A/RES/74/215 GA
Agricultural technology for sustainable development : resolution / adopted by the General Assembly
74
Session
154
Yes
2
No
26
Abstentions
| Draft symbol | A/C.2/74/L.44/Rev.1 |
|---|---|
| Adopted symbol | A/RES/74/215 |
| Category | NATURAL RESOURCES AND THE ENVIRONMENT |
| P5 Positions |
|
| UN Document | A/RES/74/215 ↗ |
Vote Recorded Vote — A/74/PV.52
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Full text of resolution
United Nations
A/RES/74/215
General Assembly
Distr.: General
21 January 2020
19-22429 (E) 270120
*1922429*
Seventy-fourth session
Agenda item 19
Sustainable development
Resolution adopted by the General Assembly
on 19 December 2019
[on the report of the Second Committee (A/74/381)]
74/215. Agricultural technology for sustainable development
The General Assembly,
Recalling its resolution 72/215 of 20 December 2017,
Reaffirming its resolution 70/1 of 25 September 2015, entitled “Transforming
our world: the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development”, in which it adopted a
comprehensive, far-reaching and people-centred set of universal and transformative
Sustainable Development Goals and targets, its commitment to working tirelessly for
the full implementation of the Agenda by 2030, its recognition that eradicating
poverty in all its forms and dimensions, including extreme poverty, is the greatest
global challenge and an indispensable requirement for sustainable development, its
commitment to achieving sustainable development in its three dimensions –
economic, social and environmental – in a balanced and integrated manner, and to
building upon the achievements of the Millennium Development Goals and seeking
to address their unfinished business,
Reaffirming also its resolution 69/313 of 27 July 2015 on the Addis Ababa
Action Agenda of the Third International Conference on Financing for Development,
which is an integral part of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, supports
and complements it, helps to contextualize its means of implementation targets with
concrete policies and actions, and reaffirms the strong political commitment to
address the challenge of financing and creating an enabling environment at all levels
for sustainable development in the spirit of global partnership and solidarity,
Welcoming the Zero Hunger Challenge initiative launched by the Secretary-
General at the United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development as a vision
for a future free from hunger, and recalling the Rome Declaration on Nutrition,
adopted at the Second International Conference on Nutrition, 1 the United Nations
__________________
1 World Health Organization, document EB 136/8, annex I.
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Decade of Action on Nutrition (2016–2025),2 the International Year of Plant Health,
2020,3 and the United Nations Decade on Ecosystem Restoration (2021–2030),4
Recalling the adoption of the 10-Year Framework of Programmes on
Sustainable Consumption and Production Patterns by the United Nations Conference
on Sustainable Development in 2012,5
Reaffirming the Paris Agreement6 and its early entry into force, encouraging all
its parties to fully implement the Agreement, and parties to the United Nations
Framework Convention on Climate Change7 that have not yet done so to deposit their
instruments of ratification, acceptance, approval or accession, where appropriate, as
soon as possible,
Welcoming the Sendai Declaration and the Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk
Reduction 2015–2030, adopted at the Third United Nations World Conference on
Disaster Risk Reduction,8
Welcoming also the Buenos Aires outcome document of the second High-level
United Nations Conference on South-South Cooperation, held in Buenos Aires in
March 2019,9
Recalling relevant strategies and programmes of action, including the Istanbul
Declaration and Programme of Action for the Least Developed Countries for the
Decade 2011–2020, 10 the SIDS Accelerated Modalities of Action (SAMOA)
Pathway, 11 and the Vienna Declaration and Vienna Programme of Action for
Landlocked Developing Countries for the Decade 2014–2024, 12 reaffirming the
importance of supporting Agenda 2063 of the African Union and the programme of
the New Partnership for Africa’s Development,13 and recognizing the major challenge
to the achievement of durable peace and sustainable development in countries in
conflict and post-conflict situations,
Welcoming the United Nations strategic plan for forests 2017–2030, 14 and
acknowledging that forests and trees outside forests provide essential ecosystem
services, such as timber, food, fuel, fodder, non-wood products and shelter, as well as
soil and water conservation and clean air, and that forests and trees outside forests
contribute substantially to climate change mitigation and adaptation and to the
conservation of biodiversity, prevent land degradation and desertification and reduce
the risk of floods, landslides and avalanches, droughts, dust and sand storms and other
disasters,
Welcoming also the United Nations Decade of Family Farming (2019–2028)15
and noting that sustainable agricultural technology, digitalization as well as
technological, social, economic and institutional innovations build on the knowledge
and capacities and respond to the needs and realities of smallholders and family
farmers, in particular women and youth in rural areas, and in that regard highlighting
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2 See resolution 70/259.
3 See resolution 73/252.
4 See resolution 73/284.
5 A/CONF.216/5, annex.
6 Adopted under the UNFCCC in FCCC/CP/2015/10/Add.1, decision 1/CP.21.
7 United Nations, Treaty Series, vol. 1771, No. 30822.
8 Resolution 69/283, annexes I and II.
9 Resolution 73/291, annex.
10 Report of the Fourth United Nations Conference on the Least Developed Countries, Istanbul,
Turkey, 9–13 May 2011 (A/CONF.219/7), chaps. I and II.
11 Resolution 69/15, annex.
12 Resolution 69/137, annexes I and II.
13 A/57/304, annex.
14 See resolution 71/285.
15 See resolution 72/239.
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the importance of innovation-driven development and support to entrepreneurship
and innovation, and welcoming new sustainable agricultural technologies that can
contribute to their transition from subsistence farming to innovative, commercial
production, helping them to increase their own food security and nutrition, generate
marketable surpluses and add value to their production,
Recognizing that agricultural technology has a beneficial impact on and an
important role in the successful implementation of the goals and targets of the
2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, and in that regard taking note with
appreciation of the report of the Secretary-General on progress towards the
Sustainable Development Goals16 and the Global Sustainable Development Report,
and the Secretary-General’s strategy on new technologies,
Expressing concern about the rise in global hunger, which affected 821 million
people in 2018,
Recognizing that agricultural technologies have improved the productivity of
agriculture and enhanced the sustainability and resilience of food production systems
at the local level,
Noting with concern the findings of the special report of the Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change on climate change, desertification, land degradation,
sustainable land management, food security, and greenhouse gas fluxes in terrestrial
ecosystems entitled Climate Change and Land,
Taking note of the June 2019 report of the Secretary-General’s High-level Panel
on Digital Cooperation entitled “The age of digital interdependence”,
Seriously concerned about the findings of the Intergovernmental Science-Policy
Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services, and stressing the urgent need to
step up efforts to prevent the loss of biological diversity and the degradation of land
and soil,
Welcoming the inauguration of the Technology Bank for the Least Developed
Countries, and encouraging its continued support,
Recognizing that the agriculture sector is inextricably linked with the entire food
system and that agricultural technologies and digitalization can add value throughout
the food system by improving the sustainability of storage, transport, trade,
processing, transformation, retail, waste reduction and recycling, as well as
interactions among these processes,
Stressing the crucial role of women in the agricultural sector and their
contribution to enhancing agricultural and rural development, improving food
security and nutrition and eradicating rural poverty, and underlining the fact that
meaningful progress in agricultural and agricultural technology development
necessitates, inter alia, closing the gender gap, introducing appropriate gender-
responsive interventions at all stages in agricultural innovation processes, including
at the policy level, and ensuring that women have equal access to agricultural
technologies, related services and inputs and all necessary productive resources,
including tenure rights and access to land, fisheries and forests, as well as to
affordable education and training, social services, social protection, health care,
health services and financial services, and access to and participation in local,
regional and international markets,
Recognizing that young people play a significant role in supporting sustainable
economic growth and that agricultural technology, innovation and digitalization have
an essential role to play in facilitating access to agricultural skills for young women
and men, improving the livelihoods of youth, creating quality and decent jobs and
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16 E/2019/68.
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contributing to the prohibition and elimination of the worst forms of child labour,
strengthening progress towards achieving the realization of the Sustainable
Development Goals,
Recognizing also the rapid evolution in science and technological innovation
and digitalization, and that the development and open access to mega data and
information will bring about profound changes in agricultural research, agricultural
extension and rural development,
Recognizing further that a systems approach to agricultural innovation is
essential to ensure that innovations, including technologies, are aligned towards
common objectives, promote collaboration, address problems relevant to farmers and
offer incentives to, and the means to accelerate adoption by, smallholder farmers, and
that it is essential to enable interactions and knowledge flows among the different
stakeholders in the agricultural innovation system, including farmers’ organizations,
research institutions, extension services, governments, international organizations,
the private sector and civil society,
Acknowledging the role and work of civil society, the private sector and
academia in furthering progress in developing countries and promoting sustainable
agriculture and management practices, the use of agricultural technology,
digitalization and the training of smallholder farmers, in particular rural women, and
that multi-stakeholder partnerships can contribute to the financing of food security
and nutrition as well as sustainable development by mobilizing additional resources
through advocacy and innovative funding mechanisms and facilitating the
coordinated and targeted use of existing resources, aligning them more effectively
with global and national public priorities,
Stressing the need to design sustainable food systems that conserve the natural
resource base and enhance the provision of ecosystem services, while increasing
productivity, and that respond to the challenges posed by, inter alia, climate change,
the depletion and scarcity of natural resources, urbanization and globalization, and
recognizing that agricultural technology and digitalization can contribute to food
security and nutrition and help to build resilience,
Emphasizing that participatory research, in conjunction with effective,
pluralistic and demand-driven extension and rural advisory services, is critical in
order to ensure that agricultural technologies respond to the demands and needs of all
farmers, including family farmers and smallholder producers,
Recognizing the need to further enhance the linkages and synergies between
agricultural technology and innovative sustainable agricultural practices, including
agroecological principles, resource use efficiency, circular economy, recycling,
optimizing external inputs, integration, crop rotation and diversification, no-tillage,
soil health monitoring, agroforestry and regenerative agricultural practices, and by
effectively combining appropriate technologies, including biotechnologies, with
traditional and indigenous knowledge, in order to design sustainable farming systems
that strengthen the interactions between plants, animals, humans and the environment
for food security and nutrition, enhance productivity, improve nutrition, conserve the
natural resource base and attain more sustainable and innovative food systems,
Stressing the need to support and strengthen information systems and statistical
systems for better disaggregated data collection and processing, which will be key in
monitoring progress in the adoption of sustainable agricultural technologies and their
impact on improving food security, nutrition and sustainable agriculture,
1.
Takes note with appreciation of the report of the Secretary-General;17
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17 A/74/238.
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2.
Urges Member States, relevant United Nations organizations and other
stakeholders to strengthen efforts to improve the development of sustainable
agricultural technologies and their transfer and dissemination under mutually agreed
terms to developing countries, especially the least developed countries, in particular
at the bilateral and regional levels, and encourages international, regional and national
efforts to strengthen capacity and foster the utilization of local know-how in
developing countries, especially that of smallholder and family farmers, in particular
rural women and youth, in order to enhance the productivity and nutritional quality
of food crops and animal products, promote sustainable practices in pre-harvest and
post-harvest agricultural activities and enhance food security and nutrition-related
programmes and policies that take into consideration the specific needs of women,
young children and youth, with particular attention to securing the prohibition and
elimination of the worst forms of child labour, strengthening progress towards
achieving the Sustainable Development Goals;
3.
Recognizes the important role of family farming and smallholder farming
in contributing to the achievement of food security and improved nutrition and the
role that family farms play in contributing to global food security, poverty eradication
and sustainability, as well as job creation, and in ending chronic child malnutrition,
and that agricultural technologies should be adapted to the needs of small- and
medium-scale family farmers and combined with credit access for sustainable
production and significant investment in rural infrastructure as well as the training
and education of those who would most benefit from them;
4.
Calls upon Member States and relevant United Nations organizations and
other stakeholders to mainstream gender perspectives into agricultural policies and
projects and to focus on closing the gender gap by, inter alia, encouraging gender-
balanced investments and innovation in small-scale agricultural production and
distribution, and a gender-responsive value chain supported by integrated and
multisectoral policies, in order to improve women’s productive capacity and incomes,
strengthen their resilience and achieve equitable access to all forms of financing,
markets and networks, labour-saving technologies and agricultural technology
information and know-how, equipment, decision-making forums and associated
agricultural resources to ensure that agriculture, food security and nutrition-related
programmes and policies take into consideration the specific needs of women and the
barriers that women face in accessing agricultural inputs and resources;
5.
Encourages Governments to develop and implement youth-focused
agricultural development projects and programmes, including through training,
education, financial inclusion services, including microcredit services, and capacity-
building, including with regard to innovation, in association with the private sector,
in order to stimulate the interest and the involvement of youth in agriculture,
especially in agroenvironmental sustainability through access to microcredit and
capacity-strengthening, to develop agricultural technological innovation through
private partnerships;
6.
Remains concerned that agricultural innovations and technologies often
bypass ageing famers, and in particular ageing women farmers, as many do not
possess the financial resources or the skills to adopt new practices, and in this regard
stresses the need to strengthen the capacity of ageing farmers through continued
access to financial and infrastructure services and training for improved farming
techniques and technologies;
7.
Acknowledges the importance of adopting innovative and sustainable food
systems by harnessing science, technology and innovation, including co-innovation,
promoting participatory research, demand-driven extension and rural advisory
services and increased, responsible and inclusive public and private investment,
building human capacity, encouraging entrepreneurship, creating an enabling
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economic and institutional environment and strengthening knowledge flows, in
particular between scientists and farmers, taking into account local and traditional
knowledge systems, in combination with new sources of knowledge;
8.
Invites the United Nations system and all relevant stakeholders to consider
ways to make available, on mutually agreed terms, data and information relating to
agriculture and food systems, including meteorology, big data, the Internet of things,
satellite imagery, early warning systems and other data-based technologies, that could
help to build the resilience of family farmers and smallholder producers, optimize
yields and support rural livelihoods;
9.
Recognizes that weather forecasting and climate services and products
allow farmers to better plan agricultural activities, optimize production, manage
climate-related risks and integrate climate change adaptation into their decisions, and
therefore encourages governments and meteorological agencies to improve the
collection, dissemination and analysis of agrometeorological and agroclimatological
data and information;
10. Acknowledges that technological innovations can be supported by
financial innovations and financial support, such as de-risking strategies and blended
finance options, and that blended finance mechanisms are new institutional models
that link public and private financing and patient capital with equity investments and
promote schemes that more effectively distribute investments to small-scale
enterprises and producers;
11.
Underlines the importance of supporting and advancing research in
improving and diversifying crop varieties and seed systems, as well as supporting the
establishment of sustainable agricultural systems, sustainable management practices
and the use of new and existing technologies, such as conservation agriculture,
integrated soil fertility management, integrated farming systems, animal disease
prevention and control and integrated pest management, precision agriculture,
irrigation, livestock husbandry and biotechnologies, in order to make agriculture
more sustainable and productive and, in particular, to make crops and farm animals
more resistant to diseases, including drug-resistant infections, considering
international standards in this regard, pests and environmental stresses, including the
impacts of climate change, drought and extreme rainfall events, in accordance with
national regulations and relevant international agreements;
12. Stresses the urgent need to enhance adaptive capacity, strengthen
resilience and reduce vulnerability to climate change, and urges Member States to
continue to engage in adaptation planning processes and the implementation of
mitigation actions;
13. Recognizes that sustainable agricultural mechanization can have potential
drawbacks but could also help address shortages of labour, ease drudgery, increase
incomes, enhance productivity and the timeliness of agricultural activities, promote
efficient resource use, enable better market access and attract new investment and
talent into agriculture, thereby creating better prospects for sustainable growth and
support measures to mitigate climate and weather-related hazards, and acknowledges
that mechanization and digitalization can also create new and higher-paying jobs in
agricultural value chains, making it more attractive for youth to stay in rural areas;
14. Stresses the need to significantly reduce pre-harvest, post-harvest and
other food losses and waste throughout the food supply chain through, inter alia,
improved production planning, the promotion of resource-efficient production and
processing practices, improved preservation and packing technologies, improved
transportation and logistics management and enhanced household and business
awareness of food losses and waste prevention, to help all actors in the value chain to
enjoy greater benefits and to contribute to environmental protection;
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15. Recognizes that energy-efficient food systems represent a key component
in transitioning to sustainable food and agriculture;
16. Also recognizes that strengthening urban-rural linkages can improve both
rural and urban food security and nutrition, and in this regard highlights the need for
integrated urban and territorial agriculture land planning, improved rural-urban
transportation links, food packaging technology and cold chain development to
reduce food loss, and for effective trade links across the urban-rural continuum, which
will contribute to ensuring that small-scale farmers and fishers are linked to local,
subnational, national, regional and global value chains and markets;
17. Further recognizes that urban farming and agriculture can improve the
food security and nutrition of, and foster income opportunities for, urban dwellers,
and in this regard highlights the need to further develop agricultural technology in
support of sustainable urbanization, including sustainable intensification through
indoor and vertical farming, the use of automation to overcome intensive labour
challenges, the innovative use of urban spaces for agriculture and the promotion of
urban farming, in order to reduce hunger and malnutrition and to promote sustainable
urban development;
18. Underlines the importance of the sustainable use and management of water
resources to increase and contribute to agricultural productivity, calls upon
stakeholders to promote integrated water resources management in agriculture and
adapt agricultural systems to improve their overall water efficiency and water
productivity, and their resilience to water stresses, inter alia, by developing and
implementing adaptive water and agricultural strategies and action plans based on a
comprehensive approach to the long-term availability and variability of all water
sources, reducing water scarcity risks through integrated water resources management
options, designing and implementing agricultural and landscape management
practices that increase the resilience of agricultural systems to water stress and reduce
pollution, making rain-fed agriculture systems a more reliable option, investing in an
enabling environment and mobilizing the full set of tools available to them, and calls
for further efforts to develop and strengthen irrigation facilities and water-saving
technology, which can also enhance resilience to the current and projected adverse
impacts of climate change;
19. Encourages Member States, civil society and public and private
institutions to develop partnerships to support financial and market services,
including training, capacity-building, infrastructure and extension and rural advisory
services, and calls for further efforts by all stakeholders to include smallholder
farmers, in particular rural women and youth, in planning and in taking decisions
about making appropriate sustainable agricultural technologies and practices
accessible and affordable to them, and strengthen the links between community-based
initiatives and financial institutions, including through the promotion of financing
tools that foster agricultural sustainability;
20. Recognizes the important role of information and communications
technology, as well as digitalization and e-agriculture, in achieving the Sustainable
Development Goals, which constitute tools for improving agricultural productivity,
practices and smallholder livelihoods, strengthening agricultural markets and
institutions, improving agricultural extension and rural advisory services,
empowering farmer communities, keeping farmers and rural entrepreneurs informed
about agricultural innovations, weather conditions, input availability, financial
services and market prices and connecting them with buyers, and stresses the need to
ensure the access of women and youth to information and communications
technology, digitalization and e-agriculture, especially in rural areas;
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21. Calls upon Member States to include sustainable agricultural development
as an integral part of their national policies and strategies, notes the positive impact
that North-South, South-South and triangular cooperation can have in this regard, and
urges the relevant bodies of the United Nations system to include elements of
agricultural technology, research and development in efforts to realize the 2030
Agenda for Sustainable Development,18 with a focus on the research and development
of technology that is affordable, durable and sustainable and that can be easily used
by and disseminated to smallholder farmers, in particular rural women and ageing
farmers;
22. Requests relevant United Nations organizations, including the Food and
Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, the International Fund for
Agricultural Development and the United Nations Conference on Trade and
Development to promote, support and facilitate the exchange of experience among
Member States through, inter alia, recommendations and other public goods related
to ways to promote sustainable agriculture and increase the adaptive capacity of
agriculture and the use of a broad range of agricultural technologies that support more
sustainable food systems, build long-term fertility, healthy and resilient
agroecosystems and secure livelihoods and have a positive impact on the entire value
chain, including technology for post-harvest crop storage, processing, handling and
transportation, including in pressing environmental circumstances;
23. Underlines the instrumental role of agricultural technology, agricultural
research and innovation and technology transfer on mutually agreed terms and the
sharing of knowledge and practices in furthering sustainable development and in
achieving the Sustainable Development Goals, calls, therefore, upon Member States,
and encourages relevant international bodies, to support sustainable agricultural
research and development, emphasizes that research outputs should be appropriate to
the needs of and accessible to end users, including governments, water managers,
large-scale private sector enterprises and smallholder farmers, and in this regard calls
for continued support to the international agricultural research system, including the
research centres of CGIAR and other relevant international organizations and
initiatives;
24. Stresses the importance of indicators that can be used to formulate targeted
policies towards the adoption of agricultural technology and to measure their impact
on the Sustainable Development Goals, and in this regard encourages Member States,
in cooperation with all relevant stakeholders, to continue to contribute to the ongoing
work of the Statistical Commission on the global indicator framework;
25. Requests the Secretary-General to submit to the General Assembly at its
seventy-sixth session, within existing resources, an action-oriented report that
examines the current technological trends and key advances in agricultural
technologies, provides illustrative examples of the transformative use of technologies
at scale and includes recommendations that assist Member States in accelerating their
efforts to implement the relevant goals and targets of the 2030 Agenda, and decides
to include in the provisional agenda of its seventy-sixth session the item entitled
“Sustainable development”.
52nd plenary meeting
19 December 2019
__________________
18 Resolution 70/1.
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