snne2o1s ‘The Economist explains she world running ou of food? | The Econmist
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The Economist explains
Is the world running out of food?
Jun 23rd 2015, 23:50 by E.L.
NOT in the short term. Stocks of grain and
other foods are high, with another bumper
harvest due in the northern hemisphere this
year. Food prices have been dropping in real
terms since a spike in 2011
(http://www.economist.com/node/17970938)
. The number of hungry people has been
falling too, by 167 million in the past decade
(according to the rough estimates used by the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organisation
(FAO), chiefly thanks to progress in China and India. Yet that leaves nearly 800m, a third of
which are in Africa. The UN reckons that one measure, “prevalence of undernourishment”
has dropped from 18.6% of the world population in 1990-92 to 10.9% now. That broadly
meets a target the world set itself in 2000, in the Millennium Development Goals.
| Going against the grain
Wheat
World production, tonnes m
800
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‘The Economist explains she world running ou of food? | The Econmist
600
400
200
2005- —07- 09- 11- 13- 14-
06 08 10 12 14 15*
Price, Hard Red Winter, $ per tonne
600
400
200
T1111 1 0
2005 07 09 11 13 15
Source: International Grains Council *Forecast
Economist.com
But international bodies such as the G7 are worried about the coming decades. The world’s
population will exceed nine billion in 2050, with most of the growth in developing countries.
The United States Department of Agriculture reckons that the number of hungry (“food
insecure”) people in sub-Saharan Africa will rise by a third. The FAO reckons that food
production will need to increase by 70%. Worries abound. Crop yields are flat. And many
ip ikwaweconemisticom nede!21654537iprint‘nnezo1s ‘The Economist explains she world running ou of food? | The Econmist
trends are negative: new crop diseases, urbanisation, desertification, salinisation and soil
crosion, which outstrips renewal even in developed countries.
That does not mean dis
ster is looming. Agricultural productivity is often shockingly low in
“traditional” farming practices. That leaves plenty of room for improvement. But in most
ssibly. A study by Britain’s Institution
kinds of agriculture, scarce water can be used more s
of Mechanical Engineers estimated that 550 billion litres are wasted annually in crop
production. Eliminating waste, for example by drip-feed irrigation, could raise food
production by 60% or more. Phosphorus (a finite resource, unlike water) is wasted too: only
a fifth of the phosphorus mined actually ends up in food. Climate change will indeed hurt
some farmers but helps other
‘0, perhaps, does more carbon dioxide in the atmosphere).
GM crops (such as drought-resistant rice, heat-resistant maize or blight-resistant wheat)
have huge potential.
Technology is only part of the solution. The food chain lacks resilience to other forms of
disruption too, from political strife to consumer panics. Panics about contamination (real or
imagined), for example, can send food flying off the shelves (Nestlé is having to destroy
27,000 tonnes of instant noodles in India, amid a row about lead contamination). A new
report by Lloyds, the London insurance market, highlights the need for more innovation to
help farmers and food manufacturers deal with adverse weather and other potential risks.
The G7 summit in Germany in early June agreed that it would aim to lift 500m people from
hunger by 2030. Attention now shifts toa UN development summit in New York in
September, where countries will discuss not merely halving the proportion of people who
suffer from hunger, but eradicating hunger. The first big target has been met. The next one
will be even harder.
Dig deeper
China's inefficient agricultural system (http://www.economist.com/blogs/economist-
explains/2015/05/economist-explains-27) (May 2015)
‘Agreen revolution in the world’s paddy fields
(http: //www.economist.com/news/briefing/21601815-another-green-revolution-stirring-
worlds-paddy-fields-bigger-rice-bowl) (May 2014)
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