Iris Publishers
W.F.P.’S Nobel Prize, The Pandemic, & Our Emerging Existential Food Crisis
Authored by Scott M Lacy
Opinion
The way we make food shapes the
world we live in. And if that’s the case, by reverse logic, our 21st century
lives are a collective indictment of an unjust global food system. Historic
levels of inequality, poverty, and hunger pervade our lived experience despite
centuries of experiments in search of political, economic, and even scientific
solutions to alleviate all this suffering on a macro-level.
That is not to say that all of
our previous experiments were mistakes, not by a long shot. In fact, our
species has a remarkable history of adapting our food system to the dynamic and
precarious balance between population growth and our lived environment, the
planet. Specifically, the long arc of our Homo sapiens history reveals two
existential food crises that may help us better understand our 21st century
challenges to feeding the planet.
Our species’ first existential
food crisis led to the development of agriculture. For 99.8% of our 7 million
years as upright walking apes, our human ancestors relied on forms of
hunter-gathering to produce food, but some 12,000 years ago, Homo sapiens
started the journey that takes us from protoagriculture to industrial farming,
not to mention sedentary living. The hunter-gatherers among us roll their eyes
at the question of whether or not our present day socioeconomic inequalities, ,
are actually rooted in our food system; the anthropological record reminds us
that global inequalities and world hunger were possible only after the
agricultural transformation seeded surplus into civilizations, and all that
comes with them. Foraged aspersions aside, the development of agriculture -
from domestication to industrialization - was a human response to our species’
first existential food crisis: climate change and population pressures rendered
untenable the widespread continuation of the food system we had relied on for
millions of years. Paleopathology and nutritional studies reveal significant
costs for this transition, but with populations and ecologies increasingly out
of sync, our ancestors reinvented our food system by domesticating plants and
animals.
Into the 20th century,
exponential population growth and ecological limits brought Homo sapiens into
our second existential food crisis. Facing a world out of balance in which our
food system could not keep up with exponential population growth, scientists
worked with farmers and governments to do what our early agricultural ancestors
did—they reinvented our food system. Humanity created a new form of agriculture
that sought to produce more calories in a bounded ecosystem that was already
tragically over-exploited. As it was with the development of agriculture, the
20th Century re-invention of agriculture came with sobering costs for humanity
and the planet on which we live, but our choices were limited and the threat of
widescale starvation and hunger was significantly reduced or delayed. The
coming of age of scientific plant breeding and cultivation strategies bought us
time just as we were running out, which is why pioneering plant breeder Norman
Borlaug received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1970.
So here we are 50 years later, in
the age of quantum computing and CRISPR, world hunger is on the rise yet again,
and we’re nosediving into our species’ third existential food crisis. Literally
50 years after Borlaug received his Nobel Peace Prize for helping find new
paths to feeding our planet, just this month the World Food Programme received
the Nobel Peace Prize for its heroic contributions staving off a 3rd
existential food crisis. Created in 1961, the WFP has worked to end world
hunger and has been distributing over 15 billion rations annually.
The 12,000-year-old experiment we
call agriculture emerged as an innovative yet compulsory adaptation to
widespread ecological disruptions to the food system we upright walking apes
had depended on for nearly 7 million years. But today, we’re facing a much more
daunting existential food crisis plagued by extreme weather events associated
with climate change as well as the rise of prolonged conflict zones across the
globe. The good news is that despite ubiquitous ecological and socioeconomic
disruptions, we create more than enough calories to feed the planet, so we’ll
need to reconsider how and why we create this unequal surplus. The bad news is
the that as a barometer of progress toward our Sustainable Development Goal of
eradicating hunger and poverty by 2030, the WFP dashboard shows us a harrowing
road ahead. Our emergent existential food crisis was on our horizon years
before the COVID-19 pandemic further destabilized our food system, but as a
result of this global health crisis the WFP projects that the number of acutely
hungry in the countries where it operates could increase 82% in the.
So, as we celebrate the WFP Nobel
Peace Prize, let’s remember that it was bestowed this honor not only because of
the billions and billions of rations it has already distributed, but as we look
into the ambiguities of the immediate and long-term future, WFP also earned
this distinction because, if it can find the additional $5 trillion it requires
to get emergency food assistance to an unprecedented 265 million people, it
like no one else can get this job done. But the third existential food crisis
on our horizon requires much more than emergency assistance.
As we work through this pandemic
and an exacerbated food crisis, all of us with our hands and minds in the soil
and food baskets, let’s focus on new opportunities to collaborate and build
entirely new food systems that yield not only ample and nutritious calories,
but one that re-seeds civilizations with our common humanity.
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this article: https://irispublishers.com/wjass/fulltext/wfps-nobel-prize-the-pandemic-our-emerging-existential-food-crisis.ID.000627.php
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