Farmer’s Weekly – 23 August 2019

(Kiana) #1
23 August 2019 farmer’sweekly 7

range of evidence-based policy levers,
addressing issues of both soft and hard
power. Policy mechanisms are also
critical for de-risking investments.


  • Enhancing institutional capacity.
    The need for speed in the adoption of
    numerous changes requires greater capacity
    everywhere: in governments, companies,
    communities, banks and investors, among
    others. Government capacity is critical, but
    it needs to filter down to individuals and
    into enhanced local knowledge systems.

  • Enabling lifestyle and behavioural
    change. Substantial shifts in production
    and consumption will require behavioural
    change in institutions as well as individuals.
    There should be awareness drives to
    boost public support for change.

  • Enabling technology innovation and
    transfer. Technology is required for change
    at scale, but issues of equity and fairness
    are critical. The focus therefore needs to
    be on economic incentives for technology
    transfer, particularly to smallholder farmers.

  • Finance and investment. Economic
    incentives must be clear, both in terms of the
    redirection of existing financial mechanisms
    into sectors, companies and technologies
    that promote a low-carbon, just
    transition, and investment in
    new areas. – Staff reporter ▪FW


These practices are typically intensively
output-oriented, practise extensive tilling
and mono-cropping or concentrated animal
feeding, and require heavy machinery,
large-scale irrigation and external inputs
of fuels, chemicals, seed and feed.


The way forward
A projected 50% production increase will
be required to feed the global population of
almost 10 billion people by 2050. Similarly,
in South Africa, a population of as many as
73 million people will double the demand
for most commodities, with meat and
milk demand expected to rise about 200%.
To achieve this goal, government, civil
society and industry leaders will have to
work together to find solutions that allow
progress on all dimensions simultaneously.
South Africa needs to continue to produce
nutritious food to meet the growing demand
and changing dietary preferences of its
inhabitants. However, agricultural practices
are rapidly depleting and degrading the
resource base, so that increased productivity
results in decreased resilience. Focusing only
on production is a zero-sum gain; we need to
solve the food loss and waste challenge, and
mitigate the impact of climate change too.
To transform the food system, progress
must happen across all sectors and on all
levels more or less simultaneously. All
the evidence indicates that focusing on
system-wide change can bring about rapid,
far-reaching and positive change at scale.
WWF focuses on five practical areas for
transformative change in the food system,
namely inclusive regenerative farming,
optimal water use, responsible sourcing,
reducing food waste, and dietary shift.
To achieve urgent, transformative
change, specific enabling conditions
must be in place. These include:



  • Strengthening scientific evidence. Effective
    action must be time-bound and informed
    by evidence, based on scientific consensus.
    This requires not just a commitment to
    gathering evidence, but also the capacity to
    interpret and correctly apply best-available
    science in developing policies and scientific
    target-setting appropriate to local context.

  • Enhancing multilevel governance.
    The concentration of power in the
    agribusiness sector, and the resulting
    marginalisation of important stakeholders
    in the food system, require mechanisms
    to improve engagement and the ability to
    co-operate across all scales and sectors.

  • Strengthening policy instruments.
    Change requires application of the full

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