Halo concerned viewers.
Food security
has recently become
a hot topic.
In honor of
the United Nations
World Food Day,
today’s program will
explore the root causes
of global food insecurity,
possible consequences
of inaction, and solutions.
The summer of 2010
in the northern hemisphere
brought a series of
extreme weather events
linked to climate change,
including a massive heat
wave across all of Europe,
Northern Africa,
parts of Asia and
North America.
In Russia, the heat wave,
along with a drought
of proportions not seen
in 5,000 years,
sparked massive fires.
During the same summer
period, heavy rains
from an intense monsoon
created a flood disaster
in Pakistan.
At one point,
a full fifth of the nation
was under water,
including fertile crop lands.
Meanwhile, crop losses
and lower yields across
the northern hemisphere
this summer caused
global grain prices
to spike up to levels
not seen since 2008,
making food
too expensive in many
developing countries.
The tensions created
by such a situation
can even lead to conflict.
It was not long
before Mozambique
saw food protests sadly
resulting in fatalities
in September 2010.
Economics editor
Sean O'Grady of
“The Independent”
in the United Kingdom
noted in response to this
problem as it unfolded:
“In developing and
emerging economies…
the challenge is
in some cases a matter
of life and death.
In these countries
food represents
a much higher proportion
of household budgets
than in the West, and
they are less able to
withstand such shocks.”
Prior to 2007, spikes
in prices were due to
one-time events
like a monsoon failure.
The 2010 food price
increases, however,
were more alarming
because they are part
of longer term directions
in which demand
for food is outpacing
the growth in food supply.
As Britain’s “Telegraph”
news stated,
“The crises in Russia and
Pakistan are a reminder
that, for the last 20 years,
the growth of
the world's population
has outstripped that of
its agricultural output.”
The spread of modern
agricultural practices
referred to as the
“Green Revolution”
started in the 1960s
and led to increased
global grain production
of 250% as measured
between 1950 and 1984,
and increased average
calorie consumption
per day in the developing
world by 25%.
Another key benefit
was the gradual reduction
of the number of people
in the world suffering
from hunger right up
until the late 1990s.
According to Earth
Policy Institute founder
and author Lester Brown,
the population suffering
from hunger decreased
to 775 million people
by 1997, with 108 days
of global grain reserves.
Today, the number of
hungry has soared above
a billion people as both
the absolute numbers
and the percent of hungry
have increased and grain
reserves dropped to
a record low of 62 days.
Even more disturbing,
however, are the
potential ramifications
for the stability
of civilization.
Mr. Brown reported
his own gradual realization
that, as past major
civilizations may have
collapsed because
they lost control of their
food supply, our modern
society is at risk, too.
He stated,
“For a long time
I had rejected the idea
that food could be
the weak link in our
modern civilization,
but as I began to reflect
back a year or so ago,
I realized that the trends
that we had been tracking
for decades now –
things like soil erosion,
aquifer depletion
and falling water tables,
the deterioration
of grasslands,
deforestation… –
it occurred to me that
these trends are
undermining
the world economy,
and we have not turned
around a single one.
And that does not take
into account at all some
of the more recent trends
associated with
climate change.”
Mr. Lester Brown also
explained that as demand
for food increases
at a pace greater than
the growth in food supply,
food prices inflate,
putting pressure on many
developing countries
which are already
on the edge of chaos as
their citizens sometimes
turn to desperate means
to survive.
“Failing states,”
he cautioned, “are of
international concern
because they are a source
of terrorists, drugs,
weapons and refugees,
threatening political
stability everywhere.”
What are the main factors
causing growing
global food insecurity
and how do we address them?
Mr. Brown identifies
three main demand
and three main
supply areas tendencies
which we must address
in order to reverse
growing global
food scarcity and
general global insecurity.
On the demand side,
the three main factors
are population growth;
increased consumption
of animal products, and
the use of grains
for fuel instead of food.
The global population
has been growing
at an exponential rate
this last century, reaching
around 6.8 billion today.
The US Census Bureau
anticipates the globe
will hold 9.2 billion
people by 2050, which
will put a huge amount
of pressure on the need
for increased food
supplies to meet demand.
The next demand area
driving food scarcity
is the heavy
consumption of meat
and dairy products,
which use many times
more grain than
would be needed
if the grain were fed
directly to humans.
As incomes increase,
there has historically
been an unhealthy
increase in the consumption
of animal products.
Using food crops
for biofuel is the third
identified demand area.
British investigative
journalist George Monbiot
explains why this area
is much less significant
than the consumption
of animal products,
as he wrote
in The Guardian:
“There is a bigger reason
for global hunger, which
is attracting less attention
only because it has been
there for longer.
While 100 million tons
of food will be diverted
this year to feed cars,
760 million tons
will be snatched from
the mouths of humans
to feed animals.
This could cover
the global food
deficit 14 times.
If you care about hunger,
eat less meat.”
On the supply side,
the main threats
to the global food supply
include depletion of top soil,
dwindling water supply,
and climate change.
Top soil is the top
6 inches of earth
that contains nutrients
essential to the healthy
growth of plants.
Professor John Crawford,
a sustainable agriculture
expert at Australia’s
University of Sydney
released a study finding
that around 75 billion tons
of top soil is lost
annually and around
80% of the world’s
farming lands have
moderate to severe erosion.
He also estimates that
topsoil could be gone
in as little as 60 years,
threatening
global food security.
The next major supply-
side threat to global food
security is water.
The world’s water supply
is affected by both
the depletion of
underground aquifers and
changes in precipitation
patterns due to
climate change.
British scientist
Dr. Jonathan Baillie,
who is the director
of environmental
conservation at
the Zoological Society
of London, UK, stated,
“At the present rate of use,
by 2030 half the world’s
population could be
living with
severe water stress.
We cannot afford this.”
Much of the pumped water
for irrigation comes
from fossil aquifers that,
like an oil reserve,
don’t replenish.
In India and China alone
a combined total of
300 million people
depend upon pumping
water from rapidly
diminishing fossil aquifers
for crop irrigation.
Many other places,
including Pakistan,
Iran, Iraq, Mexico,
and the US are also
facing over-pumping
and threatened aquifers.
From a climate change
perspective,
erratic weather patterns
tend either to bring
extreme drought,
or to dump, for instance,
a month’s worth of rain
in one day, both of which
damage crops and
decrease food security.
Climate change also
brings increasing
global temperatures,
where each 1 degree
Celsius rise in global
average temperature
is expected to decrease
crop yields by 10%.
The warmer temperatures
are also melting glaciers
around the globe,
which are used
for irrigating crops
during the dry season.
The melting ice caps in
Greenland and Antarctica
could also bring about
10s of meters of
sea level rise.
Current projections
estimate around
two meters of
sea level rise by 2100.
To put this into perspective,
the World Bank estimates
that 1 meter of
sea level rise will affect
all of Asia’s productive
rice growing regions
to some degree.
So the question is,
how do we improve
global food security
in these circumstances?
Lester Brown points out
that most of
the productivity increases
from the Green Revolution
have already occurred,
and biotechnology
does not look as though it
is likely to make up
for the shortfall.
Another current approach
is for developed nations
to help developing
nations boost their
food production;
however, Lester Brown
argues that this is too
narrow of an approach.
We need to reverse
the devastating threats
in order to return
to food security.
Organic farming techniques,
such as cover cropping
and no-till agriculture,
help preserve
and build topsoil.
The Rodale Institute
of the US has developed
organic farming techniques
with yields similar to
or better than using
conventional agriculture,
while also retaining
more water
and building topsoil.
But the most important
aspect of ensuring
food security is
for the world to adopt
an organic vegan diet.
A plant-based diet
is the best way to feed
more people
with fewer resources,
while also helping to
reverse climate change.
Feeding grain
to livestock rather than
directly to humans
is very wasteful, because
most of the food is used
up in the animal’s
metabolic process.
George Monbiot
highlighted research by
British magazine editor
Simon Fairlie, whose
calculations demonstrate
the efficiencies of
a plant-based diet.
Mr. Monbiot wrote,
“In his magazine
The Land, Simon Fairlie
has updated the figures
produced 30 years ago
in Kenneth Mellanby’s
book
Can Britain Feed Itself?
Fairlie found that
a vegan diet grown by
means of conventional
agriculture would require
only 3m hectares of
arable land
(around half the current total).
A vegan Britain
could make a massive
contribution
to global food stocks.”
Vegan diets use the least
water in production.
Sweden’s Stockholm
International Water
Institute reports that
70% of water usage
occurs in agriculture,
with most of that used to
produce animal products,
including meat and dairy.
University of
California-Davis
in the US found that
one serving of beef
raised in California used
1,238 gallons of water,
one serving of chicken
used 330,
but one complete,
nutritionally-balanced
meal of a grain, a legume
and two vegetables used
only 98 gallons of water.
A vegan diet is also
the best way to mitigate
climate change,
both because livestock
raising contributes
overwhelmingly to
climate change emissions,
but also because
livestock emissions dissipate
out of the atmosphere
much more quickly.
In summary, the best
and fastest approaches
to preserve global
food security and
to do more with less
and dwindling resources
include: building top soil
with organic farming
methods;
conserving dwindling
water resources by eating
a more water-efficient
plant-based diet; and
reversing climate change
quickly and effectively
by adopting
an organic vegan diet.
May the day soon come
when the planet is saved
through humanity’s
wise actions, so that
all the world may live in
happiness and abundance.
We thank you for joining
us on this program.
Please stay tuned to
Supreme Master
Television
for Words of Wisdom,
coming up next after
Noteworthy News.
May your life be blessed
with peace and protection.