Discussion comes ahead of visit to Bonn for UN Climate Change Summit
Pacific states are severely affected by the impacts of climate change and frequent natural disasters.
©Photo: ©FAO/Sue Price
9 November 2017, Rome - Leaders of several states in the Pacific and other top officials from the region will gather at FAO in Rome on 10 November to discuss their region's food security and nutrition challenges, the impact of climate change, disaster risk reduction and the building of resilient livelihoods.
The high-level meeting to be chaired by FAO Director-General José Graziano da Silva will take place ahead of the Pacific leaders' participation at the UN Climate Conference COP23 in Bonn. While in Rome, the Pacific leaders will also meet Pope Francis and the Italian President Sergio Mattarella.
Like many other people living in Small Island Developing States, Pacific islanders' lives are severely affected by the impacts of climate change and frequent natural disasters. At the same time many also face chronic malnutrition and other problems associated with poor diets including rising obesity. Poor diets, in turn, are influenced by existing food systems that determine availability, affordability, convenience and desirability of various foods across the regions.
Pacific states also face other threats to their food security and nutrition stemming from factors such as rapid urban population growth, land degradation and decreasing food production, erosion of crop genetic diversity, coastal and coral degradation and declining productivity of fisheries. These problems are often compounded by breakdowns in traditional social safety nets.
Participants of the High-level Pacific leaders' meeting with FAO include:
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