Pathways Leading to a More Sustainable and Healthy Global Food System

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Krishna, B.K.C, E.D. Fraser, and S. Pascoal. (2016). Pathways Leading to a More Sustainable and Healthy Global Food System. Solutions 7(5): 10-12. https://thesolutionsjournal.com/article/pathways-leading-to-a-more-sustainable-and-healthy-global-food-system/

Envisioning

Pathways Leading to a More Sustainable  and Healthy Global Food System by Krishna B. KC, Evan D.G. Fraser, Goretty Dias, Trudi Zundel, and Samantha Pascoal

This article is part of a regular section in Solutions in which the author is challenged to envision a future society in which all the right changes have been made.

What follows is a hypothetical executive summary from an imagined Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) report on the state of the world’s food systems, written from the perspective of the 2050s.

Executive Summary: FAO State of World Agriculture in 2050 Draft Report While significant challenges still remain, this FAO report presents evidence that the international food system of the second half of the 21st century is more sustainable than the food system of the late 20th or early 21st centuries. In particular, United Nations data illustrate that today more people are being fed on less land and that agriculture is requiring fewer inputs. For instance, despite there being 10 billion people on the planet, today agriculture requires 438 million hectares less land than it did in 2015,1 yet produces more adequate nutrition for all. In part, technological developments have helped achieve this milestone and the application of big data analytics

Dana Styber

A young boy cradles his harvest of produce at a community garden in Washington, US.

to farming systems in the 2010s and 2020s brought about a new agricultural revolution that was as significant for the early 21st century as the Green Revolution was in the 20th century. Although technological advancement provided numerous benefits in terms of boosting production while minimizing inputs, the impact of these tools was probably less than the effect that a change in consumer demand, linked with a change in policy, had on the nature of food and farming systems.

For instance, the 2010s were marked by a systemic overproduction of cereals and starches, oils and fats, and sugars. This meant that although there were enough calories (and UN estimates from the early 21st century suggest that there were close to 3,000 dietary calories per person per day on the planet) these calories were disproportionately cereals, fats, and sugars. By contrast, food systems only produced one third of the fruits and vegetables needed for everyone to enjoy a nutritious diet.

1. Authors’ note: This figure was arrived at by assuming that: (1) agricultural production shifts away from the current over production of cereals, oils, and sugars, thus saving land from farming, but increases the amount of fruit and vegetables to ensure that we produce nine servings of fruit and vegetable / person / day; (2) the world population reaches 10 billion by 2050, as per one of the UN’s medium population scenarios; (3) agricultural yields increase an average of one percent / year between now and 2050. This yield increase is based on the past 30 years of yield data that show an approximate two percent / year increase but also accounts for possible problems caused by climate change that suggests a one percent / decade decline; (4) protein consumption shifts from today where 86 percent of global protein (measured in dietary servings) come from animals and 14 percent comes from plants such as legumes, to a situation where protein consumption is split between 50 percent animal and 50 percent plant-based proteins. Please contact the authors for references etc. pertaining to these calculations.

10  |  Solutions  |  September-October 2016  |  www.thesolutionsjournal.org


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