Food systems can capture emissions and advance in the fight against hunger, highlights JBS Global CEO in New York

Food systems can capture emissions and advance in the fight against hunger, highlights JBS Global CEO in New York
JBS Global CEO, Gilberto Tomazoni, during the Brazil-US Climate Impact Summit 2024
JBS Global CEO, Gilberto Tomazoni, during the Brazil-US Climate Impact Summit 2024

Food systems – from production in the field to reaching the consumer – can play a decisive role in addressing humanity’s two greatest challenges: climate change and food security. This was the point emphasized by JBS Global CEO, Gilberto Tomazoni, on Thursday morning, the 19th, during a panel on unlocking the Brazil-United States potential in renewable energies. The Brazil-US Climate Impact Summit 2024, organized by Valor Econômico and Amcham Brasil, fostered discussions on the challenges and paths forward in the face of climate change, with a special focus on energy transition as the main solution.

“For the transformations that need to be made, resources are necessary, more specifically between $300 and $350 billion annually until 2030,” said the executive, who leads the B20’s Task Force on Food Systems and Sustainable Agriculture, the business arm of the G20, a group of the world’s 20 largest economies. As he emphasized, it is essential to prioritize correctly and place small producers at the center of the strategy. “Today, less than 4% of climate change mitigation investments go to agriculture,” he noted, citing data from the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), a UN agency.

The executive stressed that the policy paper “Sustainable food systems and agriculture” – the result of work by 139 people from various geographies, sectors of the supply chain, and partners – presents three essential guidelines to be integrated into the private sector’s proposal for the G20 Leaders’ Summit, scheduled for November in Rio de Janeiro: increasing productivity in the field, improving credit access for rural producers, and strengthening the multilateral trade system.

Alongside JBS’s Global CEO, other participants in the panel “Unlocking the Brazil-US potential in renewable energies” included: Barry Glickman, President of Honeywell’s Sustainable Technologies and Solutions Division; Paula Kovarsky Rotta, Vice President of Strategy at Raízen; Luisa Palácios, Senior Researcher at Columbia University’s Center on Global Energy Policy; and Abrão Neto, CEO of Amcham Brasil. The panel was moderated by Francisco Goes, head of the Valor Econômico office in Rio de Janeiro.

Escrito por: Oxigenweb