Food
shortages could force world into vegetarianism, warn scientists
Water
scarcity's effect on food production means radical steps will be
needed to feed population expected to reach 9bn by 2050
26
August, 2012
Leading
water scientists have issued one of the sternest warnings yet about
global food supplies, saying that the world's population may have to
switch almost completely to a vegetarian diet over the next 40 years
to avoid catastrophic shortages.
Humans
derive about 20% of their protein from animal-based products now, but
this may need to drop to just 5% to feed the extra 2 billion people
expected to be alive by 2050, according to research by some of the
world's leading water scientists.
"There
will not be enough water available on current croplands to produce
food for the expected 9 billion population in 2050 if we follow
current trends and changes towards diets common in western nations,"
the report by Malik Falkenmark and colleagues at the Stockholm
International Water Institute (SIWI) said.
"There
will be just enough water if the proportion of animal-based foods is
limited to 5% of total calories and considerable regional water
deficits can be met by a … reliable system of food trade."
Dire
warnings of water scarcity limiting food production come as Oxfam and
the UN prepare for a possible second global food crisis in five
years. Prices for staples such as corn and wheat have risen nearly
50% on international markets since June, triggered by severe droughts
in the US and Russia, and weak monsoon rains in Asia. More than 18
million people are already facing serious food shortages across the
Sahel.
Oxfam
has forecast that the price spike will have a devastating impact in
developing countries that rely heavily on food imports, including
parts of Latin America, North Africa and the Middle East. Food
shortages in 2008 led to civil unrest in 28 countries.
Adopting
a vegetarian diet is one option to increase the amount of water
available to grow more food in an increasingly climate-erratic world,
the scientists said. Animal protein-rich food consumes five to 10
times more water than a vegetarian diet. One third of the world's
arable land is used to grow crops to feed animals. Other options to
feed people include eliminating waste and increasing trade between
countries in food surplus and those in deficit.
"Nine
hundred million people already go hungry and 2 billion people are
malnourished in spite of the fact that per capita food production
continues to increase," they said. "With 70% of all
available water being in agriculture, growing more food to feed an
additional 2 billion people by 2050 will place greater pressure on
available water and land."
The
report is being released at the start of the annual world water
conference in Stockholm, Sweden, where 2,500 politicians, UN bodies,
non-governmental groups and researchers from 120 countries meet to
address global water supply problems.
Competition
for water between food production and other uses will intensify
pressure on essential resources, the scientists said. "The UN
predicts that we must increase food production by 70% by mid-century.
This will place additional pressure on our already stressed water
resources, at a time when we also need to allocate more water to
satisfy global energy demand – which is expected to rise 60% over
the coming 30 years – and to generate electricity for the 1.3
billion people currently without it," said the report.
Overeating,
undernourishment and waste are all on the rise and increased food
production may face future constraints from water scarcity.
"We
will need a new recipe to feed the world in the future," said
the report's editor, Anders Jägerskog.
A
separate report from the International Water Management Institute
(IWMI) said the best way for countries to protect millions of farmers
from food insecurity in sub-Saharan Africa and south Asia was to help
them invest in small pumps and simple technology, rather than to
develop expensive, large-scale irrigation projects.
"We've
witnessed again and again what happens to the world's poor – the
majority of whom depend on agriculture for their livelihoods and
already suffer from water scarcity – when they are at the mercy of
our fragile global food system," said Dr Colin Chartres, the
director general.
"Farmers
across the developing world are increasingly relying on and
benefiting from small-scale, locally-relevant water solutions.
[These] techniques could increase yields up to 300% and add tens of
billions of US dollars to household revenues across sub-Saharan
Africa and south Asia."
Warming-Driven
Drought Pushes Crop Prices To Record Levels, As We Burn 40% Of Corn
Crop In Our Engines
23
August, 2012
When
will the madness stop? In a piece titled, “Nearly Half Of Corn
Devoted To Fuel Production Despite Historic
Drought,” Bloomberg editorialized:
Record-high corn prices should be sending a clear message to policy makers in Washington: Requiring people to put corn-based fuel in their gas tanks is a bad idea.
Climate
Progress has been saying the same for many years (see “The
Fuel on the Hill”
and “Let
them eat biofuels!“).
Bloomberg notes:
The damage is far-reaching. Beef and pork producers are slaughtering their stocks at a record pace to cut use of corn feed that costs two-thirds more than three months ago. This week, President Barack Obama told a campaign rally in Iowa that the federal government will buy $170 million of meat to prop up the market. U.S. cattle herds next year are forecast to be the smallest since 1952, a guarantee of more expensive food in years to come.
Researchers at Texas A&M University have estimated that diverting corn to make ethanol forces Americans to pay $40 billion a year in higher food prices. On top of that, it costs taxpayers $1.78 in subsidies for each gallon of gasoline that corn-based ethanol replaces, according to the Congressional Budget Office.
Burning
some 40% of the U.S. corn crop was crazy enough before the record
drought, but now it is just plain inhumane. As uber-hedge fund
manager Jeremy Grantham put
it this
month:
Our ethanol policy is becoming the moral equivalent of shooting some poor Indian farmers. Death just comes more slowly and painfully.
US corn and soybean prices closed at new record highs Tuesday as a new survey showed worse-than-expected crop damage from a brutal drought across the country’s central breadbasket…..
“Crops in western Ohio and eastern Indiana were far below the norm,” said Pro Farmer analyst Brian Grete.
Yields in South Dakota meanwhile were called “stunningly low.”
And
remember, while this drought may be a record-setter now, if we keep
taking no action to reduce carbon pollution, it’ll be the normal
climate by my mid-century.
By then, humanity will be
desperately trying to figure out how to feed another 2 billion people
while dealing with extreme weather beyond anything humans have
experienced during the period large-scale farming that (barely) fed
ever-growing populations. See “Climate
Story of the Year Decade:
Warming-Driven Drought and Extreme Weather Emerge as Key Threat to
Global Food Security.”
As
an aside, conservatives like to claim that it is environmentalists
who gave us our current biofuels policy, but in fact I never have met
an environmentalist who thought we should mandate anywhere near the
current amount of corn ethanol.
The
only reason environmentalists and clean energy advocates even
tolerated energy deals with corn ethanol mandates is the hope that
jumpstarting the infrastructure for corn ethanol would pave the way
for next-generation cellulosic ethanol. That turned out to be a
mistake (see “Are
biofuels a core climate solution?“).
We
have gone far beyond what is tenable. Yes, the energy-intensive
nature of food production means that oil prices will tend to rise in
tandem with food prices, thus increasing the profitability of
biofuels. And yes, we are a rich country, the breadbasket
of the world, politically far more impervious to higher food prices
than higher oil prices.
But
as population grows, developing countries’ diets change, and the
extreme weather of the last couple of years increasingly becomes the
norm in a globally warmed world, food insecurity will grow and our
biofuels policy will, inevitably, collapse. It must.
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