This year's G8 Summit was held in L’Aquila, Italy, to discuss the world economy, development, climate change, trade and international political issues. A significant portion of the three-day summit included major emerging economies and other key international players. Several African leaders joined the summit on the last day.
The G8 countries have only a year before the Gleneagles commitments to the poorest are to be delivered, but some G8 countries, particularly the Summit chair Italy, are falling dangerously behind on their commitments. As the global economic crisis and the threat of climate change compound extreme poverty, ONE urged the world’s wealthiest countries to: (1) be accountable to their individual Official Development Assistance (ODA) commitments by setting out clear timetables on how to get their promises back on track; (2) provide US$25 billion over three years for medium and long-term agricultural initiatives to support smallholder farmers in Africa; (3) fully implement and expand upon previous commitments on health such as to provide adequate funding to the Global Fund to fight Aids, Tuberculosis and Malaria and to implement the Global Health Care Partnership to strengthen health systems; and (4) agree to mobilise adequate funding for climate change adaptation and mitigation efforts in developing countries. (Read ONE’s policy perspectives for the 2009 L’Aquila Summit.)
Several important agreements were reached at the summit. Significant progress was made on agriculture, where the international community committed to mobilising US$20 billion over three years to help farmers in developing world boost production over the long term and has helped inject fresh momentum in a sector that has long been neglected. On accountability, the G8 countries published a preliminary accountability report at the Summit, and pledged to develop a comprehensive framework to monitor and progress and strengthen the effectiveness of their actions and publish the full report in time for the 2010 Summit. The G8 also asked for an international assessment in 2010 to examine what is needed in order to achieve the Millennium Development Goals.
A total of seven documents were approved during this year's G8 Summit. One of the most significant agreements reached was the joint Declaration on Global Food Security, referred to as the "L'Aquila Food Security Initiative" (AFSI). With strong U.S. leadership, 40 government heads and international organizations committed to providing US$20 billion over three years to help farmers in poor countries boost productivity, signalling a new focus on sustainable agricultural investment previously absent from G8 communiqués. MORE
Development assistance for agriculture could help provide the resources and the technical expertise to move smallholder farmers out of poverty, but development assistance for agriculture has declined dramatically in the last two-decades. Land-use policies and climate change have exacerbated the dire situation, as have the recent global food and financial crises. ONE urges development partners to implement the following recommendations: MORE
The 2009 G8 Summit is a year before the Gleneagles commitments to the poorest are to be delivered. The G8 countries collectively need to deliver an average of an additional $7.2 billion of effective development assistance each year in 2009 and 2010, but G8 President Italy and France are falling dangerously behind on their commitments. MORE
Sara Kianpour from our ONE France office reports live from the G8 in Deauville. The G8 Summit ended yesterday and here's a quick summary of what we learned:For the first time, freedom and democracy are headlining and ONE welcomes them. However, we are concerned that the final statements ... More
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Sara Kianpour from our ONE France office reports live from the G8 in Deauville. The Final Deauville Declaration has been made public. It is full of good intentions. Great. However, you must read between the lines to find (or not) concrete commitments, particularly on immunization, from the G8.At ONE ... More
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Sara Kianpour from our ONE France office reports live from the G8 in Paris. During two days, the French capital was the world capital of the Internet. The e-G8 gathered the web elite –- from Google's Eric Schmidt to Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg to Rupert Murdoch -- in the Tuileries Park ... More
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Sara Kianpour from our ONE France office reports live from the G8 in Deauville. The first elements of the final communique were revealed in the press. The Arab spring and democracy in North Africa placed high on the agenda. At ONE, we are delighted. However, we believe it is essential ... More
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We have another new face on the ONE Blog, Friederike Röder. She is ONE France's new policy manager and we are very excited to have her on board. Say hi in the comments below! Following the tradition started last year at the G8 in Canada, this year’s French ... More
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More details have emerged in the past couple weeks on the G8’s commitment to improve maternal, newborn and child health through the “Muskoka Initiative,” but not enough to deliver on the G8’s other critical commitment at the 2010 summit - to enhance their own accountability.The initiative (which includes ... More
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The G8's US$20bn agreement to provide support for the world's poorest farmers was welcomed today by advocacy group ONE. The deal was expected to amount to US$15bn over three years, but at the last minute the communiqué announced the figure had risen to US$20bn. The deal also includes significant steps to make progress on the effectiveness of aid for agriculture.
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Leaders of the world's eight biggest economies must act this week to rescue their aid promises to Africa, advocacy group ONE said today, including agreeing a special deal for the continent's farmers. MORE