World lacks enough food as population soars: UN
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World lacks enough food as population soars: UN

Last Updated: Tuesday, January 31, 2012, 14:30
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World lacks enough food as population soars: UN London: The world is running out of time to make sure there is enough food, water and energy to meet the needs of a rapidly growing population and to avoid sending up to 3 billion people into poverty, a UN report warned on Monday.

As the world's population looks set to grow to nearly 9 billion by 2040 from 7 billion now, and the number of middle-class consumers increases by 3 billion over the next 20 years, the demand for resources will rise exponentially.

Even by 2030, the world will need at least 50 percent more food, 45 percent more energy and 30 percent more water, according to U.N. estimates, at a time when a changing environment is creating new limits to supply.

And if the world fails to tackle these problems, it risks condemning up to 3 billion people into poverty, the report said.

Efforts towards sustainable development are neither fast enough nor deep enough, as well as suffering from a lack of political will, the United Nations' high-level panel on global sustainability said.

"The current global development model is unsustainable. To achieve sustainability, a transformation of the global economy is required," the report said.

"Tinkering on the margins will not do the job. The current global economic crisis ... offers an opportunity for significant reforms."

Although the number of people living in absolute poverty has been reduced to 27 percent of world population from 46 percent in 1990 and the global economy has grown 75 percent since 1992, improved lifestyles and changing consumer habits have put natural resources under increasing strain.

There are 20 million more undernourished people now than in 2000; 5.2 million hectares of forest are lost per year - an area the size of Costa Rica; 85 percent of all fish stocks are over-exploited or depleted; and carbon dioxide emissions have risen 38 percent between 1990 and 2009, which heightens the risk of sea level rise and more extreme weather.

The panel, which made 56 recommendations for sustainable development to be included in economic policy as quickly as possible, said a "new political economy" was needed.

"Let's use the upcoming Rio+20 summit to kick off this global transition towards a sustainable growth model for the 21st century that the world so badly needs," EU Climate Commissioner Connie Hedegaard said in response to the report, referring to a U.N. sustainable development summit this June in Brazil.

Among the panel's recommendations, it urged governments to agree on a set of sustainable development goals which would complement the eight Millennium Development Goals to 2015 and create a framework for action after 2015.

They should work with international organizations to create an "evergreen revolution," which would at least double productivity while reducing resource use and avoiding further biodiversity losses, the report said.

Water and marine ecosystems should be managed more efficiently and there should be universal access to affordable sustainable energy by 2030.

To make the economy more sustainable, carbon and natural resource pricing should be established through taxation, regulation or emissions trading schemes by 2020 and fossil fuel subsidies should also be phased out by that time.

National fiscal and credit systems should be reformed to provide long-term incentives for sustainable practices as well as disincentives for unsustainable ones.

Sovereign wealth and public pension funds, as well as development banks and export credit agencies should apply sustainable development criteria to their investment decisions, and governments or stock market watchdogs should revise regulations to encourage their use.

Governments and scientists should also strengthen the relationship between policy and science by regularly examining the science behind environmental thresholds or "tipping points" and the United Nations should consider naming a chief scientific adviser or board to advise the organization, the report said.

Bureau Report

First Published: Tuesday, January 31, 2012, 14:30

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PaxUs - Australia
Yes, must remember to tell that to our farmers when they plow their unsold vegetables and fruit into the ground.
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V Sayikiran - Bangalore
Its true that many people will fall into BPL and struggle to get basic food requirement. It is a fact that actually there is no food shortage until people from rich developing nations realize that majority of food consumed in the modern world is only to satisy ones greed. In reallity there is plenty of food that GOD has created. Otherwise why there is no food shortage among the animal species. In fact the animals outnumber human beings. It is a fact also that animals only eat that much what is required. It is only the modern educated class of human beings who eat more than what their stomach needs. Even excess eating has so many side effets on our health. This would give rise to increase in expenditure on health care, insurance etc. Even an insane wild animal does not require all this. I have seen at least in work places and 5 star hotels that majority of people eat lavishly and 50% of food in the plate is wasted and thrown away. So really what the world requires is not produce excess food but sane human beings. This is possible if people are spiritual or God centered in nature.
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Ujjwal Sachdeva - Chandigarh, India
I believe there is enough food , but the people sitting at power are responsible for mismanagement ...
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RAKESH KAPUR - AMRITSAR
THERE IS NO DENYING THE FACT THAT WORLD WILL BE HAVING SHORTAGE OF FOOD IN THE TIMES TO COME. I STILL REMEMBER WHAT I READ IN THE CHAPTER OF `POPULATION` WHILE I WAS DOING MY GRADUATION IN COMMERCE IN 1975 WHEN THE POPULATION OF INDIA WAS 60 CRORES. THE QUOTATION READ LIKE THIS `INDIA MAY TOUCH THE ALARMING FIGURE OF 100 CRORES BY THE YEAR 2000 AND A DAY WILL COME WHEN WE WILL HAVE TO GROW FOOD ON THE TOPS OF OUR HEADS`. NOW IN 37 YEARS FROM 1975 TO 2012, THE INDIAN POLPULATION HAS SWOLLEN TO MORE THAN DOUBLE FROM 60 CRORES TO 121 CRORES. THE SITUATION IS SAME AROUND THE WORLD, WHEN THE GLOBAL POPULATION HAS TOUCHED A FIGURE OF 700 CRORES PLUS. THEREFORE WE ARE DEFINITELY GOING TO HAVE A FOOD SHORTAGE IN THE TIMES TO COME.
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Terry - United Stated
there is plenty of food the problem is being able to afford it.
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Ujjwal Sachdeva - Chandigarh, India
I believe there is enough food , but the people sitting at power are responsible for mismanagement ...