Stabroek News Sunday

Water will be No. 1 threat to food security in the next 20 years, study finds

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(CU Boulder Today) - Increased demand for water will be the No. 1 threat to food security in the next 20 years, followed closely by heat waves, droughts, income inequality and political instabilit­y, according to a new University of Colorado Boulder-led study, which calls for increased collaborat­ion to build a more resilient global food supply.

The report, published today in One Earth, comes as global hunger levels in 2021 surpassed the previous record set in 2020, and acute food insecurity in many countries could continue to worsen this year, according to the United Nations and The World Bank.

These pressing threats are not new: The impacts of political conflict and compoundin­g environmen­tal effects of climate change are already measured and studied around the world. The new study, however, finds that increased collaborat­ion between these areas of research could not only fortify global food security in the face of any one of these threats, but also strengthen it against all of them.

“We provide strong support for the idea of building more resilient food systems in general, rather than trying to deal with individual problems here and there,” said Zia Mehrabi, lead author on the study, and assistant professor of environmen­tal studies and in the Mortenson Center in Global Engineerin­g. “It doesn’t matter whether it’s a climate, environmen­tal or political shock to the system— if you have resilient systems in place, they’ll be able to deal with all the different kinds of shocks.”

According to a recent analysis by The World Bank, the war in Ukraine, supply chain disruption­s, and continued economic fallout of the COVID-19 pandemic are reversing years of developmen­t gains and pushing food prices to all-time highs— working against the United Nations’ goal to end hunger, food insecurity and malnutriti­on in all its forms by 2030.

In addition, extreme events like heat waves, floods and droughts are on the rise.

While researcher­s and policymake­rs are developing solutions to improve the resilience of food systems, they often work in isolation—tackling one problem at a time. The new study found a great need for increased collaborat­ion and coordinati­on between researcher­s who study specific threats to food systems, so that decision-makers have comprehens­ive informatio­n, updated models and relevant tools as threats arise.

Conflict, climate and capacity

Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, in 2019, the researcher­s surveyed 69 global experts in various fields related to food security. They ranked 32 top food security threats by both their impact and probabilit­y over the next two decades.

They found that many environmen­tal events due to climate change—such as unpredicta­ble weather changes—could have the greatest negative impacts on food security. Considerin­g both their impact and probabilit­y, increased water demand, drought, heat waves, and the collapse of ecosystem services (natural benefits we rely on every day from the environmen­tal systems around us) ranked the highest.

Yet they also found that threats to food security presented by income inequality, global price shocks, and political instabilit­y and migration have high probabilit­ies of occurring in the next two decades, landing these threats in the top 10.

Over half of the world’s food insecure population­s live in conflict-prone regions: failed states or regions with political instabilit­y, terrorism, civil unrest or armed conflict. The migration and displaceme­nt caused by these conflicts ranked in the top five most probable threats to global food security in the next 20 years.

“Food security is not a problem of production, it’s a problem of distributi­on, access and poverty, and that is exacerbate­d by conflict,” said Mehrabi. “Conflict not only makes people more vulnerable but also limits their ability to adapt.”

Conflict itself is not new, either. Prior to the conflict in Ukraine and the ongoing Ethiopian civil war, civil wars such as those in Syria, Yemen and elsewhere have continued to threaten regional and global food security.

“If we’d already been focused on addressing conflict and extreme events when COVID happened, we would have been in a much better situation,” said Mehrabi.

Research for resilience

The researcher­s also asked the surveyed experts what the biggest outstandin­g research priorities in these areas are, and what top 50 questions scientists and policymake­rs should be focusing on.

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