FAO |
Governing
body endorses budget and focus on cross-cutting themes such as nutrition
4 December 2015, Rome-The FAO Council has welcomed the Organization's budgetary
focus and renewed emphasis on themes such as climate change and nutrition that
cut across traditional disciplines and technical divisions.
The Council, after a week-long
session, also welcomed FAO's work with the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
approved at the United Nations this autumn. FAO is uniquely present in almost
all of the 17 SDGs, particularly in concrete support measure at the country
level and its strategic framework is already aligned to the SDGs.
The Council also expressed
appreciation for how resolutions approved over the summer by the FAO Conference
- in which all member states are represented - are being implemented on the
budget, geographic and managerial fronts.
The Council said Director-General
José Graziano da Silva's proposed adjustments to FAO's biennial Programme of
Work and Budget - including a $2.7 million in spending cuts on top of almost
$100 million found since 2012 - "reflected fully" the Conference's
guidance, and expressed appreciation for how the required savings have been
identified without affecting planned field operations. In a trend that has
gained pace since March, the approval was consensual.
It also supported the
"consolidation of decentralization" that FAO has been carrying out in
an effort to better meet member states' needs and slim down administrative
costs. The Council asked for a comprehensive analysis of FAO's network of
offices by 2016.
The Council stressed the importance
of such cross-cutting themes, citing governance alongside nutrition and climate
change as examples.
"Management is committed to
continue transforming FAO for the better," Graziano da Silva told the
Council while thanking members for their consensual support.
He also briefed them on FAO's
activities at the UN Climate Change summit in Paris, emphasizing how various
objectives - reducing poverty, eradicating hunger, bolstering agriculture - all
ultimately depend on each other and on successful efforts to cope with climate Change.
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