Tuesday, November 26, 2013

Global Hunger: Gone in Our Lifetime?

     From MercatorNet:    
     The head of the UN Food and Agriculture Agency, Jose Graziano da Silva, makes that assertion.  According to Graziano, the scourge of hunger in Africa could be gone by 2025.  Proposing three solutions in this article, Graziano remarks that the key to eradication of world hunger is small family-owned farms and the cultivation of the super-food quinoa.  As Graziano himself puts it, "You don't need to buy seed from Monsanto."
      Read the article here.
                                   
And this is backed up by Jose Graziano da Silva, the head of the UN food and agriculture agency. - See more at: http://www.mercatornet.com/demography/view/13159#sthash.ANZ1l0Vj.uCzqv7NM.dpuf
And this is backed up by Jose Graziano da Silva, the head of the UN food and agriculture agency.  According to Graziano, the scourge of hunger in Africa could be eradicated by 2025 (12 years away!) “if Africa’s leaders champion it and promote improved crop production and healthy eating”.  - See more at: http://www.mercatornet.com/demography/view/13159#sthash.ANZ1l0Vj.uCzqv7NM.dpuf
And this is backed up by Jose Graziano da Silva, the head of the UN food and agriculture agency.  - See more at: http://www.mercatornet.com/demography/view/13159#sthash.ANZ1l0Vj.F2ZUvdaa.dpuf
this is backed up by Jose Graziano da Silva, the head of the UN food and agriculture agency.  According to Graziano, the scourge of hunger in Africa could be eradicated by 2025 (12 years away!) “if Africa’s leaders champion it and promote improved crop production and healthy eating”.  Graziano put the solution to the problem of world hunger into perspective for all us in an interview with the AP:
“…saying the Food and Agriculture Organization believes that hunger can be eradicated around the globe ‘in a generation, in our lifetime’ if there is a political commitment by world leaders to ensure that all their citizens get access to nutritious food.
‘We are not talking about sending a man to the moon or something that complicated,’ he said. ‘We have the technology. We have the expertise. We have the things that we need to do it.’”
- See more at: http://www.mercatornet.com/demography/view/13159#sthash.ANZ1l0Vj.F2ZUvdaa.dpuf
this is backed up by Jose Graziano da Silva, the head of the UN food and agriculture agency.  According to Graziano, the scourge of hunger in Africa could be eradicated by 2025 (12 years away!) “if Africa’s leaders champion it and promote improved crop production and healthy eating”.  Graziano put the solution to the problem of world hunger into perspective for all us in an interview with the AP:
“…saying the Food and Agriculture Organization believes that hunger can be eradicated around the globe ‘in a generation, in our lifetime’ if there is a political commitment by world leaders to ensure that all their citizens get access to nutritious food.
‘We are not talking about sending a man to the moon or something that complicated,’ he said. ‘We have the technology. We have the expertise. We have the things that we need to do it.’”
- See more at: http://www.mercatornet.com/demography/view/13159#sthash.ANZ1l0Vj.F2ZUvdaa.dpuf
this is backed up by Jose Graziano da Silva, the head of the UN food and agriculture agency.  According to Graziano, the scourge of hunger in Africa could be eradicated by 2025 (12 years away!) “if Africa’s leaders champion it and promote improved crop production and healthy eating”.  Graziano put the solution to the problem of world hunger into perspective for all us in an interview with the AP:
“…saying the Food and Agriculture Organization believes that hunger can be eradicated around the globe ‘in a generation, in our lifetime’ if there is a political commitment by world leaders to ensure that all their citizens get access to nutritious food.
‘We are not talking about sending a man to the moon or something that complicated,’ he said. ‘We have the technology. We have the expertise. We have the things that we need to do it.’”
- See more at: http://www.mercatornet.com/demography/view/13159#sthash.ANZ1l0Vj.F2ZUvdaa.dpuf

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