Enhancing food security and nutrition through resilient agrifood value chains

O. Adeyemo
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Abstract

The war in Ukraine, with other attendant consequences, has resulted in a massive decline in the supply of major staple foods leading to a rise in food prices globally. As the world focuses on the global food crises precipitated by the Ukrainian war; it is important to contextualize food and nutrition insecurity in the light of domestic challenges. Nigeria’s population in conflict zones have faced and will continue to face food insecurity crisis or emergency levels of food insecurity due to ruthless banditry in the northwest. For example, in 2016, the United Nations reported that Boko Haram bombings in Northern Nigeria disrupted trade routes between Chad and Nigeria, interrupting the supply of basic goods and causing local price hikes. In addition, climate change, natural disasters, violence between farmers and herders; kidnappings, and other forms of insecurity have impacted food production and distribution in Nigeria making food crisis a daily war for Nigerians. At the same time, agricultural productivity has steadily grown, and technological and institutional innovations have proliferated within agrifood markets and value chain with the potential to reduce poverty and food insecurity around the world. A food value chain (FVC) consists of all the stakeholders who participate in the coordinated production and value-adding activities that are needed to make food products. According to HLPE (2014), losses and wastes are common in all the phases of the FVCs (pre-harvest, harvesting and initial handling, storage, transport and logistics, processing and packaging, retailing and, finally, consumption activities). The agrifood value chain development in Nigeria is facing many barriers to fulfilling its potential including but not limited to capacity, enabling environment, governance, infrastructure, and policies conducive to sustainability and growth. Adding value post-production and minimizing losses with innovations in post-harvest and processing phases can have significant economic and environmental impacts, with input savings and carbon footprint reductions
通过有韧性的农产品价值链加强粮食安全和营养
乌克兰战争以及随之而来的其他后果导致主要主食供应大幅下降,导致全球粮食价格上涨。当世界关注乌克兰战争引发的全球粮食危机时;重要的是要根据国内挑战来考虑粮食和营养不安全问题。尼日利亚冲突地区的人口已经并将继续面临粮食不安全危机或由于西北地区无情的土匪活动而出现的紧急粮食不安全状况。例如,2016年,联合国报告称,博科圣地在尼日利亚北部的爆炸事件扰乱了乍得和尼日利亚之间的贸易路线,中断了基本商品的供应,导致当地价格上涨。此外,气候变化、自然灾害、农牧民之间的暴力;绑架和其他形式的不安全影响了尼日利亚的粮食生产和分配,使粮食危机成为尼日利亚人的日常战争。与此同时,农业生产力稳步增长,农业食品市场和价值链中的技术和制度创新激增,有可能减少世界各地的贫困和粮食不安全。食品价值链(FVC)由参与食品生产所需的协调生产和增值活动的所有利益相关者组成。根据HLPE(2014),在fvc的所有阶段(收获前、收获和初始处理、储存、运输和物流、加工和包装、零售以及最后的消费活动)中,损失和浪费是常见的。尼日利亚农业食品价值链的发展在发挥其潜力方面面临许多障碍,包括但不限于能力、有利环境、治理、基础设施和有利于可持续性和增长的政策。通过收获后和加工阶段的创新来增加生产后的价值并最大限度地减少损失,可以产生重大的经济和环境影响,节省投入并减少碳足迹
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