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GLOBAL AGRICULTURE and FOOD SECURITY PROGRAM. A presentation to CSOs attending IPC-Asia and AHC meetings, 11-12 March 2011 Bangkok, Thailand. BACKGROUND. Food Crisis in 2008 and G8 in Italy, $20 billion were pledged
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GLOBAL AGRICULTURE and FOOD SECURITY PROGRAM A presentation to CSOs attending IPC-Asia and AHC meetings, 11-12 March 2011 Bangkok, Thailand
BACKGROUND • Food Crisis in 2008 and G8 in Italy, $20 billion were pledged • The Global Agriculture and Food Security Program (GAFSP) is a multilateral mechanism to assist in the implementation of pledges made by the G8++ at the L’Aquila Summit in July 2009 and was set up in response to a request from the G20 in Pittsburgh in September 2009. • Objective: address the underfunding of country and regional agriculture and food security strategic investment plans already being developed by countries in consultation with donors and other stakeholders at the country-level. This will make aid contributions toward the achievement of the Millennium Development Goal 1 to cut hunger and poverty by half by 2015 more predictable.
FOCUS • FOOD SECURITY Through • Grants, Loans, Equity investments in poorest countries
Pledged vs Receipt ao oct 31, 2010 • 925 million USD pledged by 7 donors • 394.7 million USD received
Key Principles o Country-led o Pooling of resources o Filling gaps o A broad-based multilateral coalition o Matching efforts: governance and allocation o Finding the right framework- trust building and flexibility
Priorities • Scale up agri productivity including improved tech, land tenure, agri innovation • Market link including strengthened producers organizations • Reducing risk and vulnerability • Agri entry and exit, rural Non-farm income • Environmental sustainability
Recipient Countries • 8 out of 26 applicant countries= USD 321M approved out of total USD1.307B fund request • June: 5 out of 8 applicant countries= USD 224M /377 USD M • November: 3 out of 21 applicants= USD 97 M/930 USD M • Two out 8 countries so far are Asians: Bangladesh (USD 50M) and Mongolia (USD 12.5 M)
June Asian Recipient • Bangladesh ($50 million):To enhance productivity and resilience of smallholder farmers against tidal surges, flash floods and frequent droughts, the fund will finance the adoption of improved seed varieties and better water management techniques.
November Asian Recipient: Mongolia (USD12.5 M) • implemented through the World Bank • Integrated Livestock-based Livelihoods Support Program. • increase access to domestic and regional markets for livestock commodities, • improve market information systems, • and strengthen the capacity of producer groups and cooperatives. It also aims to raise the productivity and quality of livestock through extension services, veterinary services, improved animal breeding, land rights and land usage, technical assistance and capacity building for livestock sector planning and coordination.
Steering Committee Members • Voting: 12 • 6 donors (Australia, Canada, Gates Foundation, Korea, Spain, US) ; • 6 recipient countries (Bangladesh, Haiti, Mongolia, Senegal, Sierra Leone,Yemen) • Non-Voting: 15 • 10 Multilaterals and 2 countries: Trustee (WB-2), Supervising Entities (WB-2, FAO-1, IFAD-1, ADB-1, AfDB-1, IDB-1), UN High Level Task Force-1, Donors in Non Voting Status (Ireland), Recipient Reps in Non Voting Status (Moldova) • 3 CSOs: North (Action Aid), Africa (ROPPA), Asia (Dr. Sang YaingKoma-Farmer and Nature Net, Cambodia)
The Steering Committee Role • Studying and Deciding • Allocating • Identifying independent experts • Informing the countries
CSO Participation • Four Meetings Attended: April 22, 2010 (Neil Watkins), May (Neil), June (Mamadou Cissokho and Neil Watkins), Nov 2010 (Neil, Ndiogu, Soc) • 22 requests Made
Output • 18 of 22 requests approved some with modifications • Increased CSO Participation • PO participation in project devt guidelines • Increased participation of small holders in Private Sector Window
CSO Participation • From observer (i.e., governance document) to full member status • From two and one alternate to three full members (two from south, one from north) • From voluntary to funded participation • From voting to consensus
KEY ISSUES as CSO Agenda • Communicating with National Governments re CSO participation • Strategy of the GAFSP, e.g., putting land tenure security as important agri productivity component • Complementation of GAFSP and other International Initiatives (e.g., EU food security efforts)