Strong and resilient food systems
are the most cost-efficient and sustainable way to prevent all forms of
malnutrition.
17 January 2014 – Healthy people
need healthy and sustainable food systems, the United Nations said today said
calling for agricultural research and development to become more focused on
nutrition, as well as local biodiversity and diversified farming systems.
“Our common approach to food
production is simply not sustainable today, or in 2050, when we will have to
provide food for a population of 9.6 billion people,” said FAO Deputy
Director-General Helena Semedo in a news release.
“We need to produce nutritious food
for all people today while also protecting the capacity of future generations
to feed themselves,” she added.
Food production has tripled since
1945 and average food availability per person has risen by 40 per cent, FAO
said.
Despite the abundance of food
supplies, there are still 840 million people that go hungry every day,
according to FAO. The health of another two billion is compromised by nutrient
deficiencies.
This, as another 1.5 billion people
are overweight or obese, consuming more food than their bodies need and
exposing them to greater risk of diabetes, heart problems and other diseases.
Much of the high food output
achieved in the past has placed great stress on natural resources, Ms. Semedo
said. These include degraded soils, polluted and exhausted fresh water
supplies, encroached on forests, depleted wild fish stocks and reduced
biodiversity.
Intensive farming systems, combined
with food wastage on a massive scale, have also contributed to greenhouse gas
emissions.
Among the challenges highlighted in
FAO’s news release is the management of sustainable livestock. Demand for
livestock products will grow 70 percent by 2050, the UN agency noted.
Consumption of meat, milk and eggs is growing rapidly in developing countries,
providing nutritious diets to previously food insecure populations.
Consumers also need help to make
healthy food choices, requiring “better governance, based on sound data, a
common vision and, above all, political leadership,” Ms. Semedo said.
“If the global community invested
$1.2 billion per year for five years on reducing micronutrient deficiencies,
the results would be better health, fewer child deaths and increased future
earnings,” she added. “It would generate annual gains worth around $15 billion
- a benefit to cost ratio of almost 13 to 1.”
- UN,
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