Dec 28, 2015 | News

NEPAD and Brazil to partner to increase Food and Nutrition Security in Africa

NEPAD CEO Dr Mayaki and Brazil’s Ambassador to South Africa Mr P L Carneiro De Mendonça met today at the Agency’s offices in Midrand, to develop a joint food and nutrition security programme in Africa called PAA Africa NEPAD, which stands for Programa de Aquisição de Alimentos or the Food Purchase Programme

PAA Africa NEPAD is inspired by a similar initiative in Brazil’s, created in 2003 under the Zero Hunger Programme. It promotes access to food by supporting family farming. The programme purchases a wide variety of food produced by the farmers without a bidding process. The food is then distributed to people in food and nutrition insecurity communities as well as to those served by social assistance networks. PAA Africa is currently carried out in five small-scale projects with a focus on rural Africa in Sub-Saharan countries, namely Ethiopia, Malawi, Mozambique, Niger and Senegal.  

The meeting today explored areas of cooperation and to identify concrete African projects that will benefit from PAA Africa NEPAD. Ambassador Carneiro De Mendonça shared the experience of Brazil’s school feeding programme, which has improved the lives of more than 14 million school children in the country. The lessons learned from Brazil will inform NEPAD’s school feeding programme being implemented in 12 African countries together with other partners.

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Dr Mayaki giving Ambassador P L Carneiro De Mendonça an invitation letter to the Dakar Financing Summit in June.

Dr Mayaki said that improving food security is crucial because it has the most significant impact in changing the lives of the people in rural communities. He stressed the need for better institutional coordination to ensure that food and nutrition security interventions are well-planned, budgeted for and implemented at national and regional levels.

PAA Africa NEPAD will be promoted and implemented within the framework of the Comprehensive Africa Agriculture Development Programme (CAADP).

They also discussed ways of scaling up bioenergy development so as to accelerate agricultural growth in Africa.