Previously in this course, we have been discussing the human population situation (click on history or current to review notes on the history of human population growth or the current situation with regard to that topic).
Now we will spend the next 2-3 weeks (probably more??) talking about how we are attempting to feed all these people, and about the environmental consequences of those attempts.
That is, we'll be discussing impacts of human agriculture on ecosystems. The US Department of Agriculture tracks many trends related to agriculture in the US (land, water, fertilizer and pesticide use, etc.) and assesses public policies that affect conservation and environmental quality in agriculture. The site is updated periodically, and is available at: "Agricultural Resources and Environmental Indicators.
A traditional environmental science course wouldn't necessarily include discussion of agricultural issues.
Traditionally, the study of agriculture ("agronomy") has been considered to be an applied discipline, and its practitioners for the most part have felt that they had nothing to learn from academic ecologists, much less environmental scientists.
Similarly, ecologists and environmental scientists have felt that agricultural systems are inherently uninteresting, in part because they aren't "natural" and in part because they are so simplified. Until recently, most ecologists have not recognized that an agroecosystem (an agricultural ecosystem) is a complex place -- and a good home for both theoretical and applied research.
Ecologists have also come to recognize that agroecosystems dominate much of the land area of the globe, and that by ignoring them, they are ignoring a great deal.
In fact, about 1/3 of the land area of the world is used directly in agriculture of various types, including grazing lands. As of 2004, about 12 % of land area, globally, was planted to crops and about 21 % was in pasture lands. For the U.S. in 2001, "farmland" (grazing and crop lands) used about 55% of the land in the lower 48 states).
Cereal (grain) fields are now one of the largest terrestrial ecosystems of the temperate zone!
Agriculturists and ecologists should be talking to each other, and are beginning to do so more and more. They have much to learn from and offer to each other.
Better communication between the two disciplines can help to ensure that we continue to be able to feed ourselves, and that we do not do that at the expense of our children.
First, in terms of demand for food, experts are anticipating something close to a doubling of demand for food globally by 2050 -- maybe as much as a tripling.
This doubling in demand is expected to occur as population increases and as urbanization and income increase with expanded development. Increased incomes often are associated with changes in diet, notably with an increase in animal-derived products. Much grain is used to feed livestock, and thus diets richer in meat and dairy require increased gain production for animal feed. (We'll talk about efficiencies of various kinds of diets later.)
Globally, experts anticipate something on the a 64% increase in demand for food by 2020 (compared to 1996).
The prospect of feeding an increasing (and increasingly affluent) population didn't seem to present much of a problem until relatively recently. World wide, per capita food production increased steeply until recently. As an example, per capita grain production increased 40% between 1950-1984! (See Figure 3, under "Trends ..." below.)
The increase was not sustained, however. Global per capita grain production peaked in 1985 and has generally dropped since then:
Total grain harvests have continued to increase, generally, but the increase has not been fast enough to keep up with population growth (remember, we've been adding something on the order of ~ 80 million people per yr for some time now); this combination has resulted in declining per capita yields. Even in 2004, which had the highest global grain harvest ever in history, production on a per capita basis was still lower than its historical high.
Basically, increases in global grain harvests seem unable to keep up with population growth!
We've explored the population part of this equation already. Over the next couple of weeks, we'll explore the reasons for both the rapid increases in production that have occurred, particularly from about 1950 through the early '80's, and also reasons for the failure of production to keep up with population growth.
How many people starve each year across the globe (on average)?
more than 5 million children per year die of hunger (this is about 1 every 5 seconds...)
about 40 million persons of all ages die each year from starvation and diseases related to malnutrition
Numbers like these are difficult to grasp. But they become more real if we cast them in terms of something more familiar. The 40 million persons dying from starvation and diseases related to malnutrition is roughly equivalent to 300 JUMBO JETS EACH CARRYING 400 PEOPLE CRASHING EVERY DAY!
This is only the numbers who actually die. It is impossible to estimate accurately the number who are severely malnourished, but estimates are that about 1 in 8 are not fed well enough to be considered as having "enough" food each day (that is, lack enough calories to satisfy their basic bodily requirements).
In 2004, the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) estimated that there were at least 854 million undernourished hungry people in the world (this is the ~ 1 in 8 people referred to above). This is about 18 million more than were in this condition in the mid 1990's, and the estimate for 2004 was an increase over previous estimates for the first time since FAO began keeping track in the 1970's.
Of this 854 million hungry people, about 10% are "acutely" hungry -- that is wasting away from starvation) and the remainder are "chronically" hungry -- lack enough calories to satisfy basic bodily requirements. Most of the hungry are in Asia, but the largest percentage of the population in this condition is in subSaharan Africa, where about 30% of the population is hungry; most of these are from small-scale, subsistence farming families.
Basically, increases in food production used to keep up with population growth, but that is no longer the case.
Differences between trends in grain production and population growth differ by region of the world, of course. Africa is about the worst off, in general, in terms of trends in per capita grain production. As of 2004, it was projected that Africa will be able to feed only about 40% of its population from its own food production by 2025.
The Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR); a consortium of 16 international agricultural research centers, estimated in 1992 that about 70% of developing countries have rates of population growth that are outstripping their gains in food production. I haven't read an update of this statistic, but I suspect that it is still approximately correct.
(1) The immediate problem of feeding the world's people now
(2) The longer term problem of meeting future food needs, and, closely related to that,
(3) Preventing the deterioration of the resources that agriculture depends on
These challenges are great. For example, every year farmers have to feed ~ 80 million more people with billions of tons less topsoil (about 25 billion tons are lost per year to erosion alone) and trillions of gallons less water. How can this be done? Can it be done?
In the US, we are generally well-fed, and we are rich in agricultural resources. It often seems to us that these problems are not ours.
However, food crises elsewhere in the world have implications for agricultural methods and production goals in the US, for global climate, and for biodiversity.
As an example, if US farmers shifted to using agricultural practices that are likely to be more sustainable than current practices, there is likely to be at least an initial drop in yields. Then it would be impractical for the US government to keep subsiding exports of agricultural products to lesser developed countries ("LDC's"), the importing nations could not then afford to import these products, and you can see the picture:
Agricultural reform in the US is, to some extent, limited by the need to feed people in other countries!
We cannot view food problems as belonging only to others -- they are our problems in the US as well.
Click ">>" at the bottom of this page to move to a look at a brief history of the Green Revolution, or click "Navigate," here for a reminder on how to move around and within these documents.
Page last updated September 27, 2005. Page maintained by Patricia Muir at Oregon State University.