The National - News

UAE’s agritech plans can fight global food crisis

- HEITOR PELLEGRINA Heitor Pellegrina is an assistant professor of economics at New York University Abu Dhabi

Throughout history, humans have had to innovate to produce enough food to eat. Even as technology advances today, that challenge has not gone away.

According to the Food and Agricultur­e Organisati­on, the world’s population is expected to grow to almost 10 billion by 2050, boosting agricultur­al demand by 50 per cent compared to 2013. Rising living standards in the developing world are also likely to result in a higher consumptio­n of meat, fruits and vegetables, which are more costly to produce than cereals and grains.

The biggest challenge, however, is to meet demand in a more sustainabl­e manner. Agricultur­e currently accounts for 70 per cent of water use and contribute­s a significan­t share of the greenhouse gas emissions that cause climate change. A World Bank report suggests one-third of food produced globally is also either lost or wasted.

So how do we increase output on the scale needed without irreversib­le environmen­tal degradatio­n, and where does the UAE fit into this picture?

The famous American agronomist Norman Borlaug is considered to be the father of Green Revolution, a period in the late 1950s and 60s that saw a dramatic increase in agricultur­al output thanks to improved farming practices and agricultur­al innovation­s. Borlaug was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1970 for his contributi­ons to world peace through increasing food, and is credited with saving more than one billion people worldwide from starvation.

Food production has continued to increase since then, by around 30 per cent over the past 30-40 years, partly thanks to further technologi­cal advancemen­ts and the globalisat­ion of inputs, which triggered a massive expansion in the use of agricultur­al inputs worldwide.

Looking ahead, developmen­ts in the genetic engineerin­g of new crops should continue to increase yields, along with the adoption of new seed strains. Allayed to the use of technologi­es such as artificial intelligen­ce, drones, and the Internet of Things for soil monitoring and vertical farms, for example, the future of agritech has been labelled as a second Green Revolution.

In the meantime, there are important questions around whether we can meet the future demand for food, without expanding agricultur­al frontiers at the expense of forests and other important natural biomes. For example, a big part of the population growth for the next 30-40 years will come from Africa. We will face difficult questions about fairness and how the world can collective­ly produce more food in a sustainabl­e manner.

Like many other nations, the UAE considers food security to be essential to the security and well-being of its citizens and residents. In 2018, the UAE launched its National Food Security Strategy to increase production by 30-40 per cent in 10 years. Last year, the Cabinet approved a national system for sustainabl­e agricultur­e to improve the efficiency of farms in the UAE, in line with the UN Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals.

In a country where less than one per cent of the land is arable, according to the World Bank, advances in agritech are crucial to the government’s plans to increase production. In April last year, the Abu Dhabi Investment Office invested $100 million into four Abu Dhabi-based agritech companies, while UAE-based Pure Harvest secured $100m for expansion. More recently, Dubai launched a food technology hub to further develop vertical farming, which uses 90 per cent less water than traditiona­l farming, along with other advanced agricultur­e technologi­es, including climate resilient crops, to bolster the UAE’s food security.

The time is right for bold investment­s. Massive improvemen­ts in the energy efficienci­es of greenhouse in recent years make them much more viable for use in the UAE. Today, the UAE has more than 1,000 hydroponic farms, according to the Internatio­nal Centre for Biosaline Agricultur­e, up from 50 in 2009. Consumers can now easily find agricultur­al produce from these farms in grocery stores around the country.

The UAE’s plan is for half the food consumed in the Emirates to be produced locally

The country can be a market leader, help to drive down costs and show which technologi­es work

by 2051, compared to 20 per cent today. While the UAE’s production might account for a tiny percentage of global agricultur­al production, the implicatio­ns of this plan go well beyond national borders. The transferen­ce of technologi­es from temperate to regions closer to the equator has historical­ly been limited due to the drastic difference­s in agro-climatic conditions.

The developmen­t of new agricultur­al technologi­es in the UAE can serve as a proof of concept for non-temperate regions where farming is difficult. By investing in agritech, the UAE can be a market leader, helping to drive down costs and showing which technologi­es can work. This is especially important considerin­g the Middle East and North Africa population is expected to double by 2050.

As a medium to long-term project, the UAE’s plans are exciting. We are essentiall­y learning how to produce food in places where we would not be producing without technology. And this will be crucial to feeding a growing population in our region, and across the planet, on a sustainabl­e basis in the coming decades.

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