Iran Daily

UN report says fragile climate puts food security at risk

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Feeding a hungry planet is growing increasing­ly difficult as climate change and depletion of land and other resources undermine food systems, the UN Food and Agricultur­al Organizati­on said Wednesday as it renewed appeals for better policies and technologi­es to reach “zero hunger.”

Population growth requires supplies of more nutritious food at affordable prices, but increasing farm output is hard given the “fragility of the natural resource base” since humans have outstrippe­d Earth’s carrying capacity in terms of land, water and climate change, the report said, abcnews. go.com reported.

About 820 million people are malnourish­ed. The FAO and Internatio­nal Food Policy Research Institute released the report at the outset of a global conference aimed at speeding up efforts to achieve zero hunger around the world.

Food security remains tenuous for many millions of people who lack access to affordable, adequately nourishing diets for a variety of reasons, the most common being poverty.

But it is also endangered by civil strife and other conflicts. In Yemen, where thousands of civilians have died in airstrikes by a Saudi-led coalition, the aid group Save the Children says 85,000 children under five may have died of hunger or disease in the civil war.

In Afghanista­n, severe drought and conflict have displaced more than 250,000 people, according to UNHCR, the UN refugee agency.

FAO Director-general Jose Graziano da Silva noted that the number of hungry and malnourish­ed people in the world has risen to levels last seen a decade ago.

“After decades of gains in fighting hunger, this is a serious setback and FAO and the UN sister agencies, together with member government­s and other partners, are all very concerned,” Graziano da Silva said in a videotaped address to the conference.

Hunger is still most severe in Africa, but the largest number of undernouri­shed people live in the Asia-pacific region, the report said. It said good public policies and technology are the keys to improving the situation.

The FAO estimates that global demand for food will jump by half from 2013 to 2050. Farmers can expand land use to help make up some of the difference, but that option is constraine­d in places like Asia and the Pacific and urbanizati­on is eating up still more land that once may have been used for agricultur­e.

Increasing farm output beyond sustainabl­e levels can cause permanent damage to ecosystems, the report said, noting that it often causes soil erosion, pollution with plastic mulching, pesticides and fertilizer­s, and a loss of biodiversi­ty.

 ??  ?? HANI MOHAMMED/AP In this October 1, 2018, file, photo, a doctor measures the arm of a malnourish­ed girl at the Aslam Health Center, Hajjah, Yemen.
HANI MOHAMMED/AP In this October 1, 2018, file, photo, a doctor measures the arm of a malnourish­ed girl at the Aslam Health Center, Hajjah, Yemen.

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