Related items
Showing items related by metadata.
-
Brochure, flyer, fact-sheetCase study: the COVID-19 outbreak in Beijing’s Xinfadi Market and its impact on the food supply chain 2020
Also available in:
There were seven confirmed local cases of COVID-19 in Beijing on 11 and 12 June 2020. Epidemiological investigations confirmed that all cases were related to the Beijing Xinfadi Agricultural Produce Wholesale Market. The market supplies 80 percent of Beijing’s demand for agricultural products. Notably, it accounts for roughly 70 percent of Beijing’s market for vegetables. On 13 June, the Xinfadi market and some other markets with COVID-19 cases connected with Xinfadi were temporarily closed. Measures including nucleic acid testing, environment sampling, isolation of close contacts and closed management (controlled entry and exit) of the relevant communities were implemented. Meanwhile, to guarantee food supply, trading areas were moved; trading volumes in other large wholesale markets increased; the point-to-point mechanism for monitoring and replenishing was strengthened; food supply was shipped directly from producers to end retailers; market price control measures were enforced. In this case, the endemic was effectively controlled within four weeks from the outbreak. There were no obvious shortages of the major types of food and prices did not fluctuate significantly. Although there was room for improvement in a few issues such as the way the market was closed, information release and the protection of vulnerable groups, the measures adopted for disease control and food supply guarantee were generally successful. -
Book (stand-alone)Second rapid assessment of food and nutrition security in the context of COVID-19 in Bangladesh
May – July 2020
2020Also available in:
No results found.COVID-19 is a global health crisis that has caused a shock to food and agricultural systems around the world, affecting production, supply chains, trade, markets, and people’s livelihoods and nutrition. This second assessment provides an invaluable and wide-ranging analysis that underlines the scale and scope of COVID-19’s impact on food and agriculture in Bangladesh. It is based on qualitative data collected during May and June 2020. The analysis determined that the entire food supply chain was hampered by the COVID-19 lockdown and resulting economic crisis that occurred from mid-March to May. The study detailed and analyzed major impacts. -
Brochure, flyer, fact-sheetFrom impact to transformation – improving the food supply chains in Kuwait in the context of COVID-19 pandemic
Kuwait policy note
2021Also available in:
No results found.The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic has shifted peoples lives and the State of Kuwait has demonstrated strong commitment in curbing the virus and addressing the impacts on all sectors of society. Kuwait used a variety of instruments and reduced the risks associated with international markets, including ensuring food availability for all by focusing on markets, consumers’ needs and preferences, and most prominently, mobilized the successful efforts of the private sector and civil society. This policy brief is drawn out from three virtual consultations (webinars) organised by United Nations Resident Coordinator’s Office in Kuwait in collaboration with ESCWA, FAO, GSSCPD, PAAF, PAFN, and UNOPS2 between May and July 2020. While some recommendations focus on issues in the short term, they primarily target the policy-level actions required for building resilience of food systems to minimise the disruptions in supply chains in the long-term perspectives.
Users also downloaded
Showing related downloaded files
No results found.