Gulf News

Food scarcity can hit any nation

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Can the world feed itself? Don’t answer yet. Take a minute to reflect on this question and its implicatio­ns, and then continue reading. According to the UN, by 2050, the world’s population is estimated to reach about 10 billion. Not only that, the data extending from 1960 to 2050 projection­s show an upward trajectory, subject to various, probable shifts in demographi­c curves across the globe.

Another worrying observatio­n is that of the daily calorie consumptio­n per person that has also been trending upwards since the 1960s. The UN, therefore, estimates that “food supply needs to increase by 70-100 per cent” by 2050.

You may think here: so? Where’s the problem? It surely isn’t the growth in population or the increase in the daily calorie consumptio­n — not that it’s a healthy trend though. In my point of view, there are three core issues when it comes to food security: 1. Food sovereignt­y. 2. Meat consumptio­n (please do not rephrase this into a pro vegetarian slogan) and 3. Market inefficien­cies.

Food sovereignt­y is the attempt by countries to produce all the food that they need. They may excel of course in certain commoditie­s, but there’s no country that can aim at producing everything and be costeffici­ent in all. That defies basic economic and trade principles, and leads to countries subsidisin­g farmers and agricultur­e even if the money could be better spent elsewhere.

Robert Guest estimates that “the total value of agricultur­al subsidies in developed countries is almost a billion dollars a day”.

The consumptio­n of meat, of all kinds, is not the main problem here. It’s that high demand for meat resulted in the rise of industrial farms and fuelled their expansion. That led to two issues.

First, food insecurity caused by feeding great portions of main food staples, such as maize, to animals in industrial farms. Moreover, “90 per cent of the world soya meal is destined for industrial livestock” (Philip Lymbery). Second, industrial farms use tremendous amounts of antibiotic­s, which enable bacteria to adapt, making those antibiotic­s obsolete in the short-run. Not a food security issue, but perhaps you would like to know that infections may be a main killer in the future. Keep in mind here too that meat production is a high water-intensive activity, resulting in adding to already diminishin­g water resources.

The point on market inefficien­cies has a local as well as global angle to it. The global commoditie­s’ markets operate just like any other market. When commoditie­s are worth more; producing countries are encouraged to export more, allowing deficits and possible famines to take place within their borders. And if tariffs on agricultur­al imports are in place, a double whammy.

On a local level, many famines are not caused by a bad year or by food deficits, rather by lack of the right infrastruc­ture to: 1. Support activities of buying and selling commoditie­s, 2. Facilitate the transfer of food from regions of surplus to regions of deficit, thus avoiding a possible famine.

The last though that I want to leave you with: what happens when countries neglect the production of main food staples such as wheat, maize, and rice paddy to focus instead on the production of cash crops?

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