Thailand Showcases Vision for Sustainable, Climate-Resilient Agricultural Policy
Thailand presented its sustainable agriculture policy at the ASEAN-EU Sustainability Summit 2026 in the Philippines, emphasizing smart agriculture, One Health approaches, and climate resilience. The Agricultural Economics Office deputy highlighted Thailand's integration of digital technology, data management, and proactive risk management to strengthen ASEAN food security. Thailand also called for deeper regional cooperation through data sharing and early warning systems to address transboundary agricultural risks.
The Agricultural Economics Office (AEFO) under the Ministry of Agriculture and Cooperatives supported Thailand's participation at the ASEAN-EU Sustainability Summit 2026 regional cooperation forum. Deputy Secretary-General Dr. Kanjana Khwanmuang represented Thailand and the Ministry of Agriculture as a panelist at the discussion titled "Food Security, Animal Health, and Climate Resilience: A Sustainability Imperative for ASEAN" on May 7, 2026, at Tambuli Seaside Resort & Spa in Cebu, Philippines.
The summit, organized by the EU-ASEAN Business Council and the European Chamber of Commerce of the Philippines, brought together government officials, private sector representatives, international organizations, and partners from ASEAN and the European Union to discuss green growth, sustainable agriculture, food security, and climate change adaptation.
During the forum, the AEFO deputy presented Thailand's agricultural policy direction, integrating sustainability and climate resilience into agriculture and food systems through the BCG economic model, smart and precision agriculture, water management and proactive risk management, and digital technology and early warning systems to boost productivity and farmer resilience.
On animal health, Thailand presented a comprehensive policy overview through the Department of Livestock, emphasizing disease surveillance, prevention, control, and food safety standards. The ministry stressed that animal health is essential for food security, rural economies, and consumer confidence, particularly for smallholder farmers who depend on livestock as household assets.
Thailand promotes proactive disease prevention following the One Health approach through biosecurity systems, vaccination, disease surveillance, standardized farm management, and data-driven decision-making to reduce economic losses, prevent antimicrobial overuse, and support sustainable livestock production.
Regionally, Thailand advocates elevating ASEAN cooperation from addressing immediate problems to systematic, data-informed collaboration, including information and early warning system sharing and policy coordination to manage transboundary risks such as animal disease outbreaks, disasters, climate change, and supply chain disruptions.