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20/01/2019
THE SECOND WORLD CONFERENCE OF THE REVITALIZATION OF THE MEDITERRANEAN DIET: STRATEGIES TOWARDS MORE SUSTAINABLE FOOD SYSTEMS IN THE MEDITERRANEAN REGION. PALERMO, 15-17 MAY 2019

The three-day conference included 18 sessions, representatives of international and intergovernmental organizations, high-level experts and representatives of Mediterranean cities shared their experiences and discussed strategies towards more sustainable food systems that take into account the major challenges to overcome in the Mediterranean region, by linking consumption and production through the Mediterranean diet in a sustainable and healthy way.

From 2003 to 2019: The Historical Contextualization of the Second World Conference

 

Introduction by Sandro Dernini, Conference Coordinator; Welcome and Opening Remarks by Adham Darawsha, Mayor City of Palermo Representative/Commisioner Cuture; Maurizio Raeli, Director CIHEAM-Bari; Lluis Serra Majem, President IFMeD

 Welcome by Leoluca Orlando, Mayor of Palermo

 

Opening Remarks by Maurizio Raeli, Director CIHEAM-Bari

Video Opening Remarks by Graziano da Silva, Director-General FAO

 

Session 1:A Mediterranean Contribution on Environment and Sustainable Co-Development to the “Summit of the Two Shores” 

Mohammed Sadiki, CIHEAM President

Session 4: 

Towards the Sustainability of Small Scale Fisheries and Aquaculture in the Mediterranean: Status, Activities and Prospects

 

Session 5: 

Solutions for Coping with Malnutrition, Primary Prevention and Public Health Nutrition in the Mediterranean Region

Session 6: 

Developing skills for addressing the deep roots of migration in the Mediterranean: training youth, developing agriculture and creating opportunities for rural sustainable development

Session 7: 

Solutions for Coping with impacts of Water Scarcity, Land Degradation and Climate Change on Mediterranean Food Systems

Session 8: 

The Diversity of Mediterranean Food Cultures and Culinary Systems as a Driver for the Revitalization of the Mediterranean Diet in the Context of Sustainable Food Systems in the Mediterranean Region


Session 9:

Appeal, Acceptance, Adoption of a Contemporary Sustainable Mediterranean

Diet LifeStyle through Education, Communication and Consumer Empowerment

 

Session 10: 

The Challenge of Organic Food Systems Linking Sustainable Production and Consumption in the Mediterranean 

Session 15:Lessons Learned from different Sustainable Diet Case Studies: Japanese Diet, New Nordic Diet and Mediterranean Diet 

Session 16: Sustainable Diets: Linking Nutrition and Food Systems.

 

Session 17: 

The Mediterranean Diet as a Lever for Bridging Consumption and Production in a Sustainable and Healthy Way in the Mediterranean Region

Session 18: 

Fostering Multi-stakeholder Engagement and Partnerships Towards More Sustainable Food Systems in the Mediterranean Region

 

From 2003 to 2019: The Historical Contextualization

of the Second World Conference

Javier Medina, ICAF President; Sandro Dernini Forum Mediterranean Food Cultures; Vincenzo Fersino CIHEAM Principal Adimistrator:

The historical actors at the 2003 Second EuroMed Forum on Dialogues among Mediterranean Civilizations on Food Security

2003 Corigliano Calabro, Calabria

who were present in 2019 Palermo

Second World Conference on the Revitalization of the Mediterranean Diet 

 





WEDNESDAY 15 MAY 2019

TEATRO S. CECILIA

 

8.00-9.00 Registration

9.00 -9.30 Welcome by Authorities

9.30-10.00 Opening Remarks

10.00-10.45 Keynote Addresses

The Mediterranean Diet Fish Consumption Recommendation as an Emblematic Challenge for Nutrition, Sustainability and Food Security

10.45-12.00 Session 1 A Mediterranean Contribution on Environment and Sustainable Co-Development to the “ Summit of the Two Shores”

12.00-13.00 Session 2: Connecting Mediterranean Countries: From Expo 2015 Milan to Expo 2020 Dubai, passing through the Channel of Suez

 

 

 

13.00-14.30 LUNCH BREAK

14.30-15.00 Mediterranean Scientific Collaboration Across the Divide: The Continuation of an Israeli/Palestinian Scholar Dialogue, 2005-2019

15.00-17.00 Session 3: Milan Urban Food Policy Pact: Sustainable Urban and Peri-Urban Food Systemsin the Mediterranean Cities

17.00–19.00 Session 4: Towards the Sustainability of Mediterranean Fisheries: Sustainable Small-Scale Fisheries and Aquaculture Projects in Mediterranean Countries

 

20.30 DINNER

 

 

THURSDAY, 16 MAY 2019

PARALLEL SESSIONS IN 4 HISTORICAL LOCATIONS NEAR TO EACH OTHER

8.30 -10.30

Hall 1

Session 5

Solutions for Coping with Youth Migrations, Agriculture, and Rural sustainable development in the Mediterranean Region: Knowledge Sharing, Capacity Building and Training as Driving Forces

Hall 2

Session 6

Solutions for Coping with Malnutrition, Primary Prevention and Public Health Nutrition in the Mediterranean Region

 

 

 

Hall 3

Session 7 Solutions for Coping with impacts of Water Scarcity, Land Degradation and Climate Change on Mediterranean Food Systems

 

 

Hall 4

Session 8

The Diversity of Mediterranean Food Cultures and Culinary Systems as a Driver for the Revitalization of the Mediterranean Diet in the Context of Sustainable Food Systems in the Mediterranean Region

 

10.30-11.00 Coffee break

11.00 -13.00 PARALLEL SESSIONS

Session 9

Understanding the Food Environment in the Mediterranean: Interlinkages between Sustainable Diets and Sustainable Food Systems

 

 

 

 

 

Session 10

The Challenge of Organic Food Systems Linking Sustainable Production and Consumption in the Mediterranean

 

Session 11

Appeal, Acceptance, Adoption of a Contemporary Sustainable Mediterranean Diet Life Style through Education, Communication and Consumer Empowerment 

 

Side event 1

Networking EuroMediterranean Countries for Sustainable Food Consumption and Production Strategies using the Mediterranean Diet for the Prevention of Noncommunicable Diseases Coordinated by Ordine dei Medici

 

Side Event 2

12.00-13.00

Sicilia Sea Food and Sea Women

13.00 - 14.30 Lunch

14.30 -16.30 PARALLEL SESSIONS

Side Event 3

Contribution from the Sicilian Fisheries District and Blue Growth to the 5+5 Dialogue of the “ Summit of the Two Shores”

 

Session 12

Lessons Learned from different Sustainable Diet Case Studies: Japanese Diet, New Nordic Diet and Mediterranean Diet

 

Session 13

Sustainable Agriculture, Agro-Ecology and Sustainable Food Value Chains Development in the Mediterranean Region

 

 

 

 

 

Session 14

Research and Innovation as Driving Forces for the Shift Towards More Sustainable Food Systems in the Mediterranean

 

 

 

16.30-17.00 Coffee breaks

17.00 – 19.00 PARALLEL SESSIONS:

Side Event 4

Blue Economy, Green Economy and Circular Economy: A Contribution to the 5+5 Dialogue of the “ Summit of the Two Shores”

 

Sessione 15

17.00-18.00 Pannel Discussion

Coping with Food Losses and Waste in the Mediterranean through more Sustainable Food Systems

___________

Side Event 6

18.00 -19.00

Food Education and Training for a Healthier Future

Side Event 5

17.00-18.00 Training for the Agro-Food Sector in Sicily

 

 

Side Event 7

18.00 -19.00

Session 16

Sustainable Diets: Linking Nutrition and Food Systems.

A Transdisciplinary Imperative

 

 

20.30 DINNER

 

FRIDAY, 17 MAY 2019

S. CECILIA THEATRE, PLENARY HALL

8.30-10.30 Session 17: Evolution of the Mediterranean Diet as a Sustainable Diet in the XXI Century, for the Well-Being of Present and Future Generations.

 

 

10.30. 12.30 Session 18Fostering Engagement and Partnership Towards a Multi-stakeholder Sustainable Food Systems Platform in the Mediterranean, within the United Nations One Planet Network, for Achieving the 2030 Agenda’s SDGs.

 

13.00-13.30 CONCLUSIONS

CHANGE OF ROUTE: A TRANSFORMATIONAL CHANGE. THE PALERMO CALL 2019 FOR A COMMON ACTION IN THE MEDITERRANEAN TOWARDS MORE SUSTAINABLE FOOD SYSTEMS AND THE REVITALIZATION OF THE MEDITERRANEAN DIET AS A SUSTAINABLE DIET MODEL FOR ACCELERATING THE 2030 AGENDA IN THE REGION

 

 

 

 

THE SECOND WORLD CONFERENCE ON THE REVITALIZATION OF THE MEDITERRANEAN DIET IN PALERMO

 

The Mediterranean is currently seen mostly as a dividing sea, but culturally diverse countries are still found united within the Mediterranean diet heritage, without this distorting the identity of each of them.

In the Mediterranean, there are different food cultures, expressed in the wide variety of foods of the Mediterranean diet, scientifically recognized as one of the healthiest diets in the world. Paradoxically, the impressive quantity of scientific publications on the health benefits of the Mediterranean Diet did not result in changing current unhealthy and unsustainable food consumption patterns in Mediterranean countries.

 

The Mediterranean diet, acknowledged by UNESCO as an intangible cultural heritage of humanity, is testimony to the strong connections between peoples, who live around the same sea, their territories and their ways of life. Today, these ties need to be strongly safeguarded from increasing erosion and revitalized as a contemporary sustainable and healthy life style. The Mediterranean is today a region in which growing ecological, economic, social and cultural challenges coexist with unresolved international tensions. Significant discrepancies in development levels between countries, together with regional conflicts, raise more challenges for the sustainable future of the Mediterranean areas.

Across the Mediterranean region, there is an “inequalitarian drift” in the current relations between Northern Mediterranean countries and Southern-Eastern ones, where many difficulties are encountered due to the existing economic, social and cultural disparities.

In fact, the macroeconomic indicators of the Mediterranean region emphasize the marked heterogeneity among the countries and a growing gap between the advanced economies in the northern shores and the less developed ones in the southern/eastern ones. Indeed, the region is facing unprecedented global challenges that affect the sustainability of food systems, from agriculture to fisheries, and thus the livelihoods of millions of farmers, fishers, herders, and forest-dependent communities and their families.

Current Mediterranean sustainability challenges include:

  1. Ecological sustainability: over-exploitation of natural resources and adverse impacts of environmental degradation by climate change (such as water scarcity, desertification, drought, land degradation, the loss of biodiversity); lack of good practices for resilience and ecosystem services, urban sprawl, chemical contamination, marine pollution, marine invasive non-indigenous species.

  2. Economic sustainability: population growth, increased demand for food, poverty and unemployment (especially among young people), conflict areas, food insecurity, migration from rural areas and other countries, urbanization, predominance of imported food, low profitability for smallholders, food sovereignty, lack of efficient rural sustainable development policies (particularly for women and youth), food loss and waste;

  3. Social and cultural sustainability: food insecurity, malnutrition (undernutrition, hidden hunger and obesity), growing public health expenditures, erosion of the Mediterranean diet heritage, food cultures and traditional, indigenous knowledge, changes in Mediterranean societies and roles of women (cf. gender equality and inclusion), emerging new unsustainable globalized lifestyle behaviors, progressive urbanization, migration from rural areas and from other countries, changing food procurement.

 

The Mediterranean coasts account for 30 per cent of global tourist arrivals in the region. Global shipping routes through the Mediterranean Sea make the density of maritime traffic exceptional for this semi-closed sea. Approximately one-third of the Mediterranean population is concentrated along its coastal hydrological basins, where environmental stresses have increased significantly. Urban agglomerations on the Mediterranean coasts, along with tourist infrastructure, have resulted in the development of large and mega-cities, with consequent pollution pressures from the growing population and the increase in economic activities in a particularly fragile environment along the coastal zones.

The marine resources and ecosystems of this region have come under increasing pressure in recent decades, driven by demographic and economic growth as well as by diversification and intensification of marine and maritime activities, as well as the expansion of the Suez Canal. Pollution, alien species, illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing, as well as overfishing - all have adverse impacts, not only on the marine ecosystems, but also on the well-being of Mediterranean coastal communities and riparian countries. The recent surge in the exploitation of hydrocarbons and minerals under the Mediterranean seabed also poses increased threats to the environment.

In particular, the NENA (Near East and North Africa) countries are facing pressing challenges that are greatly affecting their capacity to increase sustainably food supplies for a growing population (e.g. booming young populations) and consequent increased food demand and market prices, increasing poverty, food insecurity and malnutrition as well as transboundary plant, animal and fish pests and diseases and man-made conflicts. The NENA is a region intensively exposed to the dynamics of climate change, such as drought and desertification processes, which contribute to escalating the vulnerability of rural livelihoods. Food losses and waste (FL&W) in the NENA region are high and contribute to reduced food availability, aggravate water scarcity, adverse environmental impacts and increased food imports in an already highly import-dependent region. Qualitative losses in the region are very high and exacerbated by deficient market infrastructure, especially for food destined for domestic markets. This includes a lack of cold chain infrastructure, poor transportation such as in non-refrigerated vehicles, and open air markets where food is exposed to heat and sunlight. These factors speed up food degradation and create health hazards. Measures to reduce quantitative losses will also reduce qualitative losses. The causes and origins of FL&W are attributed to poor farming systems and deficient infrastructure and practices at all post-harvest stages of the supply chain. In the last two decades, the population has doubled due to high birth rates, with this demographic change taking place rapidly on a rich but fragile resource base, with acknowledged limitations in terms of land, water and food production, especially characterized by rain-dependent production and traditional agro-silvo-pastoral systems and artisanal fisheries. Insecurity is aggravated by high unemployment rates in the general population, especially among youth. The impacts of poverty and unemployment have contributed to social marginalization, which is further compounded by income disparities, and gives rise to social and political instability. Mounting economic, social, and environmental strains and their resultant implications on livelihood security make the situation unsustainable in NENA countries.

All Mediterranean countries are passing through a “nutrition transition” in which under-nutrition problems (wasting, stunting, underweight) and micronutrient deficiencies coexist with over-nutrition problems (overweight, obesity) and diet-related chronic non-communicable diseases. This nutrition transition is alarming as it affects negatively the livelihood of all people in the region. In many Mediterranean countries, eating habits are changing towards “Westernized” style dietary patterns. The urbanization of society, the integration of women into the labor market, long working hours and retail development are modifying considerably dietary behaviors. Therefore, this growing nutrition transition also has a direct effect on the erosion of the Mediterranean Diet, as noted by several surveys that is increasingly less followed by the populations of the Mediterranean countries, with undesirable impacts not only on health and nutrition but also on cultural, social, economic, environment sustainability in these territories. Data show that the Mediterranean diet is becoming less the diet of choice in most Mediterranean countries, despite the fact that its health and nutrition benefits have been supported by scientific evidences since the early epidemiologic and cohort studies conducted more than 50 years ago. The Mediterranean diet is associated with its characteristic food products, inextricably linked to the Mediterranean agrarian and sea landscapes, with their diversified ecological, cultural, social and economic dimensions. The symbolic value of food and its identification and differentiation has led to the creation of strong links between local food and local heritage and identity -- the construction of cuisines de terroir(s), and local-food production knowledge and skills -- through the establishment of systems modeled on the geographical indication of provenance. These products of origin-linked quality are strongly connected to the sustainability of the Mediterranean diet and the preservation of biodiversity. Exacerbation of gene pool depletion due to erosion of agro-biodiversity as a result of globalization trends and climate change is reducing the sustainability of local production systems, along with the ability to safeguard the Mediterranean Diet heritage based on indigenous food species and varieties.

The Mediterranean is among the richest regions in biodiversity in the world, home to a multiplicity of ecosystems and species. It has in fact been identified as a `hotspot’ of biodiversity, an area featuring exceptional concentrations of endemic and historically imported species, but which are sadly experiencing unprecedented loss of habitat. This loss of agricultural diversity occurring around the region has negative repercussions on the food and nutritional security and livelihood of the local populations. The loss of indigenous knowledge on the use of local crops in favor of a small number of recently imported non-native species and varieties has affected traditional food production systems and biodiversity across the Mediterranean area.

 

 

THE SECOND WORLD CONFERENCE

 

HISTORICAL CONTEXTUALIZATION OF THE SECOND WORLD CONFERENCE IN PALERMO

 

Since 2002, the Forum on Mediterranean Food Cultures, CIHEAM-Bari, Las Palmas University of Gran Canarias, La Sapienza University of Rome, and ICAF (International Commission of the Anthropology of Food and Nutrition), have developed a continuous collaboration on the Mediterranean diet as a resource of sustainable development for Mediterranean countries.

In 2005, in Rome, “The Call of Rome for a Common Action on Food in the Mediterranean” was issued on the occasion of the third Euro-Med Forum "Dialogues between Cultures and Civilizations of the Mediterranean on Food Security", jointly organized by the Forum on Mediterranean Food Cultures and the Sapienza University of Rome, in collaboration with CIHEAM-Bari, ICAF, and the support of the County of Sicily.

In 2009, in Parma, at the 3rd International Conference on "The Mediterranean Diet Today: A Model of Sustainable Diet", jointly organized by CIISCAM (Interuniversity International Centre of Studies on Mediterranean Food Cultures), in collaboration with the Mediterranean Food Cultures Forum, CIHEAM-Bari, Bioversity International, and the technical support of FAO, the Mediterranean diet pyramid was revised in the light not only of its well-known health benefits, but also of its other sustainable benefits for the environment, the economy of the territories, and its social and cultural values.

As follow up, in 2010, at FAO in Rome, the Scientific Symposium "Biodiversity and Sustainable diets: United Against Hunger" was organized by FAO and Biodiversity International, with the collaboration of INRAN, CIHEAM-Bari, FENS, IUNS, in which a common position was reached on the following definition, internationally acknowledged, of “sustainable diets”: Sustainable Diets are those diets with low environmental impacts which contribute to food and nutrition security and to healthy life for present and future generations. Sustainable diets are protective and respectful of biodiversity and ecosystems, culturally acceptable, accessible, economically fair and affordable; nutritionally adequate, safe and healthy; while optimizing natural and human resources”.

In 2011, FAO and CIHEAM identified the Mediterranean diet as a sustainable diet case study for the characterization and evaluation of the sustainability of food consumption and diets in the Mediterranean region.

In 2012, in Malta, on the ninth meeting of Agriculture Ministers of the CIHEAM member countries, the Ministerial Declaration highlighted the role of the Mediterranean diet as a "driver" for sustainable food systems within the Regional development strategies.

In 2015, at the EXPO of Milan,the Med Diet EXPO Milan 2015 Call: Time to Act " was issued by CIHEAM on the occasion of the International Conference “Does the Mediterranean Diet Still Exist? Nutrition-Health-Quality-Sustainability-Innovation-Evolution", jointly organized by CIHEAM-Bari, CNR, CREA, ENEA and Forum on Mediterranean Food Cultures and endorsed by 81 institutions.

Always, in 2015, at the EXPO of Milan, the Sustainable Food Systems Programme (SFSP) of the United Nations 10 Year Framework of Programmes on Sustainable Consumption and Production Patterns (10YFP), now called “One Planet” was established, with FAO and CIHEAM part of its Multistakeholder Advisory Committee (MAC). .

In 2016, in Milan, the First World Conference of the Mediterranean Diet on "Revitalizing the Mediterranean Diet from a Healthy Dietary Pattern to a Healthy Mediterranean Sustainable Lifestyle", was organized by IFMeD (International Foundation of Mediterranean Diet), in collaboration with CIHEAM-Bari and FENS (Federation of European Nutrition Societies), and the FAO technical collaboration for the CIHEAM side event “From production to consumption: The Mediterranean diet as a lever in the Mediterranean, within the framework of the SDGs”. On this occasion, “the Call for Action on the Revitalization of the Mediterranean Diet” was issued and endorsed by 37 scientific societies, research institutes and national and international organizations.

In 2017, in Bari, the FAO/CIHEAM International Workshop "Development of Voluntary Guidelines for the Sustainability of the Mediterranean Diet in the Mediterranean Region" was organized at CIHEAM-Bari in the context of the One Planet Sustainable Food Programme Systems of the United Nations (SFSP), with the participation of several Mediterranean members of the SFSP: Hebrew University, Al Quds University, ENEA, UNESCO Chair Universidad Oberta de Catalunya, IFMeD, CIISCAM, HHF, CREA (formerly CRA-NUT), University of AIX-Marseille/Inserm/INRA, FQH, American University of Beirut, Chouaib Doukkali University, CNR. One objective of this workshop was to finalize a proposal for the development of a One Planet SFSP Mediterranean Multistakeholder Platform on Sustainable Food Systems. The implementation of the 10YFP is inscribed as target 12.1 into the SDG 12 on Sustainable Production and Consumption.

 

SCOPE AND OBJECTIVES

The Second World Conference has the aim to better identify strategies, programs and actions, able to provide solutions for coping with current critical challenges in the region through more sustainable Mediterranean food systems, by bridging sustainable food consumption and production through the Mediterranean diet as a lever.

The Conference has the scope, with a science-based approach, to continue strengthening the dialogue, between North and South Mediterranean countries, by linking food security and nutrition to sustainability, towards a shift towards more sustainable food systems in the region, for ensuring sustainable development, security, stability and l well-being for present and future generations.

The underpinning rationale of the Second World Conference is that a better understanding of the multidimensionality of the sustainability of food systems will strengthen the dialogue between North and South countries to address growing challenges for food security, nutrition and sustainability, in the Mediterranean region

In the international debate on the sustainability of food systems, the interest on sustainable diets has grown in recent years, by linking consumption and production, and therefore, the interest on the Mediterranean diet as a sustainable diet model, with multiple benefits and country-specific variations, has been <sp