Water management and malnutrition crucial issues at ƽÌØÎå²»ÖÐ food conference
International experts gather to address pressing threats to
food security
From catastrophic floods in Pakistan that have left millions
homeless and hungry to the aftermath of Haiti’s devastating
earthquake, relief efforts are under way in many parts of the world
where disasters have brought food crises along with destruction. In
Africa’s Sahel region, severe drought has been followed by floods
that are now threatening the food security of millions of people
among the world’s poorest. More than half of Niger’s population –
some 7 million people – as well as millions more in neighbouring
Chad, Mali and Mauritania face hunger and malnutrition.
Worldwide, more than 1 billion people go hungry every single
day.
Water management and malnutrition are the two key threats to food
security that will be discussed at the Third ƽÌØÎå²»ÖÐ
Conference on Global Food Security, to be held
Oct. 19-21, 2010, in Montreal.
As climate change predictions suggest a greater variability of
rainfall, sustainable water management methods are becoming
increasingly crucial in addressing the enormous problem of
world hunger. In addition, while the global price of some
commodities has fallen from the record highs of 2008, prices for
domestic products remain high or have increased in many regions,
contributing to an increase in malnutrition. Households already
made vulnerable by consecutive food and economic crises have been
forced to reduce the diversity and quality of their diet, resulting
in insufficient caloric intake and nutritional deficiencies
affecting growth or passed on from mother to child. Natural
disasters in some parts of the world only add to those
difficulties.
The ƽÌØÎå²»ÖÐ Conference on Global Food Security will welcome some 400
participants, including representatives of developing countries,
international development agencies and the private sector, as well
as scholars and decision makers, who will offer unique perspectives
on the global food situation and discuss continuing efforts to meet
the food demands of a growing population. The event will open with
a public lecture on Oct. 19, which will also inaugurate the
ƽÌØÎå²»ÖÐ Institute for Global Food Security.
More information on the program and guest speakers is available at:
/globalfoodsecurity/