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ROME, ITALY – Global trade agreements, harmonized food safety standards and measures that benefit rather than harm poor family farmers in the developing world should be key objectives in the ongoing international trade negotiations, said José Graziano da Silva, director-general of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO).

Top officials from around the world will gather in Buenos Aires for the World Trade Organization (WTO) Ministerial Conference in December. While subjects such as e-commerce are expected to be high on the agenda, rapidly expanding international food trade remains a critical issue and gained substantial momentum after the agreement at the last conference — in Nairobi in 2015 — to eliminate agricultural export subsidies.


“We should aim to produce an outcome that will be a step closer toward an inclusive, balanced and equitable global trading system,” Graziano da Silva said.

“A top priority is prioritize global agreements over the bilateral and regional trade instruments that have proliferated in recent years,” he added in remarks to an event organized under the aegis of the Committee on Commodity Problems (CCP).

While family farmers produce 80% of the world’s food, many also suffer from hunger and rely on both import and export possibilities for food security and as a path out of poverty, he noted, adding that it is imperative that policies and rules avoid trade-distorting effects that harm them.

The CCP, the FAO’s oldest technical committee comprising more than 100 members who meet every two years, offers an intergovernmental forum for members to debate issues related to commodity markets and policy developments.

This inter-sessional event’s focus is on how to leverage the contributions of trade to the food security and nutrition goals of the2030 Sustainable Development Agenda, ahead of the Buenos Aires WTO Ministerial Conference.

Promoting a “universal rules-based, open, non-discriminatory and equitable multilateral trading system under the World Trade Organization” is a specific objective of SDG 17.

The Nairobi agreement on eliminating agricultural export subsidies was “the most significant reform” of global rules on agriculture trade for 20 years and will help level the playing field to the benefit of farmers and exporters in developing and least-developed countries, Roberto Azevêdo, director-general of the WTO, told the CCP delegates.

The 11th WTO Ministerial Conference in Buenos Aires is an important milestone to ensure agricultural trade supports growth and development, Azevêdo added.

Issues on the table include public stockholding for food security purposes, domestic support generally, transparency in export restrictions, market access and fishery subsidies, he said.

The FAO and WTO have deepened their partnership with joint efforts such as ajoint publicationexplaining how developing countries can participate more effectively in the harmonized food standard setting processes in Codex Alimentarius and the WTO's Sanitary and Phytosanitary(SPS)and Technical Barriers to Trade(TBT) Committees.

Azevêdo said that he and Graziano da Silva “have been trying to encourage a more substantive and inclusive debate on trade and agriculture.”

Acknowledging that “there is no easy or obvious solution on any of the fronts” atop the agenda in Buenos Aires, he urged participants to identify clear ways forward for unresolved issues.

The FAO’s aim, articulated in a guidance note released at the CCP event, is to acknowledge that policy settings should be coherent with a nation’s development phase and above all to make sure that the expansion of agricultural trade works for the elimination of hunger, food insecurity and malnutrition in the world.