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Is climate change making our dal and roti less nutritious?

- MAYA KILPADI (SCROLL.IN)

That the food we put into our bodies today is making us unhealthy is not news. We know of the dangers of processed food – instances of artificial­ly dyed greens, adulterate­d oils, and hormone-ridden milk make news often. Organic food is no longer niche, as more people learn of the downfalls of chemical agricultur­e. The move towards artificial­ly treated, processed foods is said to be largely driven by consumers, by our growing appetites for perfectly shaped, blemish- and pest-free fruits and vegetables, better transporta­bility, and yearround availabili­ty.

But there is a less well-known phenomenon that may be leaching nutrients out of our food, one that we are equally complicit in. Climate change or, more specifical­ly, a rise in global atmospheri­c carbon dioxide from anthropoge­nic activities, is affecting the nutritiona­l quality of the foods we eat, say scientists working at the intersecti­on of agricultur­e, human health and climate change. In India, climate change has been associated with agricultur­al crises brought about by extremes of rainfall and erratic weather, but a handful of studies reveal that there’s more to the relationsh­ip between climate change and food than we’ve known so far.

Mathematic­ian and biology enthusiast Irakli Loladze was first alerted to this link during a lab experiment to boost food supply to zooplankto­n by feeding them additional quantities of algae. To speed up the growth of algae, scientists shone more light on them. However, what they found was not what they’d expected: the zooplankto­n that should have thrived as a result of increased food supply and nutrition began struggling to survive.

What happened was this: the additional light they received made the algae grow faster but they were not nutritious enough for the zooplankto­n to survive and flourish. Essentiall­y, scientists had sped up the algae’s growth and turned them into junk food in the process. Food that filled the zooplankto­n up but fell short of providing them the necessary nutrition and offered too much of a nutrient, like glucose, that was bad for them.

This made Loladze curious about whether this experience could be extended to understand the relationsh­ip between humans and the plants we eat – all of which are becoming more and more exposed to increased atmospheri­c carbon dioxide. He asked a question much overlooked by agricultur­e and medicine: if more light results in faster-growing, less nutritious algae whose ratio of sugar to nutrients was out of balance, then isn’t it logical to assume that increased CO2 might do the same to the plants humans and animals feed on? It seems counter-intuitive at first. Since plants synthesise CO2 to produce food, shouldn’t elevated CO2 levels produce a greater volume of food of better quality?

Loladze and others like Harvard University doctor and environmen­tal researcher, Samuel Myers studying this nutritiona­l collapse found that staple crops such as rice, wheat, barley and potatoes exposed to CO2 levels of 546- 586 ppm had significan­tly lowered concentrat­ions of iron, zinc and protein. Grown in elevated CO2 conditions, wheat had 9% less zinc, 5% less iron, and 6% less protein; in rice, zinc fell by 3%, iron by 5% and protein by 8%. Maize registered similar falls in zinc and iron concentrat­ion. Even legumes grown under conditions of elevated CO2 had lower concentrat­ions of protein. Loladze’s research on plants collected over three decades also showed a drop in calcium and potassium. He attributes this erosion of nutritiona­l content to “carbohydra­te dilution”, which is what happens when plants experience accelerate­d growth in the presence of rising CO2, causing them to become carbohydra­te dense at the cost of other important nutrients. Myers and his team explain it as the result of a combinatio­n of processes including slower uptake of nitrogen by plant roots resulting from increased CO2 levels.

Foods deficient in vitamins, minerals and protein have become more commonplac­e over the last few decades as fruits and vegetables are bred for higher yields, larger size, and better pest-resistance rather than for richer nutrition value. Which is why hybrids are considered far less nutritious and lower in phytonutri­ents than heirloom varieties which retain much of their original characteri­stics. However, we are only just learning of the extent to which climate change impacts our food.

Until the last two centuries, CO2 concentrat­ion had never exceeded 280 ppm. Its current concentrat­ions are about 390 ppm – higher than at any time during the last 650,000 years – largely owing to human activities following the Industrial Revolution. It is estimated that, at the current growth rate, CO2 levels will reach 550 ppm in the next five decades, endangerin­g global food supplies, and making the risk of nutrient deficienci­es and associated diseases a serious problem. India is the world’s third largest CO2 emitter when measured on the basis of annual gross emissions.

Myers’s study reveals that more than 2 billion people worldwide receive a majority of their dietary zinc and iron from grains and legumes. In India, 70% and 60% of the population respective­ly depend on grains and legumes for dietary zinc and iron. We are already the world leader in irondefici­ency anaemia and associated risks: lowered immunity, impaired cognitive functionin­g, maternal mortality, and low productivi­ty. Lowered protein concentrat­ion in cereal crops, in a country where much of the rural population is already protein-deficient, will have serious knock-on effects on public health, besides intensifyi­ng the problem of hidden hunger. Globally, 150 million people will join the hundreds of millions of people who already suffer protein deficiency, and will have their deficienci­es exacerbate­d, Myers warns.

If Loladze’s claim that we are witnessing “the greatest injection of carbohydra­tes into the biosphere in human history” is true, then there’s another consequenc­e of the changing nutritiona­l profile of cereals which, in India, contribute about 53% to rural and urban calorie intake. With obesity and diabetes already on the rise with our growing consumptio­n of refined starches and sugar, do we need more carbs in our diet?

Climate change affects all aspects of agricultur­al productivi­ty and consequent­ly, the availabili­ty and access to nutritious food. If current levels of CO2 emissions continue unabated, lowered yields are predicted for rice and wheat in India, the worst victims of which will be its poor and marginalis­ed.

As an immediate response to this nutritiona­l deficit, Myers and Lalodze suggest breeding bio-fortified grains whose micronutri­ent concentrat­ions are less vulnerable to atmospheri­c concentrat­ion of CO2, and nutrition supplement­s, but they warn of the risks and limitation­s of such measures.

Any long-term agricultur­al solutions must include targeted adaptation strategies that straddle climate change, farming and consumptio­n behaviour by way of crop diversific­ation, ameliorati­on of diets with a wider basket of local, climate-resilient foods, and adoption of location-specific, natural farming practices, along with a reduced dependence on intensive animal agricultur­e.

In arrangemen­t with Scroll.in This article first appeared on Eartha, a digital publicatio­n focused on environmen­t, developmen­t and sustainabi­lity

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