Horowhenua Chronicle

Dealing with food and farming issues

Scientists and farmers are thinking globally as they grapple with the complexiti­es of available land, climatic conditions, biodiversi­ty and an increasing number of mouths to feed, Dr Jacqueline writes.

- Rowarth

Rising food prices, gaps on shelves and requests from supermarke­t chains to be kind and try something else if a favourite brand or item isn’t available . . . supply chain disruption­s are real and food shortages are global.

Already there are warnings about the potential for food riots to occur, just as they did during the Global Financial Crisis. War and Covid have exacerbate­d the issues caused by drought, fire and flood. In addition, there is the overarchin­g pressure to meet the nutritiona­l needs of an ever-increasing world population.

Scientists are thinking globally as they grapple with the complexiti­es of available land, climatic conditions, biodiversi­ty and the number of mouths.

How can we feed more people to a better state of nutrition using no more land, while reducing the risks to production?

German researcher­s have modelled the options.

In a paper released this year they suggested that improved efficienci­es in crop production could increase production by almost 3 per cent while reducing the area required for growing crops by between 37 per cent and 48 per cent.

This would allow land to stay “natural“and host biodiversi­ty. In addition, the researcher­s estimated that crop prices would decrease.

Achieving the scenario requires overcoming the yield gap, which is the difference between average global yields and possible yields. Agricultur­al intensific­ation — fertiliser, irrigation and crop protection chemicals — is the key.

Globally yields of wheat hover around 3.5 tonnes/hectare, but 17.389 tonnes/hectare is possible.

Eric Watson is the holder of the global record in The Guinness Book of Records. Eric farms in Wakanui, Canterbury, New Zealand.

Eric’s yield in 2020 was five times that of the world, growing in the relatively ideal conditions of New Zealand, with all the modern technologi­es available. Another publicatio­n this year suggested that relocating crop land to areas where water is available would cut the carbon impact of global croplands by

71 per cent, by allowing the drier land to revert to forestry. Like the German study, the inter-country team led by the University of Cambridge UK concluded that highinput, mechanised farming was required to be successful.

By focussing on carbohydra­tes (crops), however, both the studies missed the limiting factors for human nutrition in the future — calcium and essential amino acids.

The Sustainabl­e Nutrition Initiative hosted by the Riddet Institute at Massey University is working on it.

Another research paper this year, this time with authors from Massey University and Fonterra, analysed the contributi­on various foods make to nutrition. The goal was to identify

how the world can best position for meeting future nutritiona­l needs.

Like the previous two studies, the research involved modelling scenarios. In this case, the DELTA Model, which considers 29 nutrients and calculates the available nutrition from global food production scenarios, was used to examine the role of milk. The authors found that milk contribute­s to the global availabili­ty of 28 of the 29 nutrients in the model.

“Milk is the main contributi­ng food item for calcium (49 per cent of global nutrient availabili­ty), Vitamin B2 (24 per cent), lysine (18 per cent), and dietary fat (15 per cent)” stated the authors.

“More than 10 per cent of global nutrient availabili­ty for a further five indispensa­ble amino acids, protein, vitamins A, B5, and B12, phosphorus, and potassium was also contribute­d.”

And all the nutrients were provided for only 7 per cent of food energy requiremen­ts. Further research indicated that among the 98 food items considered by the model, milk ranked in the top five contributo­rs to 23 of the 29 nutrients modelled.

Although the cynic might expect authors associated with Fonterra to conclude the value of the milk, the

research backs up a 2016 research paper led by New Zealand nutrition scientist Dr Graeme Coles.

The authors concluded that when assessed as all-year-round production systems, mixed dairy/ cropping provided the greatest quantity of high-quality protein per unit price to the consumer, had the highest food energy production and could support the dietary requiremen­ts of the highest number of people.

Nutritiona­l security requires protein as well as calories, and Coles has calculated that a cheese sandwich meets dietary requiremen­ts for the least cost.

For the Canterbury Plains, the optimum allocation of prime arable land involved animals — dairy cows producing the milk products that contain so many nutrients essential for human nutrition. It also included beef and sheep finishing on pasture grown between crops — as is relatively common over winter.

Life cycle analysis by AgResearch scientists has shown that greenhouse gases and nitrogen loss per kg of product (meat and milk) are lower in New Zealand than in other countries. But nobody is resting on laurels. Farmers and scientists are continuing to try and reduce the food footprint still further, and to assist other countries to improve their production systems. The yield gap exists in all sectors, not just cropping, and the gap applies to environmen­tal impact as well.

Science is looking at the big picture for food production, and New Zealand researcher­s and farmers are showing what can be done while trying to do even better. Although there will always be seasonal fluctuatio­ns in the price of vegetables and fruit, and supermarke­t loss leaders and general “specials“, food prices aren’t likely to reduce in the future. Being kind is important, but so is being realistic about the global problems.

Dr Jacqueline Rowarth, Adjunct Professor Lincoln University, is a farmer-elected director of DairyNZ and Ravensdown. The analysis and conclusion­s above are her own. jsrowarth@gmail.com

For links to the articles mentioned go to: https:/ /www.nzherald.co.nz/thecountry/news/dr-jacqueline­rowarth-how-do-we-growmore-food-without-usingmore-land/UHZSLZUT73­6AMS3YM7FE­ASW3BY/

 ?? ?? Science is looking at the big picture for food production.
Science is looking at the big picture for food production.
 ?? ?? Dr Jacqueline Rowarth.
Dr Jacqueline Rowarth.

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