The United Nations has forecast that world food production must double to feed 9 billion people by 2050. That assertion has become a relentless talking point in the growing debate over the environmental, health and social consequences of American agriculture.
Full EWG Report: ewg.org
America’s farmers, we are told, must double their production of meat products and grains to “feed the world.” Otherwise, people will go hungry.
Agribusinesses such as Monsanto sometimes cite the so-called “moral imperative” to feed a hungry world in order to defend the status-quo genetically modified crop supporting farm policy and deflect attention from the destruction that “modern” agriculture is inflicting on the environment and human health.
The real experts know better. Jose Graziano da Silva, director-general of the U.N.’s Food and Agriculture Organization argues instead that the current conditions of “modern” agriculture are “no longer acceptable.”
The key to ending world hunger while protecting the environment is to help small farmers in the developing world increase their productivity and income, and to promote “agro-ecology” everywhere, including in the U.S.
Poverty is the root cause of hunger, not too few exports of U.S. wheat, corn, soybeans and meat. American exports go to people who can afford to buy them.
American farmers are helping meet growing demand from millions of people in developed and developing nations who can afford better, or at least more diversified diets. This is a welcome business opportunity for our farmers, but those exports aren’t going to the countries where hunger is chronic.
- 86 percent of the value of U.S. agricultural exports last year went to 20 destinations with low numbers of hungry citizens and human development scores that are medium, high or very high, according to the U.N. Development Program.
- Only half of one percent of U.S. agricultural exports, calculated according to their value, went to a group of 19 countries that includes Haiti, Yemen and Ethiopia. These are nations with high or very high levels of undernourishment, measured by the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization.
Even the hungriest countries produce most of their own food. Overall, in 2013, American farmers contributed only 2.3 percent of the food supply for the 19 most undernourished countries through food exports and aid.
We won’t end world hunger by doubling production in the United States while putting our nation’s environment and health at risk. We can and must help end world hunger by helping people in the hungriest countries do a better job of feeding themselves and ensuring that their farmers make a good living.
Reducing poverty, increasing income for women, providing nutrition education, improving infrastructure like roads and markets to increase access to food, and ceasing wars and conflict could all help undernourished populations better feed themselves.
Your thoughts are on the right track.
Please start a dialog that puts this on platform for political parties and all Farm organisation.
The GMO Agriculture will never end the world hunger if we do not get the rain at proper time as we used to get in earlier days.Gm plants take more water and more nutrients from the soil.What about the composition of eatable of maize or any other such crops.This kind of agriculture will get only unhealthy world queuing in front of medical care hospitals if we eat the products.
GMO is only one problem we face in agriculture. The other big problem involves climate. Ironically, the corporate mass media has it all upside-down, backwards, and inside-out.
Global Warming made civilization possible 12,000 years ago. We live in an Ice Age interglacial that’s overdue to end, and governments are getting on board to cool the planet. That would be disastrous. For one thing, cooling the planet will result in far less rain. If you’ve been paying attention to the corporate news, then you’ll see a conflict, here. They’ve lied. They claim warming will increase deserts and droughts. But, as the start of the Holocene has shown us, quite the opposite happens with global warming. In fact, during the far warmer Holocene Optimum, the Sahara was green for nearly 3,000 years.
Time to start realizing that corporations do not have our best interests at heart. All corporations were founded on the principle of selfishness (profits). Their primary concern is satisfying their shareholders (not their customers)!
We need to boycott all corporations and to create a new paradigm for economics and productivity — one not based on selfishness.