كندا - المرحلة 3
Discussion topic outcome
Theme 3: Integrated approaches to food systems Potential Commitments • A mechanism to report on the food system as a whole, with metrics to track, define and set targets on important considerations across social, economic, health and environmental dimensions. These metrics should include, but are not limited to: food insecurity, food culture, Indigenous well-being, farmers’ incomes, food affordability, health, food literacy, diversity, traceability, and trade. • A more integrated approach to healthy and sustainable public procurement. This affects multiple dimensions of the food system,
... قراءة المزيدand can provide an opportunity to bring together all food system actors and communities to build collective commitment for social, health, environmental and economic objectives. • A more coordinated and food systems-based approach to addressing food loss and waste, that integrates environmental, social and economic perspectives. The integration of action across all orders of government was highlighted as a key factor, particularly the need for better integration of municipal and territorial perspectives. • Advance globally a more holistic approach that considers local, gender and Indigenous perspectives when addressing food system issues such as trade, food waste, food security and human rights. The UN Committee on Food Security and EU’s Farm to Fork Strategy were cited as examples. • A more integrated and structured decision-making process where the private sector, academics, and civil society have a role to provide perspectives to governments. • Better integrated health considerations in food systems decision-making, focusing on healthy local products, supporting organizations to promote healthy eating, and reducing chronic diseases • A resilient regulatory system that supports food safety, food security, and trade, particularly in the face of climate change and the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic. Potential Actions • Promote a vision statement for Canada’s food systems that integrates social, health, environmental and economic benefits, and align government, industry and NGO action behind it. • Develop a comprehensive Food System Sustainability Index, that establishes a commonly agreed-upon set of indicators and benchmarks on sustainability, backed by evidence. • Advance an integrated approach that includes shared objectives and performance indicators for food-related policies and programs across federal departments and agencies as well provinces and territories that provides great coherence and predictability. • Improve or establish standards and tools to support integration, including data standards, guidelines, models, frameworks, and decision making tools. Important considerations include comparability, flexibility based on differing data availability and accessibility, and data sovereignty. • Strengthen Indigenous food systems and food sovereignty. This could include continued progress on reconciliation, creating space for Indigenous voices, and programs at Indigenous and community levels, e.g., community gardens, school food program, local processing/treating of foods. Participants supported the need to celebrate success stories of community action underway to demonstrate what is possible and build on these in future efforts. • Establish a more formal process to foster collaborative decision-making. As an example, a participant noted the need for a platform to bring all departments together that are responsible for any aspect of the food system. • Use the “One Health” approach to better integrate environmental, animal, and human health, break down silos, and get decision-makers on board. • Improve traceability and information flow through food systems in both directions – from producers to consumers, and from consumers to producers. This will lead to better decision-making throughout the system, not focused only on origin and endpoints. The use of IT/mobile technology to facilitate information flow was raised. قراءة القليل