GLOBAL FOOD CRISIS

THE WAR IN UKRAINE IS TRIGGERING A GLOBAL FOOD CRISIS

According to Mouood, quoting by climatechangenews:

THE WAR IN UKRAINE IS TRIGGERING A GLOBAL FOOD CRISIS. IT WON’T BE THE LAST IF WE DON’T ACT ON CLIMATE.

Published on 20/04/2022

Governments must fund humanitarian relief and prioritise cropland for feeding people, not livestock or cars, to guard against future shocks

Russia’s war in Ukraine has thrust food security to the top of the global agenda, and now, the world’s leading climate scientists have piled on a stark warning: Unless we act fast, climate change all but ensures that food crises will become the norm and not the exception.

Acute shocks to global food systems and a warming climate make for a terrifying and explosive combination. We are seeing the consequences play out right now, as the war in Ukraine will almost certainly trigger a global food crisis with catastrophic consequences for the most vulnerable.

Ukraine and Russia are both agricultural powerhouses that together account for nearly a third of global wheat and barley exports. Forty-five African and least developed countries import at least a third of their wheat from Ukraine or Russia, and 18 of those countries import more than half. If the war drags on, Egypt and other countries could face food shortages as soon as this summer, triggering what the UN Secretary-General has warned could become “a hurricane of hunger and a meltdown of the global food system.”

A man harvests bananas from a flooded plantation due to unusually heavy rains in Puerto Yumani, Bolivia. Photo: Aizar Raldes/ Getty Images

IPCC REPORTS ARE CLEAR: CLIMATE CHANGE THREATENS FOOD SECURITY
Then there’s climate change. One of the most alarming findings in the recent series of reports issued by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) is that the climate crisis will increasingly undermine food security and nutrition around the world. The IPCC’s report on climate impacts confirmed that floods, droughts, storms, and other extreme climate events have already exposed millions to acute food insecurity and malnutrition.

Perhaps most ominously, the IPCC warns that climate extremes will increase the risk of simultaneous crop losses in major food-producing regions, with potentially devastating consequences for food prices and availability.

This is our new reality: a gradually worsening situation for food and nutrition as temperatures relentlessly rise. It’s a frightening backdrop for the world’s geopolitical and economic developments — any crisis in a critical food-producing area could spell disaster on a global scale.

Rana’s greenhouse in Lebanon used to be filled with a variety of vegetables. The climate crisis is forcing her to opt for crops that are resilient to water shortages. Photo: Edmond Khoury/ WFP.

THERE ARE SOLUTIONS TO OUR CLIMATE AND FOOD CHALLENGES
While it’s likely too late to prevent a food crisis in Ukraine, we can help those who are suffering now while working to aggressively reduce greenhouse gas emissions and build resilience to future food shocks.

First, we must respond to the growing humanitarian emergency. The World Food Programme’s work is critical and should be fully funded, along with the full UN-wide response.

Second, governments should collectively diagnose the challenges to food security and coordinate their responses. When G7 countries gathered in Brussels in late March, they committed to acting in unison and called for an extraordinary session of the Council of the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) to address the consequences of Russia’s invasion on global food security and agriculture. They should follow through on those commitments.

Third, critical ecosystems should not be turned into farmland to make up for the loss of Ukrainian and Russian food exports. As part of its emergency plan, the European Union (EU) is considering freeing up fallow and conservation land for increased grain production. The United States Department of Agriculture made the right call when it rejected a request to let farmers plant on protected land. Europeans should follow suit.

Fourth, we can make up for lost food production by minimizing the amount of crops used for animal feed and biofuels. More than a third of the corn the U.S. produces is used for ethanol to blend with gasoline. The World Resources Institute found that reducing grain currently used for transportation in the U.S. and Europe by 50% this year could make up for the shortfall of Ukrainian wheat, corn, barley, and rye. Let’s prioritize growing crops to feed people, not produce fuel.

Similarly, shifting to more sustainable diets could have a big impact. About a third of global cropland is used to feed livestock. Greenpeace estimates that reducing the use of cereals for animal feed by 8% in the EU would outweigh expected production deficits in Ukraine. And we can make more food available for human consumption by reducing food loss and waste, which account for a third of all food produced.

A farmer squats near a freshly planted tree next to a flock of laying hens on a family-owned farm in Kropp, Germany. The trees are growing for the farm’s agroforestry project to combine animal husbandry with elements of forestry as part of regenerative agriculture. Photo: Gregor Fischer/ Getty Images

THE CASE FOR ALIGNING GLOBAL CLIMATE AND FOOD GOALS
Finally, and most importantly, we need to align our global climate and food goals. A changing climate will require resilience across food systems, from agricultural production to food consumption and waste disposal. At the same time, land offers opportunities to reduce greenhouse gases, from implementing farming practices that sequester carbon in soils to reducing agricultural methane emissions from livestock, rice production, and food waste, and cutting nitrous oxide emissions from fertilizer overuse.

We are at a pivotal moment. Makin

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