SEED FUNDING JOINT PROGRAMMES
Egypt
Strengthening Sustainable and Resilient Food and Nutrition Systems in Egypt for SDG Acceleration

PROJECT TITLE | Strengthening Sustainable and Resilient Food and Nutrition Systems in Egypt for SDG Acceleration |
Context | Egypt engaged actively in the 2021 Food Systems Summit process, convening a national dialogue and developing national pathways with recommended interventions for improving food security and nutrition by 2030. To enhance multi-sectorial coordination and spearhead the transformation process, the Government created a National Committee for Food and Nutrition Systems chaired by the Prime Minister and bringing together several ministries to coordinate joint actions. Strengthening coordination mechanisms, fostering multi-stakeholder partnerships, consolidating accountability structures, focusing on the availability of evidence, analysis, and data, are identified as key priorities to strengthen the food systems governance structure in Egypt. |
PUNOs | WFP, FAO, UNICEF |
Contribution to SDGs | SDG 2 Zero Hunger, SDG 3 Good Health and Well-being, 12 Responsible Consumption and Production. |
Contribution to other SDG transitions | Climate, biodiversity, pollution |
Duration | June 2024 – May 2025 |
Expected financial leverage | $87,000 (PUNO co-financing) |
Alignment with SG Call to Action | Policy integration; Food systems governance; Research, data, technology and innovation; Inclusive and participatory design; Private sector engagement |
Outcomes | The JP contributes to strengthening policy and governance frameworks for food systems transformation and generating evidence and analysis on key dimensions of food systems to inform decision-making, supporting the work of the National Committee for Food and Nutrition Systems. The JP complements the government’s flagship program “Country Platform for the Nexus of Water, Food and Energy”, which provides a mechanism to mobilize climate finance and private investments. |
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UNFSS+4 briefings set the stage for a transformative Stocktake in 2025

Ahead of the second UN Food Systems Summit Stocktake (UNFSS+4), the UN, in collaboration with the Stocktake co-hosts – Ethiopia and Italy – convened Member States for a series of briefings. The briefings set the direction of travel, and emphasized urgency and a strong focus on collaboration and investment to build momentum for the acceleration of global food systems transformation. These briefings, along with discussions among non-state stakeholders, underscored the urgency of the Stocktake, scheduled for 28–29 July 2025 in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
Briefings with Member States
Two Member State briefings were held on 18 and 24 February, in New York and Nairobi respectively, with remote participation from Rome and Geneva. The UN Deputy Secretary-General (DSG) hosted the meetings, joined by high-level representatives from the governments of Ethiopia and Italy, and key UN agencies (FAO, IFAD, WFP, UNEP, UNON), for discussions around the UNFSS+4 vision, objectives, roadmap, and expected outcomes. The discussions reiterated the urgency of collective action in the face of climate change, conflict, economic disparities, and food insecurity during a time of polycrises. The DSG underscored the need to motivate investment in food systems that would help address and overcome these challenges.
Briefing with National Food Systems Convenors
Joined by over 90 participants from 58 countries, the National Convenor Briefing, held on 24 February 2025 in Nairobi, Kenya, reinforced the critical role of National Convenors in driving food systems transformation at the country level. The DSG underscored that food systems transformation is at a turning point, with only five years remaining to meet the 2030 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). She urged National Convenors to move beyond best practices and focus on investment mobilization, policy coherence, and knowledge-sharing to drive measurable change. She also emphasized private sector engagement and digital innovation as key enablers of scaling sustainable food systems solutions.
FAO Director-General Qu Dongyu reaffirmed FAO’s commitment to supporting National Convenors, describing them as the "real game changers" who translate global strategies into local action. He emphasized the need for technological innovation, climate-smart agriculture, and stronger data-driven decision-making to accelerate food systems transformation.
IFAD President Alvaro Lario highlighted the urgent need for increased investment, calling for greater financial inclusion for smallholder farmers and new funding mechanisms to support national food security initiatives.
National Convenors shared progress updates, highlighting successes in scaling up school feeding programs, expanding digital agriculture services, and strengthening public-private partnerships. However, many also cited financial constraints, limited access to technology, and the need for stronger multi-sectoral coordination as ongoing challenges. Some countries called for better alignment between food systems strategies and broader economic development goals to ensure long-term sustainability.
The briefing concluded with a robust roadmap toward UNFSS+4, including finalizing voluntary national progress reports, conducting regional consultations, and engaging stakeholders. With the Stocktake fast approaching, National Convenors were encouraged to seize this opportunity to drive real investment and policy action, ensuring that UNFSS+4 delivers tangible progress toward more sustainable, resilient, and inclusive food systems. Read the summary report.
Briefing with private sector actors
The DSG met with private sector thought leaders to share updates on the UNFSS+4 process. The private sector reaffirmed their commitment to support the Stocktake's success, discussed initial potential entry points for engagement, and offered insights and recommendations to enhance their involvement leading up to and during the event. Overall, they welcomed the space for meaningful engagement of the private sector and exploring options for investment partnerships and good practice that can be featured at the Stocktake.
UNFSS+4 kick-off briefing
On 25 February, a kick off meeting brought together representatives from civil society, academia, youth, science, farmer organisations and the private sector to inform the design of the Summit and priority issues including mobilizing international and regional financial institutions and banks, engaging various actors including the private sector, youth and academia, social movements, and collecting their perspectives, and accelerating food systems transformation through a human rights lens.
The road ahead
The UNFSS+4 Stocktake is shaping up to be a defining moment for accelerated action for food system transformation. Over the next few months, regional consultations – including the UNFSS+4 Regional Preparatory Meetings, a Preparatory Youth Conference, a Pre-Summit moment, virtual touchpoints, and national reports will offer milestones and inform the UNFSS+4 programme in Addis Ababa.
With a strong focus on inclusivity, accountability, and investment, the UNFSS+4 aims to bridge policy commitments with real-world implementation, ensuring that food systems transformation remains at the forefront of the global agenda.