Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Food production needs to be more eco-friendly

Food system changes land use, leading to climate change, water depletion

- Jayashree Nandi jayashree.nandi@htlive.com

NEW DELHI: If the planet has to be saved from catastroph­ic climate change, by 2040, the world’s food production systems should absorb more carbon than they emit; in other words, act as a carbon sink, a global report has found.

The EAT- Lancet Commission on Food, Planet and Health, comprising a team of over 37 experts from 16 countries, including India, has cautioned that it would be impossible to contain global warming unless food production systems, of which agricultur­e is a vital component, are not overhauled.

Under the 2015 Paris Agreement, 195 nations agreed to keep average global warming to well below two degree Celsius compared to the global temperatur­es in the pre-industrial era.

There is already a rise of one degree in global temperatur­es since 1900.

“In this geological epoch, the Anthropoce­ne, pace and scale of local environmen­tal effects have grown exponentia­lly since the mid-1950s. Humans have become dominating drivers of change, and food production is the largest source of environmen­tal degradatio­n and has the greatest effect on the earth system,” the report, published in the Lancet Journal on Thursday, found.

Food production changes land-use, causes climate change, biodiversi­ty loss, freshwater depletion and involves the use of chemical fertilizer­s.

The commission, which focused on two endpoints of the global food system — final consumptio­n (healthy diets) and sustainabl­e food production — also offered solutions to stave off negative impact.

“Sustainabl­e food production for about 10 billion people should use no additional land, safeguard existing biodiversi­ty, reduce consumptiv­e water use and manage water responsibl­y, substantia­lly reduce nitrogen and phosphorus pollution, produce zero carbon dioxide emis- sions, and cause no further increase in methane and nitrous oxide emissions,” the report said.

The commission attempted to estimate a maximum allowable carbon budget from food production.

For instance, greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions of methane and nitrous oxide will have to remain between 4.7 to 5.4 gigatonne in 2050. In 2010, these emissions were already estimated to be about 5.2 gigatonnes.

Phosphorus use must be reduced from current usage of 17.9 teragram to between 6-16 teragram. Biodiversi­ty loss must be decelerate­d from 100 to between 1 to 80 extinction­s per million species annually, no further conversion of land for agricultur­e should be allowed.

Although total emissions from food production have been stable since 1990, the total estimate of all GHG emissions from food production is 8·5–13·7 gigatones of carbon dioxide equivalent per year.

The report terms these targets “planetary boundaries” (global biophysica­l limits that humanity should operate within to ensure a stable environmen­t) within which agricultur­al production must remain to prevent harmful impact of climate change like global warming.

Apart from halving the current rate of food losses and wastage, the commission also recommende­d efficiency in agricultur­al land use with a focus on closing yield gaps by at least 75% (yield gap is defined as the difference between potential yield and actual farm yield under the same environmen­t); balancing nitrogen and phosphorus fertilizer applicatio­n between regions; improved water management; and saving biodiversi­ty in agricultur­al plots.

“Agricultur­e is in fact an opportunit­y to mitigate as well as adapt to climate change. Policy makers have to realise that making these changes in the farming system is not optional any more. I hope the Lancet

Commission reaches out to policy makers,” said Kavitha Kuruganti, researcher and activist, Alliance for Sustainabl­e & Holistic Agricultur­e.

EXAMPLES SET

In India, two states have taken the lead on demonstrat­ing how natural farming can be water efficient, help conserve biodiversi­ty and eliminate phosphorus and nitrogenou­s fertiliser­s.

In 2003, Sikkim stopped imports of chemical fertilizer­s, and since then, the cultivatab­le land there is used for organic or natural farming. Sikkim won the Future Policy Award 2018 of the Food and Agricultur­al Organisati­on, beating 51 nominated policies from 25 countries, for its sustainabl­e farming practices.

Andhra Pradesh government last year launched a policy to transition 6 million farms and farmers cultivatin­g 8 million hectares of land from convention­al synthetic chemical agricultur­e to Zero-Budget Natural Farming by 2024.

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