Posted - 12 April 2013 - UN News Central
The fight against hunger and climate change will hinge on the success
of sustainable development of oceans and fisheries, a top United
Nations official stressed today, adding that there can be “no truly
‘green economy’ without a ‘blue economy.’”
Speaking at the 10th Meeting of the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) South West Pacific Ministers for Agriculture, held in the Samoan capital of Apia, FAO Director-General José Graziano da Silva told
those gathered that the sustainable development of the world’s maritime
harvests, as well as climate change, had become “a question of survival
– just like hunger.”
“The importance of capture fisheries and aquaculture cannot be
neglected,” Mr. Graziano da Silva said, pointing out that they provide
over 3 billion people with about 15 per cent of their average per capita
intake of animal protein while also contributing to over 200 million
jobs globally.
“At the same time, these vital services must not jeopardize the key role
oceans play in regulating the earth’s climate. They absorb more than 25
per cent of the carbon dioxide emitted into the atmosphere from human
activities,” he added.
The Southwest Pacific comprises both a sizeable and vulnerable swathe of
the Earth’s surface, accounting for an estimated 15 per cent of the
globe. In addition, it includes around 2,000 islands and atolls which
are particularly susceptible to storms and flooding as well as scarcity
of potable water and stresses on the fishery and forestry ecosystems,
according to the FAO.
Mr. Graziano da Silva noted that although the international community
had made significant strides in its fight against hunger, much still
remained to be done on food security and quality of nutrition in order
to achieve the Millennium Development Goal of halving, by 2015, the
number of people suffering from hunger, as measured against 1990
benchmarks.
In particular, he pointed out that three-quarters of all adult deaths in
the Pacific are linked to nutrition and lifestyle-related diseases.
The meeting – which concludes on 13 April – brings together 14 countries
from the region in an effort to review and adopt and overall plan for
the FAO’s work there.
The agency already supports the Pacific island countries in numerous
ways by working with them on issues ranging from illegal, unreported and
unregulated fishing and the management of tuna fishing to the
management of marine areas beyond national jurisdictions.
Post to be found at:
http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=44641&Cr=climate+change&Cr1=#.UW7-Ksr6Sgs
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