FAO Podcasts

FAO

The FAO Podcasts, a multilingual audio series produced by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, addresses pressing global issues including hunger, poverty, agriculture, and sustainability. With content available in English, Spanish, and French, our dedicated audio team ensures these vital conversations are accessible to a global audience. Our three distinct formats - the concise FAO Brief, insightful FAO Talks, and the deeply human documentary pieces - serve as your gateway to understanding and participating in these critical global discussions. Tune in, enrich your perspective, and join us in shaping a more sustainable future for all.

  1. 3 hrs ago

    Can Social Protection Prevent the Next Food Crisis? | Hormuz Crisis 2026 | The Work We Do

    The Strait of Hormuz crisis is disrupting global energy and fertilizer markets. For the hundreds of millions already living in extreme poverty, the effects could be severe. In this episode, Ben Davis, Director of FAO's Rural Transformation and Gender Equality Division, and Marco Knowles, Senior Policy Officer in the same division, make the case for social protection as a more effective response than the costly subsidies that governments are reaching for.   They challenge the idea that cash transfers are handouts, drawing on rigorous evidence showing that rural households invest them productively in agricultural inputs, education, and local economies. And they explain why targeted social assistance outperforms subsidies in both efficiency and reach.    Policy brief: The role of social protection in addressing the impacts of the 2026 conflict in the Middle East – Implications for poverty, food security and smallholder production  https://doi.org/10.4060/cd9363en   0:00 Introduction  0:36 Why social protection is urgent now  2:54 Why social protection systems must exist before crises  6:47 Cash transfers are investments  11:37 Social protection vs subsidies  17:44 The politics of cash transfers  25:18 Lessons from COVID-19  28:36 How to finance social protection  31:26 What countries should do now  33:31 Social protection beyond shock response  36:01 Country examples  39:05 What success could look like in 10 years

    42 min
  2. May 28

    The Work We Do – Ep 5. Nutrition, agriculture, and the fight for healthy diets. Lynnette Neufeld

    In this episode of The Work We Do, we speak with Lynnette Neufeld, Director of FAO's Food and Nutrition Division, about the complex realities behind today's nutrition challenges.  The conversation explores the double burden of malnutrition, where undernutrition and obesity can coexist within the same country, community, household or even individual. We also discuss why healthy diets costs more and the difficulties of advancing nutrition policies in contexts shaped by conflicting interests, commercial pressure and the need for stronger policy coherence.  Lynnette reflects on her years working on the evaluation of Mexico's landmark conditional cash transfer programme, the mentors and experiences in Latin America that shaped her path from young researcher to senior leader in international nutrition, and her vision for FAO's role in the nutrition agenda: helping shift the focus from simply feeding the world to enabling access to and consumption of healthy diets for all.  00:00 Evidence over interests  00:45 Intro  00:59 The double burden of malnutrition  04:44 Policy responses  08:20 Why unhealthy food is cheaper  12:54 Nutrition beyond health  14:41 Ultra-processed foods  19:08 Commercial pressure  22:39 The role of advertising  25:30 Governments, business and civil society  30:14 Healthy diets and misinformation  32:51 FAO's role in nutrition  39:02 Mexico's cash transfer programme  42:17 Evaluation and implementation  49:00 Latin America and mentorship  01:10 Healthy diets

    55 min
  3. Apr 13

    Update on the Global Agrifood Implications of the 2026 Conflict in the Middle East - The Work We Do

    The Strait of Hormuz has been effectively closed since 28 February. As of 13 April, vessels are still not moving in meaningful numbers. The last ships to leave before the blockade are now reaching their destinations, meaning the real supply gap is only beginning to materialise.   Key messages:   • Before the conflict began, the strait carried 30-35% of global crude oil, 20% of natural gas, and up to 30% of internationally traded fertilizers.   • Food commodity prices have not risen yet because existing stocks are absorbing the shock. But if the strait traffic does not resume, the shocks to energy and fertilizer markets will translate into higher commodity and retail prices later in 2026 and into 2027.   • The crop calendar is the key constraint. As planting seasons begin, farmers must choose between absorbing higher input costs or reducing fertilizer and other input use. They need targeted, timebound support, as do low-income countries relying on food and fertilizer imports.   • The disruption is not contained to the Gulf or South Asia. It is moving from east to west and from south to north. Export restrictions by major producers risk compounding the supply shortfall.   • With diplomatic solutions and the right policy, there is still time to contain the current situation and prevent it from turning into a global food crisis.   This episode was recorded on 11 April 2025. Host: Katrin Park Produced by: Eduardo De La Chica Copyright: FAO

    30 min

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The FAO Podcasts, a multilingual audio series produced by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, addresses pressing global issues including hunger, poverty, agriculture, and sustainability. With content available in English, Spanish, and French, our dedicated audio team ensures these vital conversations are accessible to a global audience. Our three distinct formats - the concise FAO Brief, insightful FAO Talks, and the deeply human documentary pieces - serve as your gateway to understanding and participating in these critical global discussions. Tune in, enrich your perspective, and join us in shaping a more sustainable future for all.

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