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  • Food production over time

    The graphs here are interesting: they would seem to indicate that there is neither a food shortage, nor was the Green Revolution an event but rather a process.

    http://rogerpielkejr.blogspot.com/20...od-supply.html

    According to the Food and Agricultural Organization, "On average, a person needs about 1800 kcal per day as a minimum energy intake." (A kcal - kilocalorie - is a measure of food energy, also known as the Calorie). For comparison, the US government recommends 2,500 per day, on average (a recommendation that is certainly exceeded by most people, but I digress).

    The unit of kcal/person/day provides a useful basis for evaluating total food supply as compared to population. The graph at the top of this post shows such an evaluation, based on data downloaded from FAOSTAT (thanks RTC!).

    The data show that from 1961 to 2007, when the dataset begins and ends, global food supply in kcal/person/day has steadily and consistently increased such that it has been for many decades comfortably above the level deemed necessary to meet individual nutritional needs.

    In fact, if food supply distribution were perfectly efficient (which of course it is not) the world could feed an additional 1-3 billion people with the food produced in 2007 (depending on your view of nutritional requirements). This can be hard to reconcile with the fact that in 2007 the UN found about 1 billion people globally to be "undernourished." So there is considerable "headroom" for progress even without increasing global food supply, and UN data show progress in recent years.

    It is such simple math that leads the OECD and FAO to conclude:
    Food production has not only kept pace with population growth, it has outstripped it. The world now produces more food than ever, and even countries that were once practically synonymous with famine have achieved self-sufficiency in staple foods... hunger is a problem of poverty, not scarcity.
    And also:
    [W]hen you look at the facts, there is no “agricultural” reason for hunger today. Global food production has increased more quickly than population over the past half century, and the EU and USA even had to bring in policies to get rid of “mountains” and “lakes” of food and drink.

    If people are hungry, it’s because they can’t afford to buy food, not that there is no food to buy. There are many reasons for this. Politics, policies and poverty all intertwine, and as Nobel-prize winning economist Amartya Sen said “There is no such thing as an apolitical food problem.”
    Let's dig a little deeper into the numbers.
    The graph above shows the annual rate of change in kcal/person/day for the 20 years ending in 2007. The red line shows the linear trend in kcal/person/day, and shows that the annual rate of growth has just about doubled over that time period. The data illustrate that food supply has been growing faster than population, and this trend has been accelerating (which probably owes to a slowdown in population growth rates in addition to effects from agricultural intensification).

    What does this data mean from the standpoint of discussing agricultural policies? I can think of several things.

    1) It can be misleading to talk of a global "food supply" problem. Certainly, sustained improvement in agricultural productivity will continue to be important, but at present does not appear to be a limiting factor in meeting global nutrition goals. Talk of the need for a "second green revolution" not only fails to accurately reflect the so-called "first green revolution" (more on this to come) but also distracts from the fact that supply is presently not a limiting factor in meeting global nutritional goals.

    2) Over many decades the global agricultural system has shown itself to be very robust to a range of shocks, including the widespread pattern of climate anomalies of the early 1970s, financial crises, and rapidly changing prices of inputs (notably energy). However, there could be unforeseen major shocks yet to come, including disease (e.g., wheat rust) and rapid climate changes (e.g., from a massive volcanic eruption). Policy should focus on the robustness of agricultural systems to such shocks.

    3) The issue of global food is ultimately as much (if not more) a problem of distribution, poverty and governments as it is an issue of technological innovation. From where I sit it seems that far more attention it paid to the latter than the former. Every call for a "second green revolution" should be met with a reply focused on the social and political factors that affect meeting nutritional goals.

    Finally, in my explorations of issues of food (the subject of several papers in the works and a chapter in my coming-into-focus new book), it seems that a focus on yield, productivity and total production (all important, of course) can obscure the larger focus on the ultimate goals of food policy -- feeding people. This post argues that an important but underutilized (in policy discussions, that is, perhaps not among specialists) metric of kcal/person/day can help to keep our attention on that larger focus.

  • #2
    Re: Food production over time

    It is remarkable because we have more than enough food out there for every person in the world, yet people still go hungry and famines persist. It is very unfortunate. Even in the face of declining oil production in the future, there is a massive amount of room for optimizing food production at every level. There has been a movement towards drip irrigation that could do a lot to improve yields and dramatically reduce water usage because it targets the plants as opposed to being haphazard. And then we have new techniques of restoring soil fertility and enhancing it greatly, like terra preta with the application of biochar. Hell, there is a lot of room in the western world for increasing individual crop growth through the introduction of individual and community gardens. So much land in the US is dedicated to just trimmed grass in the form of wasteful lawns that strip nature and look stupid as hell. You can feed a family on an acre lot, especially with modern agricultural knowledge and tools that greatly increase production without having being fossil fuel dependent.

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    • #3
      Re: Food production over time

      It is very unfortunate.
      Could the effects of the Irish Potato Famine be mitigated?

      That's a rhetorical question . . .

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Food production over time

        It can be argued that as the calories have increased, the quality of those calories have decreased.

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Food production over time

          Originally posted by BadJuju View Post
          It is remarkable because we have more than enough food out there for every person in the world, yet people still go hungry and famines persist. It is very unfortunate. Even in the face of declining oil production in the future, there is a massive amount of room for optimizing food production at every level. There has been a movement towards drip irrigation that could do a lot to improve yields and dramatically reduce water usage because it targets the plants as opposed to being haphazard. And then we have new techniques of restoring soil fertility and enhancing it greatly, like terra preta with the application of biochar. Hell, there is a lot of room in the western world for increasing individual crop growth through the introduction of individual and community gardens. So much land in the US is dedicated to just trimmed grass in the form of wasteful lawns that strip nature and look stupid as hell. You can feed a family on an acre lot, especially with modern agricultural knowledge and tools that greatly increase production without having being fossil fuel dependent.
          I live on an acre lot and have about 2000 sq. ft of it in 3 gardens (1 1200 sq ft. vegetable garden, and 800 in 2 fruit gardens plus several fruit trees. In my large family only 2 others have any garden area. Obviously I would have a long way to go to support us by what I grow but we do get far more fruit and vegetables than we consume ourselves. Since I give a lot away, maybe that is why few others in our family have a garden?

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          • #6
            Re: Food production over time

            I recently read
            Enough: Why the World's Poorest Starve in an Age of Plenty
            by Roger Thurow and Scott Kilman

            It was so good, I read it again.
            It is not just about why so many people starve in the 21st century.
            It is like so many things people do that sound simple and straightforward, but the reality and execution are quite different... and then people game the system and interests become entrenched and take on lives of their own.
            The perverse result is just jaw dropping.
            If you dont have time to read it, I suggest the audiobook, and if not, then spoiler below.

            http://makewealthhistory.org/2010/02...-scott-kilman/




            The reason they cannot get agricultural production going in a stable way is that huge amounts of food (1/3 of some US exports) is dumped on the local markets for free, and after just a few years of this, farming collapses... and guess why that happens...

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            • #7
              Re: Food production over time

              Originally posted by dummass View Post
              It can be argued that as the calories have increased, the quality of those calories have decreased.
              After eating a combination of steamed amaranth, lambs quarters and lady's thumb; all of them being considered noxious weeds, I can't tell you enough what a technically easy problem that is to solve. Nutrition in nature is abundant. Its the calories that were the hardest to come by. Even calories are not absent especially when we speak of cat tails, acorns and maples but we could nutritionally supply a 1000 times the world population. The Latin name for Dandelion is "official remedy". People have trouble stopping the official remedy for nutritional deficiency from growing.

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              • #8
                Re: Food production over time

                Originally posted by don View Post
                Could the effects of the Irish Potato Famine be mitigated?

                That's a rhetorical question . . .
                I just read about it. The Irish Potato Famine was absolutely genocide. Absolutely disgusting what happened to the people of Ireland in those dark days.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: Food production over time

                  Originally posted by jiimbergin View Post
                  I live on an acre lot and have about 2000 sq. ft of it in 3 gardens (1 1200 sq ft. vegetable garden, and 800 in 2 fruit gardens plus several fruit trees. In my large family only 2 others have any garden area. Obviously I would have a long way to go to support us by what I grow but we do get far more fruit and vegetables than we consume ourselves. Since I give a lot away, maybe that is why few others in our family have a garden?
                  And if you tend it badly, here is some food for thought. Thistle roots, taken like any other root vegetable in fall or early spring, have good subsistence value. We actively try to remove these plants of course along with wild carrot and parsnip etc.

                  I put a few potatoes in the ground but had no objection to the thistle growing either. Its all good.

                  http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7165/6...ee9c8c64_z.jpg

                  http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7030/6...f22cf34fd2.jpg

                  http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7006/6...0cbb418e05.jpg

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                  • #10
                    Re: Food production over time

                    That last picture looks delicious. When are you having me over for dinner?

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                    • #11
                      Re: Food production over time

                      Originally posted by BadJuju View Post
                      That last picture looks delicious. When are you having me over for dinner?
                      What would you like to drink ?

                      http://farm7.staticflickr.com/6234/6...268385cd79.jpg
                      http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7167/6...b76ec9aff6.jpg

                      The above was aronia with a little crab apple compote from "ornementals" in an apartment complex.


                      Black night shade berry( mistaken for being toxic in the English speaking world for quite sometime due to wrong associations with Belladonna is another tasty "noxious weed") ice cream with black walnuts for desert.
                      http://farm7.staticflickr.com/6234/6...b4a94a3659.jpg
                      Last edited by gwynedd1; July 13, 2012, 03:07 PM.

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                      • #12
                        Re: Food production over time

                        Originally posted by gwynedd1 View Post
                        And if you tend it badly, here is some food for thought. Thistle roots, taken like any other root vegetable in fall or early spring, have good subsistence value. We actively try to remove these plants of course along with wild carrot and parsnip etc.

                        I put a few potatoes in the ground but had no objection to the thistle growing either. Its all good.

                        http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7165/6...ee9c8c64_z.jpg

                        http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7030/6...f22cf34fd2.jpg

                        http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7006/6...0cbb418e05.jpg
                        Thanks, I do have a book I bought a long time ago about wild plants that are good to eat, but other than dandelions I have never tried any, perhaps I will. Few weeds grow in my garden because I put newspaper down with leaves or other mulch on top. This helps keep out the weeds, keep the moisture in and when I till it into the soil in the late fall helps the soil.

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Re: Food production over time

                          Originally posted by jiimbergin View Post
                          Thanks, I do have a book I bought a long time ago about wild plants that are good to eat, but other than dandelions I have never tried any, perhaps I will. Few weeds grow in my garden because I put newspaper down with leaves or other mulch on top. This helps keep out the weeds, keep the moisture in and when I till it into the soil in the late fall helps the soil.
                          You can certainly go out side your garden range too. Many people make the grave mistake that its about subsistence. There is famine food to be sure, but wild food is often the best of gourmet. Dandelion is a good example of how bad impression one can get of a perfectly good plant. Greens picked in summer are not the best representation at all. Dandelions will make a crown in spring, as they begin to bud up. If its heavily mulched it will create a substantial white crown. This tends to have the least of the water soluble bitterness( you don't need a bitter defense below ground). If I shred the crowns and soak them in water, they are as mild as cabbage. Fried flower fritters will taste like chicken mcnuggests to kids and much better to adults. But for spring greens, no need to go though too much trouble since basewood leaves are everywhere and are at lease as good as the best salad greens. And again, as far a nutrition goes, wild greens often have multiples over cultivated food in nutritional density, and make even spinach look quite poor. So if you combine the cheap calories of the industrial food chain with old, easy to come by, and truthfully impossible to avoid plants of the old hunter gatherer days, its all there. Kudzu and garlic mustard alone literally need to be beat back as an infestation.

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                          • #14
                            Re: Food production over time

                            Originally posted by gwynedd1 View Post
                            You can certainly go out side your garden range too. Many people make the grave mistake that its about subsistence. There is famine food to be sure, but wild food is often the best of gourmet. Dandelion is a good example of how bad impression one can get of a perfectly good plant. Greens picked in summer are not the best representation at all. Dandelions will make a crown in spring, as they begin to bud up. If its heavily mulched it will create a substantial white crown. This tends to have the least of the water soluble bitterness( you don't need a bitter defense below ground). If I shred the crowns and soak them in water, they are as mild as cabbage. Fried flower fritters will taste like chicken mcnuggests to kids and much better to adults. But for spring greens, no need to go though too much trouble since basewood leaves are everywhere and are at lease as good as the best salad greens. And again, as far a nutrition goes, wild greens often have multiples over cultivated food in nutritional density, and make even spinach look quite poor. So if you combine the cheap calories of the industrial food chain with old, easy to come by, and truthfully impossible to avoid plants of the old hunter gatherer days, its all there. Kudzu and garlic mustard alone literally need to be beat back as an infestation.
                            Thanks, I will dig out my old book and give a few a try

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Re: Food production over time

                              Very interesting stuff gwynedd1.

                              Thanks for sharing.

                              We do a bit of growing and experimenting around home......and I get to instruct on basic edibles and medicinals down our way.....but it's always good to learn more...I'll have to pass this onto my wife.

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