UN
warns world must produce 60% more food by 2050 to avoid mass unrest
Political
turmoil, social unrest, civil war and terrorism could all be on the
table unless the world boosts its food production by 60 percent come
mid-century, the UN’s main hunger fighting agency has warned.
RT,
10
March, 2014
The
world’s population is expected to hit 9 billion people by 2050,
which, coupled with the higher caloric intake of increasingly wealthy
people, is likely to drastically increase food demand over the coming
decades said Hiroyuki Konuma, the assistant director-general of the
UN Food and Agriculture Organization Asia-Pacific.
Increased
food demand comes at a time when the world is investing less in
agricultural research, prompting fear among scientists that global
food security could be imperiled.
"If
we fail to meet our goal and a food shortage occurs, there will be a
high risk of social and political unrest, civil wars and terrorism,
and world security as a whole might be affected," Reuters cites
Konuma as saying at a one-week regional food security conference in
Ulan Bator, Mongolia.
Several
factors could exacerbate the potential for apocalyptic famines. In
November, a leaked draft of an Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change report warned that climate change could cause a 2 percent drop
each decade of this century. In the past three years for example,
Australia, Canada, China, Russia and the United States have all
suffered big flood and drought induced harvest losses.
Exacerbating
this problem is a convergence in diets worldwide, with reliance on an
ever smaller group of crops leaving global food supplies increasingly
vulnerable to inflationary pressure, insects and disease.
"As
the global population rises and the pressure increases on our global
food system, so does our dependence on the global crops and
production system that feeds us,” Luigi Guarino, from the Global
Crop Diversity Trust, told the BBC earlier this month.
"The
price of failure of any of these crops will become very high."
Progress
has been made in the battle against global hunger, with vegetable
production in Asia and the Pacific, where more than three-quarters of
the world’s vegetables are grown, increasing by 25 percent over the
last decade.
The
FAO estimates, however, that 842 million people in the world remain
undernourished, with nearly two thirds of them living in the
Asia-Pacific. One in four children under the age of five is stunted
due to malnutrition.
To
combat the problem, the UN body has outlined two primary options:
increasing arable land areas as well as productivity rates. A lack of
available arable land and more sluggish growth rates in staple crops
have complicated efforts to bolster these two pillars of food
security.
Over
the past two years, productivity rates for rice and wheat have
hovered around 0.6 to 0.8 percent. Those rates would have to
stabilize around 1 percent in order to offset serious shortages, said
Konuma.
Environmentalists
have also urged better food distribution methods. In February, the
FAO, World Bank and World Resources Institute estimated that the
world is losing 25 to 33 percent of the food it produces – nearly 4
billion metric tons.
More
efficient agricultural production, better means of storing food and
biologically diverse, local food systems less susceptible to global
changes have also been proposed as solutions to help tackle the
growing threat of food insecurity.
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