Minister Loyo announces three major issues to address in the 2030 agenda at the ALBA-TCP
Courtesy: ALBA-TCP
Published at: 06/06/2025 11:31 AM
During the first ExpoAlba 2025, organized by the Bolivarian Alliance for the Peoples of Our America-Peoples' Trade Agreement (ALBA-TCP), Juan Carlos Loyo, Minister of Popular Power for Fisheries and Aquaculture, offered three topics within the framework of the 2030 agenda.
“At the ALBA-TCP summit, they agreed to move forward with the development of AgroAlba's strategic proposal and agreed to launch the strategy, in addition to AlbaSur, both initiatives are based on the 2030 strategic line,” Loyo said.
In this context, he stressed that together with the president of Nicolás Maduro, hard work was done to discuss three major issues that humanity will face for the 2030 agenda.
“Rare earths: The use of minerals for microchip technology, the electric battery, for everything that represents the field of mineral exploitation and that is generating an agenda.
Artificial intelligence: What will be the role of AI for our nations, what will be the very appropriation of knowledge and development that we must advance
Food Security and Sovereignty: This time with greater emphasis on food security and sovereignty and on citizenship; the Covid-19 pandemic left a clear lesson for all countries, global food supply chains in a context where they wanted to and globalized collapsed.
Likewise, the minister of fisheries and aquaculture stressed that the war of tariffs unleashed by the United States (US) has disrupted the food supply chain in the context of hyperglobalization.”
“From Venezuela we have two proposals to share agricultural land spaces that together with you we are going to sustainable food production, an approach to the generative agriculture structure that proposes something that for us is innovative is the use of our productive spaces,” he stressed
In addition, through Venezuelan aquaculture, Loyo, proposes to obtain water experiences so that fishermen can enrich themselves through technology and that this allows them to do marine aquaculture.
Mazo News Team