Extracts of the side events of 28/07
28/07 Country-Owned Financial Intelligence and Strategies in a Changing Landscape
13:00-14:15 | Room: CR-3 CONCEPT NOTE 6 pp.
Report: IFAD (2025) Tracking Financial Flows to Food Systems 44 pp.
Six African governments have requested access to the Framework for Tracking Financial Flows to Food Systems (3FS Framework) to ensure comprehensive financial intelligence on their in-country food system flows. Following completion in Kenya and Niger, the 3FS is now being extended to the governments of Benin, Nigeria, Rwanda, and Tanzania—alongside Bangladesh and Indonesia. The 3FS Framework, co-designed by IFAD and the World Bank, empowers national leaders and stakeholders with critical financial intelligence—combining financial data, actionable insights, and information across domestic, external, and private financing streams. It enables them to identify food financing opportunities, anticipate shortfalls.
Six African governments have requested access to the Framework for Tracking Financial Flows to Food Systems (3FS Framework) to ensure comprehensive financial intelligence on their in-country food system flows. Following completion in Kenya and Niger, the 3FS is now being extended to the governments of Benin, Nigeria, Rwanda, and Tanzania—alongside Bangladesh and Indonesia. The 3FS Framework, co-designed by IFAD and the World Bank, empowers national leaders and stakeholders with critical financial intelligence—combining financial data, actionable insights, and information across domestic, external, and private financing streams. It enables them to identify food financing opportunities, anticipate shortfalls.
Country representatives from Benin, Rwanda, Kenya, and Niger shared key insights and experiences on how financial intelligence can help shape their country-led national food systems financing strategies amid rapid shifts in the food systems finance landscape.
28/07 The Role of Multistakeholder Approaches
Through the lens of six examples, this side event will highlight the potential of Multistakeholder Approaches (MSAs) to align cross-sectoral efforts in support of sustainable, inclusive, and resilient food systems, while advancing ambitions on climate, biodiversity, and land.
A central feature was the launch of the Policy Brief on Soil Health (4. pp.) by the Partners for Change Network, providing practical guidance for integrated policy implementation.
28/07 Lessons from a multi-stakeholder and multi-sectoral approach in Mauritania
13:00-14:15 | Room: CR-6
The session presented lessons learned from Mauritania's multidimensional approach to sustainable agri-food systems transformation, bringing together diverse efforts and partnerships across government agencies and development partners to improve nutrition, resilience, agri-food productivity and institutional mechanisms governing food systems.
28/07 Advancing Food Systems Transformation through Scaling Finance and Partnerships for Food Loss and Waste Reduction
14:15-15:30 | Room: Small Briefing Room READ THE FLYER
Ghana, together with the Food is Never Waste Coalition, in collaboration with member states and partners including the Cool Coalition and OECD demonstrated substantial progress on Food loss and waste (FLW) as part of national pathways, and how multi-stakeholder partnerships can unlock investment and accelerate scalable, systemic impact toward halving FLW by 2030.
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