By Joe DeCapua
Decades
after the Green Revolution took place in many parts of the world, food
shortages, high prices, hunger and poverty are major problems. It’s estimated
there are about one billion chronically hungry people. Now, a new book poses
the question – can we feed the world?
Sir
Gordon Conway is the author of One Billion Hungry. He says the answer to the
question – can we feed the world? – is yes, but a qualified yes.
“We
can feed the world if we focus our efforts. If we provide sufficient aid and
investment. If we utilize new technologies. If we create fair and efficient
markets. If we really utilize the power of women as farmers and as mothers as
nutritionists, as it were, and if we tackle climate change,” he said.
Conway
described hunger as not having enough food of the right nutritious quality to
lead a reasonable active life.
However,
he added, “It varies of course in terms of whether you’re a man or a woman,
whether you’re old or young. I think the worst hunger is child malnutrition.
We’ve got about 170 / 180 million children in the world under the age of five
who are stunted in their growth. In other words, they’re below the height they
ought to be for their age. And that comes about because they don’t get enough
micronutrients. They don’t get enough Vitamin A. They don’t get enough zinc.
They don’t get enough iron.”
The
Green Revolution saw increased agricultural research and technology, much of
which occurred in the late 1960s. The development of high yield crops, modern
farming techniques, fertilizers and hybrid seeds have been credited with
helping to save the lives of over a billion people.
Conway
said, “It was a success because it allowed food production to keep pace with
population growth. And it was particularly successful in India and south Asia,
generally. You have to realize that at the time of the Green Revolution India
was highly dependent on shipments of grain from the United States. And they
wanted to gain independence. So they wanted to be able to produce their own
grain and that’s what the Green Revolution did for them.”
But
it had its limitations.
“It
only focused on the best lands in India. It was over-reliant on pesticides and
fertilizers. Only some of the poor really benefitted. There were many poor who
were left out, even in India and South Asia, generally. And of course it passed
Africa by. So those were big limitations,” he said.
Conway
calls for a new Doubly Green Revolution. A revolution that produces just as
much food, but takes it a few steps further.
“To
ensure that productivity goes to the poor and in particular that it doesn’t
have a negative effect on the environment. So it’s green in two ways. It’s
green because you’ve got fields of green wheat and rice and it’s green because
it’s environmentally friendly,” he said.
During
the Green revolution, the environment often took a back seat to productivity.
Conway says there are “four routes” that should be pursued to ensure food
security: innovation, markets, focusing on people and political leadership.
“If
we take innovation first, what we’re trying to do there is to produce
appropriate innovations -- innovations that bring about high productivity, but
don’t have the side effects that maybe occurred in the past. And with markets,
we want fair markets and efficient markets. With people, it’s particularly
about engaging women, because a large number of farmers in Africa and the
developing world as a whole are women. And political leadership – it’ll only
work if leaders really focus on agricultural development and food security,” he
said.
The
Imperial College London professor said this also hinges on mitigating and
adapting to the effects of climate change.
“If
you take Africa, the prediction is by 2050 the growing seasons will have
shortened by five percent. I was in northern Ghana last year and the growing
season was very short. In other words, the rains came a month late and they
finished a month early. Secondly, the temperatures are going up. In Africa, as
the temperatures get above 30 degrees [Celsius] the maize crop begins to
suffer,” he said.
Food
security on the household, country and global levels becomes even more
important as the world population grows. The U.N. estimates it will rise to
more than nine billion by 2050. That’s about two billion more than we have now.
Conway’s
book -- One Billion Hungry: Can We feed the World? --will be published October
9th.---VOA News
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