LONDON ā British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said Monday that the U.K. is setting up a new science initiative to help develop flood-tolerant rice, disease-resistant wheat and other crops that are more resilient to climate change.
Sunak was joined by ministers, diplomats and philanthropists from about 20 countries at a one-day Global Food Security Summit in London, where he urged world leaders to harness artificial intelligence and other cutting-edge technology to end malnutrition around the globe.
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Sunak told delegates that a āfundamental shiftā is needed to confront a food-security crisis that is being worsened by climate change. He focused on the role of science and said the U.K. would set up a āvirtual science hubā linking international researchers working on more resilient crops. The U.K. hub will be part of a global research partnership known as CGIAR.
āClimate change, conflict and population rise mean ever greater challenges to food supplies," Sunak said. āSo we need a fundamental shift in the way we approach food security, with a focus on long-term solutions to stop food crises before they start. And we need to harness the full power of science and technology to ensure supplies are resilient to threats like conflict, drought and floods.ā
The event was co-hosted by Somalia and the United Arab Emirates alongside the Childrenās Investment Fund Foundation and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
The summit coincided with publication of a āre-energizedā U.K. development strategy aimed at ending extreme poverty and tackling climate change and biodiversity loss.
The document sets out the U.K.'s aid plans through 2030, and confirms Britain will not restore development aid to 0.7% of gross national income ā after it was cut to 0.5% during the coronavirus pandemic ā until āthe fiscal situation allows.ā Instead, the U.K. says it will spend smarter, earmarking money to help countries strengthen their defenses against natural disasters, raising more private-sector money for development and building āmutually respectfulā relationships with developing nations.
āTodayās answer cannot be about rich countries ādoing developmentā to others,ā Foreign Secretary David Cameron wrote in an introduction. āWe need to work together as partners, shaping narratives which developing countries own and deliver.ā
The Lancaster House conference venue was picketed by activists from Medical Aid for Palestinians calling for a cease-fire in the Israel-Hamas war to get urgently needed food and humanitarian aid into Gaza.
āIt is good that they are talking about addressing food and security in the world. But if theyāre going to do that seriously, they cannot ignore the situation in Gaza, where 2.2 million people are at risk of starvation,ā said the groupās chief executive, Melanie Ward.
āBecause of the siege thatās been imposed on Gaza, the amount of aid thatās gotten in the last month is only enough for about two normal days in Gaza. So less than 10% of the food needed to keep people in Gaza alive is actually getting in.ā
Like the United States, the U.K. has not called for a cease-fire, but Sunak urged Israel to agree to āurgent and substantive humanitarian pausesā to get in food, fuel and medicine.
āThe situation on the ground is truly tragic and getting worse,ā he said.