The world has a massive food crisis — so big that the
World Bank and the United Nations say there won’t be enough food to feed the global
population by 2050. But feeding the world is big business.
The world has a massive food crisis on its hands. The
crisis is so big that organizations like the World Bank and the United Nations say there
won’t be enough food to feed the global population when it jumps from the current
seven billion people to nine billion by 2050.
The reasons? Severe weather events like droughts and
floods, economic hardships, and political unrest in underdeveloped countries, as
well as agribusiness expansion.
While many experts say that producing more food will
make the crisis go away, others contend it’s not that simple.
“To address food security, we need a shift in the way
we address poverty and inequality in the world,” Stephen Scanlan, a professor of
sociology at Ohio University. “There should be a reframing of food as a fundamental
human right in a way that governments actually stand by.”
But feeding the world is big business. Multinational
food companies and retailers are heavily involved in food production. Corporations
such as Kraft KRFT 0.00%, ConAgra CAG 0.25%, Cargill, and PepsiCo PEP 0.72% dominate
global food distribution.
Companies like Monsanto MON 0.10%, the biggest maker of genetically
modified organisms (GMOs) seeds, promote their high tech products as a way to increase
food production.
And those companies are seeing benefits. Global food
prices increased by four percent between January and April of this year, according
to the World Bank, stopping a decline in food prices starting in August 2012.
While those figures may please company shareholders,
that kind of consolidation and profit puts too much control over food supplies into
too few places, according to critics like Scanlan. Beyond the perceived threats
from the business world, global food supplies, one analyst argued, are at the mercy
of some nations seeking to feed their own populations at the expense of others.
“China is the largest purchaser of farmable land in
the world,” said Usha Haley, a professor of business management at West Virginia
University. “They’re doing it to acquire resources as they have a huge gap between
what they produce and what they use.”
Food scarcity now
For many, food scarcity is already here. The UN’s Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO)
reports that 842 million people in the world remain
undernourished. And nearly two thirds of them are living in the Asia-Pacific region.
One in four children under the age of five is stunted due to malnutrition.
Fueling the problem are worldwide diets that rely on
an ever smaller group of crops, leaving global food supplies at the mercy of inflation,
insects, disease, and bad weather. Also, there’s the increasing creation of inedible
products — such as fuel — from crops that normally get put on the kitchen table.
“What concerns us is biofuel expansion,” said Kristin
Sundell, director of policy and campaigns for ActionAid, an international
group that focuses on ending poverty.
“We’ve seen a 50 percent expansion in recent years
in using crops like sugar, corn and soy to create fuels for gas tanks, and that’s
taking away food crops from people and making what there is more expensive,” Sundell
said.
Sundell added that the large-scale investment by private
agriculture businesses to buy up more farm land in poor countries is forcing local
growers out of business. Farmers who do have land in areas like East Africa often
face a Faustian bargain, said Scott Ickes, a professor of public health and nutrition
at the College of William & Mary.
“Farmers have to choose between growing specialty cash
crops like cocoa, tea and coffee — or food staples to make a living,” Ickes said.
“They usually pick the cash crops as it’s a challenge for them to make ends meet.”
Helping those help themselves
While agricultural innovations like genetic modified
organisms (GMOs) —
hailed by many and condemned by others – are often
offered up as solutions, one analyst said simple ways to distribute and store food
are needed.
“A lot of food rots because of bad storage facilities
in poor countries, and bad infrastructure in those areas prevents delivery of food
to a lot of the poor,” said College of William & Mary’s Ickes.
A key element in all this is helping those in need
learn how to take care of themselves, said Mark Rieger, dean of the College of Agriculture
and Natural Resources at the University of Delaware.
“We have an agricultural program so people can develop
their own food,” Rieger said. “I just got back from Kenya where we bring students
here and then send them back home to help their own countries.”
Wars over food?
The World Bank reports that to avoid food shortages by 2050, the global community needs
to produce at least 50 percent more food than it does today.
Many analysts say they are hopeful the world is waking
up to the food scarcity problem, as more governments like the U.S. and those in Europe,
ramp up efforts to provide aid to developing countries.
But a clear consensus on exactly how to end the growing
food shortage remains elusive. And that could lead to even greater disasters, said
West Virginia’s Haley.
“The food scarcity problem is serious. I think the
next world wars could be fought over resources like food and water,” she said.
Written by Mark Koba a New Jersey-based freelance
writer.|Originally posted on DECEMBER 21, 2014|FORTUNE
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