4.6 Article

The role of water in transforming food systems

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DOI: 10.1016/j.gfs.2022.100639

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Food systems transformation; Water security; United Nations Food Systems Summit (UNFSS); Nutrition; Ecosystem health

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The United Nations Food Systems Summit has not given sufficient consideration to the role of water in food systems transformation, despite its essentiality. This is of even greater importance due to the worsening impacts of climate change on food systems, which are mediated through water. To prevent water from breaking food systems, key actors should focus on protecting water-dependent ecosystems, improving agricultural water management, reducing water and food losses, coordinating water interventions with nutrition and health, enhancing the environmental sustainability of food systems, addressing social inequities, and improving data quality and monitoring for water-food system linkages.
The United Nations Food Systems Summit aimed to chart a path toward transforming food systems toward achieving the Sustainable Development Goals. Despite the essentiality of water for food systems, however, the Summit has not sufficiently considered the role of water for food systems transformation. This focus is even more important due to rapidly worsening climate change and its pervasive impacts on food systems that are mediated through water. To avoid that water breaks food systems, key food systems actors should 1) Strengthen efforts to retain water-dependent ecosystems, their functions and services; 2) Improve agricultural water management; 3) Reduce water and food losses beyond the farmgate; 4) Coordinate water with nutrition and health interventions; 5) Increase the environmental sustainability of food systems; 6) Explicitly address social inequities; and 7) Improve data quality and monitoring for water-food system linkages.

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