H.E. Dr. Rania Al-Mashat, Minister of Planning, Economic Development and International Cooperation, delivered the opening remarks at the launch of the 50th edition of the Global Food Policy Report 2025, issued by the International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI). The event also marked the 10th anniversary of IFPRI’s Cairo office and was held under the patronage of the Ministry of Planning, Economic Development and International Cooperation, in collaboration with the International Initiative for Impact Evaluation (3ie).
The ceremony was attended by Dr. Stephen Were Omamo, IFPRI Africa Director; Dr. Sikandra Kurdi, IFPRI Egypt Program Leader; representatives from the National Planning Institute, the Central Agency for Public Mobilization and Statistics (CAPMAS), the Ministry of Social Solidarity; several international organizations; and regional partners.
Delivering her remarks via video message, H.E. Dr. Rania Al-Mashat stated that while the world has made notable progress in reducing global hunger, recent data reveals the fragility of these gains. Hunger declined from 8.5% of the global population in 2023 to 8.2% in 2024. Yet achieving Sustainable Development Goal 2 will require sustained momentum and intensified efforts. Millions of people still suffer from malnutrition, and many families remain unable to afford a healthy diet despite improvements in global food prices.
In this context, she affirmed that Egypt continues to advance food security efforts through multiple pillars and in an integrated manner across state institutions. These efforts support the expansion of agricultural land, improve living standards in rural areas, and promote sustainable food and agricultural systems.
She added that food security is closely intertwined with climate action. Through the National Climate Change Strategy 2050 and initiatives such as the NWFE program, Egypt has placed food and agricultural systems at the core of its climate agenda. She noted that international partnerships have been instrumental in driving progress. This year, Egypt and its European partners launched the Food Resilience Enhancement Project to strengthen grain storage capacity and reinforce the strategic reserve.
H.E. Al-Mashat also highlighted Egypt’s ongoing work to enhance resilience across value chains, including supporting smallholder farmers and rural enterprises, scaling up climate-smart agricultural practices, and improving storage, logistics, and trade systems. She emphasized that over the past decade, IFPRI’s Cairo office has been a trusted partner, providing research and analysis that have significantly enriched national policy dialogues.
H.E. Al-Mashat expressed her appreciation for the Global Food Policy Report 2025, noting that it offers a clear and comprehensive vision on food systems, climate resilience, agricultural transformation, and the socioeconomic dynamics shaping global development. She stressed that evidence-based analysis across food system sectors — covering climate impacts, social protection, gender, governance, and innovation — remains an essential resource for governments and development partners striving to design effective, inclusive, and forward-looking policies.
She concluded by affirming that the insights contained in this year’s report will continue to guide policymakers in strengthening resilience, improving resource allocation, and advancing more inclusive and sustainable development pathways. H.E. Al-Mashat extended her sincere congratulations to IFPRI on its golden jubilee and to the Cairo office on a decade of meaningful impact.