联合国粮农 07月08日 22:05
FAO and ITU launch “Robotics for Good - Youth Challenge 2025-2026” to tackle global food insecurity
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在日内瓦举行的AI for Good峰会上,联合国粮农组织(FAO)和国际电信联盟(ITU)共同发起了“机器人助力美好-青年挑战赛2025-26”,旨在鼓励全球青年运用机器人技术解决粮食不安全问题。FAO强调人工智能在推进粮食安全和建设气候适应型农业方面的潜力,并致力于弥合数字鸿沟,确保人工智能惠及弱势群体。通过数字工具,FAO推动精准农业、资源管理、粮食安全预警等领域的发展,并利用人工智能降低农民咨询服务的成本,提升决策效率。FAO还积极倡导负责任的人工智能治理,以实现“四个更好”的目标。

🤖 联合国粮农组织(FAO)和国际电信联盟(ITU)共同启动了“机器人助力美好-青年挑战赛2025-26”,鼓励12至18岁的青年设计机器人,解决粮食不安全问题。

🌍 FAO强调人工智能在农业中的变革潜力,特别是通过数字工具弥合数字鸿沟。目前全球仍有近26亿人无法上网,FAO致力于确保人工智能惠及弱势群体。

💡 FAO正利用人工智能技术推动农业发展,包括精准农业、资源管理、粮食安全预警等。例如,利用生成式人工智能,FAO已将农民咨询服务的成本从30美元降至3美元。

🌱 FAO通过先进的遥感和地理空间平台,利用人工智能快速分析干旱、水资源压力、作物类型等。此外,FAO还开发了知识机器人和首个专注于农业的AI模型,提供定制解决方案。

Geneva/Rome – At the opening of the AI for Good Summit (8-11 July)  in Geneva today, the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) and the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) officially launched the Robotics for Good – Youth Challenge 2025–26, a global initiative aimed at empowering youth to drive innovation in agrifood systems.

The second edition of this initiative invites young people aged 12 to 18 from around the world to design and build robots that help address one of humanity’s most pressing challenges - food insecurity.

“This challenge is not just about robotics,” said FAO Director-General QU Dongyu during his keynote address at the summit. “It is about empowering youth to become agents of change in the fight against hunger.”

FAO will serve as a strategic partner in the initiative, providing technical guidance, mentorship, and support through its Youth Innovation Lab and Transformative Research models.

Digital divide

In his address, the Director-General also highlighted the transformative potential of artificial intelligence (AI) in advancing food security and building climate‑resilient agriculture.

Qu presented FAO’s vision for inclusive and ethical AI in agrifood systems, designed to empower farmers and rural communities, particularly in low-income countries.  

“The digital divide is becoming development divide,” Qu said. “If we allow these gaps to persist, the promises of artificial intelligence to reduce poverty, improve resilience and drive innovation will remain out of reach for those who need it most.”

According to the ITU, 1 in 3 people worldwide remains offline, most of them in rural and low-income countries. Nearly 2.6 billion people still lack access to the Internet, and only 26 percent of people in low-income countries use it at all. According to the World Bank, fewer than 1 in 5 people in Sub-Saharan Africa have access to broadband, limiting not only connectivity, but also the capacity to participate in the digital and AI revolutions.

Leveraging the power of AI in agrifood systems

The Director-General outlined how FAO is harnessing digital tools to close the connectivity gap and drive transformation across global agrifood systems—from precision agriculture and resource management to food security early warning systems and market access.

FAO’s approach focuses on ensuring that AI technologies benefit those who need them most. This includes new AI-powered advisory services tailored to smallholder farmers and delivered in local languages, made possible through partnerships such as with Digital Green. Through generative AI, FAO has already reduced the cost of farmer advisory services from 30 dollars to just 3 dollars per farmer, with further reductions anticipated.

Through FAO’s advanced remote sensing and geospatial platforms, AI allows the Organization to rapidly analyze drought, water stress, crop types, land use and forest management. FAO is also leveraging open-source Big Data to track food security threats before they become crises. Predictive models help farmers make better-informed decisions about sowing, harvesting, and marketing their crops.

Among its flagship innovations, the Organization is piloting a specialized “knowledge bot” built on its extensive repository of nearly 150,000 scientific publications, and working on the world’s first agrifood-focused foundation AI model to provide tailored, context-specific solutions from planting to post-harvest.

As a founding member of the Digital Public Goods Alliance and a signatory to the Rome Call for AI Ethics, FAO continues to champion digital solutions that are guided by transparency, human dignity, and the principle to “do no harm.”

The Director General re-affirmed that responsible governance of AI is essential to delivering the Organization’s Four Betters: Better Production, Better Nutrition, a Better Environment, and a Better Life—leaving no one behind.

Qu called on all partners to work together to ensure that AI is inclusive, transparent and human-centered, addressing global challenges while accelerating progress across agrifood systems.

Organized by the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) in partnership with over 40 UN sister agencies and co‑convened by the Government of Switzerland, the Summit brings together policymakers, researchers, industry leaders, startups, civil society, and other stakeholders to harness AI’s potential in solving global challenges.  

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人工智能 农业 FAO ITU 青年创新
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