5 October 2012, Rome - Some $538 million was mobilized to support FAO programmes during the first eight months of 2012, representing a 28 percent increase on the same period last year, FAO announced today.
The amount includes voluntary contributions of $498 million as well as FAO's own Technical Cooperation Programme (TCP), at $40 million. Of the voluntary contributions, $70 million is from the European Union, $77 million from Unilateral Trust Funds (UTF) projects and over $50 million from the United States of America.
The largest beneficiary is the Somalia programme, with $82.7 million in new approvals from various sources.
In addition, during the same period, through its cooperative programmes with international financing institutions, FAO has assisted its member countries in programming almost$2.8 billion in investments for agriculture and rural development projects.
The share of Official Development Assistance (ODA) going to agriculture fell from 17 percent in 1980 to 3.8 percent in 2006. Since 2007 however, in the wake of food price volatility, spending on agriculture saw a steady increase to 5.8 percent in 2010.
"With the global economic downturn not only affecting traditional ODA providers but also developing countries, there is a risk of these positive trends encountering a decline," said Laurent Thomas, Assistant Director-General of Technical Cooperation. "We have to be vigilant, monitor trends and scale up our advocacy efforts."
While some of FAO's traditional bilateral resource partners had to reduce their overall aid budgets and voluntary contributions to the Organization, partners such as the European Union, the United States of America, Germany, Norway and the United Kingdom are maintaining or increasing their voluntary contributions to FAO.
FAO's top ten resource partners in 2012 include, in order of funding importance, the European Union, the United States of America, the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, Norway, Japan, Australia, the United Nations Development Programme, the Netherlands, Canada and Spain.