It is time to rethink how we grow, share  and consume our food.
		    If done right, agriculture, forestry and  fisheries can provide nutritious food for all and generate decent incomes,  while supporting people-centred rural development and protecting the  environment.
		    But right now, our soils, freshwater, oceans, forests and biodiversity  are being rapidly degraded. Climate change is putting even more pressure on the  resources we depend on, increasing  risks associated with disasters such as droughts and floods.  Many rural women and men can no longer make ends meet on their land, forcing  them to migrate to cities in search of opportunities.
		    A profound change of the global food and  agriculture system is needed if we are to nourish today's 925 million hungry  and the additional 2 billion people expected by 2050.
		    The food and agriculture sector offers key  solutions for development, and is central for hunger and poverty eradication.
										Facts and figures
						- Agriculture is the single largest employer  in the world, providing livelihoods for 40 per cent of today's global  population. It is the largest source of income and jobs for poor rural households.
 				- 500 million small farms worldwide, most still rainfed, provide up to 80  per cent of food consumed in a large part of the developing world. Investing in  smallholder women and men is an important way to increase food security and nutrition  for the poorest, as well as food production for local and global markets.
 				- Since the 1900s, some 75 per cent of crop  diversity has been lost from farmers' fields. Better use of agricultural  biodiversity can contribute to more nutritious diets, enhanced livelihoods for  farming communities and more resilient and sustainable farming systems.
 				- 1.3 billion people have no access to electricity worldwide - most of which  live in rural areas of the developing world. Energy poverty in many regions is  a fundamental barrier to reducing hunger and ensuring that the world can  produce enough food to meet future demand.