Thank you very much for the invitation today.
I'm going to focus specifically on food in countries other than Ukraine.
Globally, we were winning the war on hunger for decades. More people were eating complete diets and fewer people were going hungry, but around 2018, we started losing that war. Hunger increased due to conflict, climate change and COVID. Now, 120 million more people are hungry than before COVID. That takes us to the war in Ukraine.
The war in Ukraine is making the fight against hunger harder. Before the war, Ukraine and Russia were major exporters of food and fertilizer. Most of that moved through the Black Sea. When the war started, that shipping stopped, and it's been disrupted ever since. The prices of food and fertilizer rose. Since then, the prices have come down somewhat at the international level, but they're still higher and more volatile than they were before the war. As it was stated in the last hour, prices at the consumer level are still very high. Sometimes they're 100% more than they were before the war.
Families eat less, farmers use less fertilizer and families are shifting to what we call negative coping strategies. These are things that are going to cause more problems later. They pull their kids out of school. Kids get married early. Kids are forced to go to work. Farmers have to sell their livestock.
In addition, aid donors are shifting their aid from long-term things like agriculture to short-term things like humanitarian assistance.
A lot of this is a repeat of what we saw around 2008, when there was a global food crisis. This really showed the vulnerability of food-importing countries, especially poor countries that had to import food and whose prices went way up. There were food riots in at least 14 countries around the world, and this was one of the major factors that led to the Arab Spring.
Collectively, we realized we had been neglecting agriculture, especially the small-scale farmers who grow most of the food that's eaten in developing countries. In response, the G7 massively invested in agriculture. Canada doubled its aid for agriculture. The resulting rise in farm productivity meant that millions of farmers produced more. They ate better and they made more money, and global hunger went to its lowest level ever.
We then forgot about the importance of agriculture. Aid from food systems declined and hunger started to climb, and then we had COVID, and then we had climate disasters, and then we had the war in Ukraine—and it's all getting worse.
Your study now is looking at peace and security issues. I'm not going to talk about Ukraine itself. That's not my expertise. However, I can tell you that the high and volatile food prices are a threat to peace in many countries and a threat to global stability. We heard in the first hour from Mr. Webb that food security equals global security. I have to emphasize that again.
Earlier this week, Canada's Minister of Foreign Affairs gave a speech in which she said:
We are in the midst of a geopolitical rebalancing as increasingly frequent and complex crises shake the foundation of the system that has kept us safe.
We must now chart a path towards building a steady footing for our children, reinforce the international system that has brought about global stability, and reshape it to become more inclusive.
Today I want to suggest to you that one of the ways to build peace and preserve global stability is to make sure that everybody has food to eat. To do that, we should invest more in small-scale farming.
To explain why, let me give you two examples. In India in the 1940s, over two million people died because the country was not producing enough food to feed its people. In the sixties, it invested in agriculture big time. By the seventies, it was self-sufficient. Now, India's the biggest exporter of rice in the world.
The second example is from my own organization, the Canadian Foodgrains Bank, and I should say that this project was supported by Global Affairs Canada. Starting in 2015, we worked with 60,000 farmers in east Africa, promoting conservation agriculture. It was so nice to hear MP Hoback in the first hour talking about no-till farming and Canada's innovation. It's the same stuff. It works with farmers in Saskatchewan with 5,000 hectares and it works with farmers in Ethiopia with half a hectare. It's the same principles, but with different tools. That helped farmers to increase productivity and soil health.
It's not really about inputs; it's mostly about management. Those 60,000 farmers we worked with increased their food production, on average, by two to three times, with less work. It was a huge success.
To promote peace and stability, I encourage Canada to step up its support for food systems around the world. It's not only small-scale farmers themselves, but all of the food-related businesses upstream and downstream, like equipment manufacturers and food processors.
Canada's aid budget was cut drastically in the 2023 budget. In 2024, it should be restored, and food systems should be a priority. Agriculture is important in Canada. We could be known for this around the world.
Thank you.