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Page added on September 12, 2013

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World population is essential part of food production discussion

Consumption

Our good friends at Progressive Farmer magazine fill 15 pages of their September issue with a well-researched, well-written “special report” on “Feeding the World.” ( http://www.dtnpf-digital.com/#&pageSet=26)

The four-color, four-story package hits all the humane highlights U.S. farmers and ranchers expect in these stories of manifest destiny when “the world will look to the U.S. to help stock the global food pantry.”

The report’s central premise is bold: “With dwindling natural resources, changing climate and already stressed environment, will the world’s farmers and ranchers be able to … boost food production by 70 percent over the next 40 years to satisfy … more than 9 billion people?”

What about population? Fifteen pages later I have some idea of the answer. What I didn’t find anywhere in all the facts, figures, photos and words, however, is any discussion on population. How do we in American agriculture constantly chew over how much food the world might need in the future and never once get within a hoe’s length of discussing population?

Must talk numbers

On its face, be it brown, yellow, black, red, white or whatever, population is one entire side of the two-sided food coin. As such, any discussion on any aspect of food availability in any future decade or century must include a discussion on population.

So why don’t we ever talk about it?

“We don’t like to talk about population,” explains Rob Dietz, co-author ofEnough is Enough: Building a Sustainable Economy in a World of Finite Resources, “because these conversations quickly go to topics dominated by personal views such as liberty, happiness and life. That makes us uncomfortable so we avoid them.”

The other big reason we don’t talk about population, notes Dietz, is that whenever society confronts a complex problem it “almost always looks at the supply side of the equation and rarely examines the consumption side.”

Fresh water shortage?

We’ll lasso icebergs and tow ‘em south rather than develop conservation practices. Food shortage? We’ll re-engineer nature, mine more fossil resources and burn all the earth’s rain forests to grow more feedgrains for livestock (or ethanol) before we even consider the topic of population size, growth and sustainability.

“It’s what we do,” says Dietz. “We think about how we can grow our way out of a problem and rarely consider how we can economize to solve the problem.”

We should consider both sides because what if the magazine’s 9-billion-people-by-2050 population figure, a United Nation’s projection based on current demographics, is wrong by, say, a billion people either way?

“It changes everything immediately and immensely,” he says. “But that still doesn’t mean we’ll talk about it.”

Wow, is that stubbornness or arrogance? It can’t be ignorance because, like our great grandparents, we know we will leave heirs who will need clothing and food, water and soil, air and land centuries into the future, right?

Of course, but the magazine, like us, is more comfortable addressing production, not population.

“The world greets 219,000 new people every day,” or the equivalent of “one Britain every year,” offers one expert.

So, if we assume that “most of this new population is from Asia and consuming 1,200 calories a day” (the average American consumes twice that amount, 2,375 calories per day)… “that means we’ll need the equivalent of 14,600 new acres a day.”

Land problem

That’s going to be a problem and it will be an even bigger problem if any of these new consumers want to eat like you and me in 2050 and 2450.What the magazine doesn’t explain, however, is if any solution can be found in examining the other side of the equation.

According to Dan O’ Neill, the publication’s co-author, women around the world say they have a combined 80 million unwanted pregnancies per year.Coincidentally, O’Neill notes in a 30-minute video introduction to the book (http://steadystate.org/discover/enough-is-enough/), that’s nearly equal to today’s annual population growth worldwide.

But you and I really can’t talk about it.

Farm and Dairy



7 Comments on "World population is essential part of food production discussion"

  1. kervennic on Thu, 12th Sep 2013 11:27 am 

    The great lesson from Malthus: population always adjusts to maintain a high level of poverty. Because poverty annd famine is ultimately what controls birth rate, not discussions and conscious decisions.

    Obviously still true today !

  2. Kenz300 on Thu, 12th Sep 2013 1:15 pm 

    Every problem is harder to solve with the worlds growing population.

    Food crisis, water crisis, jobs crisis, declining fish stocks crisis…..

    Worst Environmental Problem? Overpopulation, Experts Say

    http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2009/04/090418075752.htm

  3. bobinget on Thu, 12th Sep 2013 2:11 pm 

    More tactics promoting overpopulation;

    Banning certain contraceptives under the guise of ‘protecting the unborn’.

    Eliminate government funding for any organization offering abortion services or advocating a woman’s right to privacy.

  4. DC on Thu, 12th Sep 2013 2:19 pm 

    Another dimension to the issue the writer is highlighting is, in amerika, a small handful of corporations control virtually all food production from field to big box store.

    Thus, swelling populations are seen a being ‘good for the bottom line’. IoW, a question of more profits. The corporations themselves rarely think about how they are going to create ‘new’ food, because US corporations have been in frankenfood mode now for years. The slop amerikans so happily consume now is far less nutritious than it was even 50 years ago. Heavy adulteration and substitution, with things like chemicals and HFCS are already ‘expanding’ the food supply, just not in ways people like to think about.

    Its giving people cancer, and turning amerikans into the fastest and dumbest people in history, but its also very profitable too.

    That is the food corporations template going foward to feed all those future ‘consumers’ whose birth they are so eagerly awaiting. They dont care if the land does not exist, they will add more salt or fake sugar, or maybe even sawdust down the road-whatever people will ingest and pay for, corporations will use it.

  5. GregT on Fri, 13th Sep 2013 4:38 am 

    “the world will look to the U.S. to help stock the global food pantry.”

    The US is going to find out soon enough, that it will not be able to feed even itself. Climate change is already rearing it’s ugly head, and we haven’t seen anything yet…….

  6. BillT on Fri, 13th Sep 2013 5:28 am 

    GregT, you are so right! The US is less than 10 years from food scarcity. The main aquifers will be dry. Climate change will have turned the Midwest into desert. Weather will be radical. Soils are barren without petrochemical fertilizers. Insects are becoming immune to the genetic modifications, etc. $10 apple anyone?

  7. dashster on Fri, 13th Sep 2013 5:43 am 

    Population growth doesn’t even get discussed on Peak Oil sites, for the most part. In fact, if you bring it up it can bring forth a fair amount of pissing and moaning. And if you talk about immigration being the driver for population growth in countries where birth rates are at or below replacement levels, it turns to shrieks and wails.

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