The Global Food Crisis
The End of
Plenty
http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2009/06/cheap-food/bourne-text/1
By Joel K.
Bourne Jr
Photograph by John Stanmeyer
It is the
simplest, most natural of acts, akin to breathing and walking upright.
We sit down at the dinner table, pick up a fork, and take a juicy
bite, oblivious to the double helping of global ramifications on our
plate. Our beef comes from Iowa, fed by Nebraska corn. Our grapes come
from Chile, our bananas from Honduras, our olive oil from Sicily, our
apple juice-not from Washington State but all the way from China.
Modern society has relieved us of the burden of growing, harvesting,
even preparing our daily bread, in exchange for the burden of simply
paying for it. Only when prices rise do we take notice. And the
consequences of our inattention are profound.
Last year the
skyrocketing cost of food was a wake-up call for the planet. Between
2005 and the summer of 2008, the price of wheat and corn tripled, and
the price of rice climbed fivefold, spurring food riots in nearly two
dozen countries and pushing 75 million more people into poverty. But
unlike previous shocks driven by short-term food shortages, this price
spike came in a year when the world's farmers reaped a record grain
crop. This time, the high prices were a symptom of a larger problem
tugging at the strands of our worldwide food web, one that's not going
away anytime soon. Simply put: For most of the past decade, the world
has been consuming more food than it has been producing. After years
of drawing down stockpiles, in 2007 the world saw global carryover
stocks fall to 61 days of global consumption, the second lowest on
record.
"Agricultural
productivity growth is only one to two percent a year," warned
Joachim von Braun, director general of the International Food Policy
Research Institute in Washington, D.C., at the height of the crisis.
"This is too low to meet population growth and increased
demand."
High prices are
the ultimate signal that demand is outstripping supply, that there is
simply not enough food to go around. Such agflation hits the poorest
billion people on the planet the hardest, since they typically spend
50 to 70 percent of their income on food. Even though prices have
fallen with the imploding world economy, they are still near record
highs, and the underlying problems of low stockpiles, rising
population, and flattening yield growth remain. Climate change-with
its hotter growing seasons and increasing water scarcity-is
projected to reduce future harvests in much of the world, raising the
specter of what some scientists are now calling a perpetual food
crisis.
So what is a hot, crowded, and hungry world to do?
That's the
question von Braun and his colleagues at the Consultative Group on
International Agricultural Research are wrestling with right now. This
is the group of world-renowned agricultural research centers that
helped more than double the world's average yields of corn, rice, and
wheat between the mid-1950s and the mid-1990s, an achievement so
staggering it was dubbed the green revolution. Yet with world
population spiraling toward nine billion by mid-century, these experts
now say we need a repeat performance, doubling current food production
by 2030.
In other words, we need another green revolution. And we need it in
half the time.
Ever since our ancestors gave up hunting and gathering for plowing and
planting some 12,000 years ago, our numbers have marched in lock??step
with our agricultural prowess. Each advance-the domestication of
animals, irrigation, wet rice production-led to a corresponding jump
in human population. Every time food supplies plateaued, population
eventually leveled off. Early Arab and Chinese writers noted the
relationship between population and food resources, but it wasn't
until the end of the 18th century that a British scholar tried to
explain the exact mechanism linking the two-and became perhaps the
most vilified social scientist in history.
Thomas Robert
Malthus, the namesake of such terms as "Malthusian collapse"
and "Malthusian curse," was a mild-mannered mathematician, a
clergyman-and, his critics would say, the ultimate glass-half-empty
kind of guy. When a few Enlightenment philosophers, giddy from the
success of the French Revolution, began predicting the continued
unfettered improvement of the human condition, Malthus cut them off at
the knees. Human population, he observed, increases at a geometric
rate, doubling about every 25 years if unchecked, while agricultural
production increases arithmetically-much more slowly. Therein lay a
biological trap that humanity could never escape.
"The power of
population is indefinitely greater than the power in the earth to
produce subsistence for man," he wrote in his Essay on the
Principle of Population in 1798. "This implies a strong and constantly
operating check on population from the difficulty of subsistence."
Malthus thought such checks could be voluntary, such as birth control,
abstinence, or delayed marriage-or involuntary, through the scourges
of war, famine, and disease. He advocated against food relief for all
but the poorest of people, since he felt such aid encouraged more
children to be born into misery. That tough love earned him a nasty
cameo in English literature from none other than Charles Dickens. When
Ebenezer Scrooge is asked to give alms for the poor in A Christmas
Carol, the
heartless banker tells the do-gooders that the destitute should head
for the workhouses or prisons. And if they'd rather die than go there,
"they had better do it, and decrease the surplus
population."
The industrial
revolution and plowing up of the English commons dramatically
increased the amount of food in England, sweeping Malthus into the
dustbin of the Victorian era. But it was the green revolution that
truly made the reverend the laughingstock of modern economists. From
1950 to today the world has experienced the largest population growth
in human history. After Malthus's time, six billion people were added
to the planet's dinner tables. Yet thanks to improved methods of grain
production, most of those people were fed. We'd finally shed
Malthusian limits for good.
Or so we thought.
On the 15th night of the ninth month of the Chinese lunar calendar,
3,680 villagers, nearly all with the surname "He," sat
beneath a leaking tarp in the square of Yaotian, China, and dived into
a 13-course meal. The event was a traditional banquet in honor of
their elders. Tureens of steaming soup floated past, followed by
rapidly dwindling platters of noodles, rice, fish, shrimp, steamed
vegetables, dim sum, duck, chicken, lily root, pigeon, black fungus,
and pork cooked more ways than I could count.
Even with the global recession, times are still relatively good in the
southeastern province of Guangdong, where Yaotian sits tucked between
postage-stamp garden plots and block after block of new factories that
helped make the province one of the most prosperous in China. When
times are good, the Chinese eat pigs. Lots of pigs. Per capita pork
consumption in the world's most populous country went up 45 percent
between 1993 and 2005, from 53 to 77 pounds a year.
An affable businessman in a pink-striped polo shirt, pork-industry
consultant Shen Guang?rong remembers his father raising one pig each
year, which was slaughtered at the Chinese New Year. It would be their
only meat for the year. The pigs Shen's father raised were pretty low
maintenance-hardy black-and-white varieties that would eat almost
anything: food scraps, roots, garbage. Not so China's modern pigs.
After the deadly protests of Tiananmen Square in 1989, which topped
off a year of political unrest exacerbated by high food prices, the
government started offering tax incentives to large industrial farms
to meet the growing demand. Shen was assigned to work at one of
China's first pig CAFOs, or concentrated animal feeding operations, in
nearby Shenzhen. Such farms, which have proliferated in recent years,
depend on breeds that are fed high-tech mixtures of corn, soy meal,
and supplements to keep them growing fast.
That's good news
for the average pork-loving Chinese-who still eats only about 40
percent as much meat as consumers in the U.S. But it's worrisome for
the world's grain supplies. It's no coincidence that as countries like
China and India prosper and their people move up the food ladder,
demand for grain has increased. For as tasty as that sweet-and-sour
pork may be, eating meat is an incredibly inefficient way to feed
oneself. It takes up to five times more grain to get the equivalent
amount of calories from eating pork as from simply eating grain
itself-ten times if we're talking about grain-fattened U.S. beef. As
more grain has been diverted to livestock and to the production of
biofuels for cars, annual worldwide consumption of grain has risen
from 815 million metric tons in 1960 to 2.16 billion in 2008. Since
2005, the mad rush to biofuels alone has pushed grain-consumption
growth from about 20 million tons annually to 50 million tons,
according to Lester Brown of the Earth Policy Institute.
Even China, the
second largest corn-growing nation on the planet, can't grow enough
grain to feed all its pigs. Most of the shortfall is made up with
imported soybeans from the U.S. or Brazil, one of the few countries
with the potential to expand its cropland-often by plowing up rain
forest. Increasing demand for food, feed, and bio?fuels has been a
major driver of deforestation in the tropics. Between 1980 and 2000
more than half of new cropland acreage in the tropics was carved out
of intact rain forests; Brazil alone increased its soybean acreage in
Amazonia 10 percent a year from 1990 to 2005.
Some of those Brazilian soybeans may end up in the troughs of
Guangzhou Lizhi Farms, the largest CAFO in Guangdong Province. Tucked
into a green valley just off a four-lane highway that's still being
built, some 60 white hog houses are scattered around large ponds, part
of the waste-treatment system for 100,000 hogs. The city of Guangzhou
is also building a brand-new meatpacking plant that will slaughter
5,000 head a day. By the time China has 1.5 billion people, sometime
in the next 20 years, some experts predict they'll need another 200
million hogs just to keep up. And that's just China. World meat
consumption is expected to double by 2050. That means we're going to
need a whole lot more grain.
This isn't the
first time the world has stood at the brink of a food crisis-it's
only the most recent iteration. At 83, Gurcharan Singh Kalkat has
lived long enough to remember one of the worst famines of the 20th
century. In 1943 as many as four million people died in the
"Malthusian correction" known as the Bengal Famine. For the
following two decades, India had to import millions of tons of grain
to feed its people.
Then came the
green revolution. In the mid-1960s, as India was struggling to feed
its people during yet another crippling drought, an American plant
breeder named Norman Borlaug was working with Indian researchers to
bring his high-yielding wheat varieties to Punjab. The new seeds were
a godsend, says Kal?kat, who was deputy director of agriculture for
Punjab at the time. By 1970, farmers had nearly tripled their
production with the same amount of work. "We had a big problem
with what to do with the surplus," says Kalkat. "We closed
schools one month early to store the wheat crop in the
buildings."
Borlaug was born in Iowa and saw his mission as spreading the
high-yield farming methods that had turned the American Midwest into
the world's breadbasket to impoverished places throughout the world.
His new dwarf wheat varieties, with their short, stocky stems
supporting full, fat seed heads, were a startling breakthrough. They
could produce grain like no other wheat ever seen-as long as there
was plenty of water and synthetic fertilizer and little competition
from weeds or insects. To that end, the Indian government subsidized
canals, fertilizer, and the drilling of tube wells for irrigation and
gave farmers free electricity to pump the water. The new wheat
varieties quickly spread throughout Asia, changing the traditional
farming practices of millions of farmers, and were soon followed by
new strains of "miracle" rice. The new crops matured faster
and enabled farmers to grow two crops a year instead of one. Today a
double crop of wheat, rice, or cotton is the norm in Punjab, which,
with neighboring Haryana, recently supplied more than 90 percent of
the wheat needed by grain-deficient states in India.
The green
revolution Borlaug started had nothing to do with the eco-friendly
green label in vogue today. With its use of synthetic fertilizers and
pesticides to nurture vast fields of the same crop, a practice known
as monoculture, this new method of industrial farming was the
antithesis of today's organic trend. Rather, William S. Gaud, then
administrator of the U.S. Agency for International Development, coined
the phrase in 1968 to describe an alternative to Russia's red
revolution, in which workers, soldiers, and hungry peasants had
rebelled violently against the tsarist government. The more pacifying
green revolution was such a staggering success that Borlaug won the
Nobel Peace Prize in 1970.
Today, though, the
miracle of the green revolution is over in Punjab: Yield growth has
essentially flattened since the mid-1990s. Overirrigation has led to
steep drops in the water table, now tapped by 1.3 million tube wells,
while thousands of hectares of productive land have been lost to
salinization and waterlogged soils. Forty years of intensive
irrigation, fertilization, and pesticides have not been kind to the
loamy gray fields of Punjab. Nor, in some cases, to the people
themselves.
In the dusty
farming village of Bhuttiwala, home to some 6,000 people in the
Muktsar district, village elder Jagsir Singh, in flowing beard and
cobalt turban, adds up the toll: "We've had 49 deaths due to
cancer in the last four years," he says. "Most of them were
young people. The water is not good. It's poisonous, contaminated
water. Yet people still drink it."
Walking through the narrow dirt lanes past pyramids of dried cow dung,
Singh introduces Amarjeet Kaur, a slender 40-year-old who for years
drew the family's daily water from a hand pump in their brick-hard
compound. She was diagnosed with breast cancer last year. Tej Kaur,
50, also has breast cancer. Her surgery, she says, wasn't nearly as
painful as losing her seven-year-old grandson to "blood cancer,"
or leukemia. Jagdev Singh is a sweet-faced 14-year-old boy whose spine
is slowly deteriorating. From his wheelchair, he is
watching
SpongeBob SquarePants dubbed in Hindi as his father discusses his
prognosis. "The doctors say he will not live to see 20,"
says Bhola Singh.
There's no proof these cancers were caused by pesticides. But
researchers have found pesticides in the Punjabi farmers' blood, their
water table, their vegetables, even their wives' breast milk. So many
people take the train from the Malwa region to the cancer hospital in
Bikaner that it's now called the Cancer Express. The government is
concerned enough to spend millions on reverse-osmosis water-treatment
plants for the worst affected villages.
If that weren't worrisome enough, the high cost of fertilizers and
pesticides has plunged many Punjabi farmers into debt. One study found
more than 1,400 cases of farmer suicides in 93 villages between 1988
and 2006. Some groups put the total for the state as high as 40,000 to
60,000 suicides over that period. Many drank pesticides or hung
themselves in their fields.
"The green
revolution has brought us only downfall," says Jarnail Singh, a
retired schoolteacher in Jajjal village. "It ruined our soil, our
environment, our water table. Used to be we had fairs in villages
where people would come together and have fun. Now we gather in
medical centers. The government has sacrificed the people of Punjab
for grain."
Others, of course,
see it differently. Rattan Lal, a noted soil scientist at Ohio State
who graduated from Punjab Agricultural University in 1963, believes it
was the abuse-not the use-of green revolution technologies that
caused most of the problems. That includes the overuse of fertilizers,
pesticides, and irrigation and the removal of all crop residues from
the fields, essentially strip-mining soil nutrients. "I realize
the problems of water quality and water withdrawal," says Lal.
"But it saved hundreds of millions of people. We paid a price in
water, but the choice was to let people die."
In terms of production, the benefits of the green revolution are hard
to deny. India hasn't experienced famine since Borlaug brought his
seeds to town, while world grain production has more than doubled.
Some scientists credit increased rice yields alone with the existence
of 700 million more people on the planet.
Many crop
scientists and farmers believe the solution to our current food crisis
lies in a second green revolution, based largely on our newfound
knowledge of the gene. Plant breeders now know the sequence of nearly
all of the 50,000 or so genes in corn and soybean plants and are using
that knowledge in ways that were unimaginable only four or five years
ago, says Robert Fraley, chief technology officer for the agricultural
giant Monsanto. Fraley is convinced that genetic modification, which
allows breeders to bolster crops with beneficial traits from other
species, will lead to new varie?ties with higher yields, reduced
fertilizer needs, and drought tolerance-the holy grail for the past
decade. He believes biotech will make it possible to double yields of
Monsanto's core crops of corn, cotton, and soybeans by 2030.
"We're now poised to see probably the greatest period of
fundamental scientific advance in the history of
agriculture."
Africa is the
continent where Homo sapiens was born, and with its worn-out soils, fitful rain,
and rising population, it could very well offer a glimpse of our
species' future. For numerous reasons-lack of infrastructure,
corruption, inaccessible markets-the green revolution never made it
here. Agricultural production per capita actually declined in
sub-Saharan Africa between 1970 and 2000, while the population soared,
leaving an average ten-million-ton annual food deficit. It's now home
to more than a quarter of the world's hungriest people.
Tiny, landlocked
Malawi, dubbed the "warm heart of Africa" by a hopeful
tourism industry, is also in the hungry heart of Africa, a poster
child for the continent's agricultural ills. Living in one of the
poorest and most densely populated countries in Africa, the majority
of Malawians are corn farmers who eke out a living on less than two
dollars a day. In 2005 the rains failed once again in Malawi, and more
than a third of its population of 13 million required food aid to
survive. Malawi's President Bingu wa Mutharika declared he did not get
elected to rule a nation of beggars. After initially failing to
persuade the World Bank and other donors to help subsidize green
revolution inputs, Bingu, as he's known here, decided to spend $58
million from the country's own coffers to get hybrid seeds and
fertilizers into the hands of poor farmers. The World Bank eventually
got on board and persuaded Bingu to target the subsidy to the poorest
farmers. About 1.3 million farm families received coupons that allowed
them to buy three kilograms of hybrid corn seed and two 50-kilogram
bags of fertilizer at a third of the market price.
What happened next
has been called the Malawi Miracle. Good seed and a little
fertilizer-and the return of soil-soaking rains-helped farmers reap
bumper crops for the next two years. (Last year's harvests, however,
were slightly down.) The 2007 harvest was estimated to be 3.44 million
metric tons, a national record. "They went from a 44 percent
deficit to an 18 percent surplus, doubling their production,"
says Pedro Sanchez, the director of the Tropical Agriculture Program
at Columbia University who advised the Malawi government on the
program. "The next year they had a 53 percent surplus and
exported maize to Zimbabwe. It was a dramatic change."
So dramatic, in
fact, that it has led to an increasing awareness of the importance of
agricultural investment in reducing poverty and hunger in places like
Malawi. In October 2007 the World Bank issued a critical report,
concluding that the agency, international donors, and African
governments had fallen short in helping Africa's poor farmers and had
neglected investment in agriculture for the previous 15 years. After
decades of discouraging public investment in agriculture and calling
for market-based solutions that rarely materialized, institutions like
the World Bank have reversed course and pumped funds into agriculture
over the past two years.
Malawi's subsidy
program is part of a larger movement to bring the green revolution, at
long last, to Africa. Since 2006 the Rockefeller Foundation and the
Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation have ponied up nearly half a billion
dollars to fund the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa, focused
primarily on bringing plant-breeding programs to African universities
and enough fertilizer to farmers' fields. Columbia's Sanchez, along
with über-economist and poverty warrior Jeffrey Sachs, is providing
concrete examples of the benefits of such investment in 80 small
villages clustered into about a dozen "Millennium Villages"
scattered in hunger hot spots throughout Africa. With the help of a
few rock stars and A-list actors, Sanchez and Sachs are spending
$300,000 a year on each small village. That's one-third as much per
person as Malawi's per capita GDP, leading many in the development
community to wonder if such a program can be sustained over the long
haul.
Phelire Nkhoma, a
small whipcord of a woman, is the agricultural extension officer for
one of Malawi's two Millennium Villages-actually seven villages with
a total of 35,000 people. She describes the program as we ride in a
new UN pickup from her office in Zomba District through fire-blackened
fields dotted with the violet flush of jacaranda trees. Villagers get
hybrid seeds and fertilizers for free-as long as they donate three
bags of corn at harvesttime to a school feeding program. They get bed
nets and antimalarial drugs. They get a clinic staffed with health
workers, a gra?nary to store their harvests, and safe-drinking-water
wells within a kilometer of each household. Good primary schools,
improved road systems, and connection to the power grid and the
Internet are on the way in these villages, and in the "Madonna"
village, which is farther north.
"The Madonna?" I asked.
"Yes. I hear she's divorcing her latest husband. Is that
true?"
Good times are
apparent in the Millennium Village, where Nkhoma shows me new brick
houses topped with shiny corrugated-steel roofs, a grain bank full of
seed and fertilizer, and beneath a shade tree, a hundred or more
villagers patiently listening to a banker explaining how they can
apply for an agricultural loan. Several are queued up at the teller
window of an armored truck from Opportunity International Bank of
Malawi. Cosmas Chimwara, a 30-year-old cabbage seller, is one of them.
"The cabbage business is going well," he says. "I have
three bikes, a TV and mobile phone, and a better
house."
Such stories warm
the heart of Faison Tipoti, the village leader who was instrumental in
bringing the famous project here. "When Jeff Sachs came and
asked, 'What do you want?' we said not money, not flour, but give us
fertilizer and hybrid seed, and he will do a good thing," says
Tipoti in a deep voice. No longer do villagers spend their days
walking the road begging others for food to feed children with swollen
bellies and sickness. He gazes over to where several children are
frolicking as they wash clothes and gather water at the new village
well. "With the coming of the project, everywhere is clear, fresh
water," Tipoti says.
But is a reprise
of the green revolution-with the traditional package of synthetic
fertilizers, pesticides, and irrigation, supercharged by genetically
engineered seeds-really the answer to the world's food
crisis?
Last year
a massive study called the "International Assessment of
Agricultural Knowledge, Science and Technology for Development"
concluded that the immense production increases brought about by
science and technology in the past 30 years have failed to improve
food access for many of the world's poor. The six-year study,
initiated by the World Bank and the UN's Food and Agriculture
Organization and involving some 400 agricultural experts from around
the globe, called for a paradigm shift in agriculture toward more
sustainable and ecologically friendly practices that would benefit the
world's 900 million small farmers, not just
agribusiness.
The green
revolution's legacy of tainted soil and depleted aquifers is one
reason to look for new strategies. So is what author and University of
California, Berkeley, professor Michael Pollan calls the Achilles heel
of current green revolution methods: a dependence on fossil fuels.
Natural gas, for example, is a raw material for nitrogen fertilizers.
"The only way you can have one farmer feed 140 Americans is with
monocultures. And monocultures need lots of fossil-fuel-based
fertilizers and lots of fossil-fuel-based pesticides," Pollan
says. "That only works in an era of cheap fossil fuels, and that
era is coming to an end. Moving anyone to a dependence on fossil fuels
seems the height of irresponsibility."
So far, genetic
breakthroughs that would free green revolution crops from their heavy
dependence on irrigation and fertilizer have proved elusive.
Engineering plants that can fix their own nitrogen or are resistant to
drought "has proven a lot harder than they thought," says
Pollan. Monsanto's Fraley predicts his company will have
drought-tolerant corn in the U.S. market by 2012. But the increased
yields promised during drought years are only 6 to 10 percent above
those of standard drought-hammered crops.
And so a shift
has already begun to small, underfunded projects scattered across
Africa and Asia. Some call it agroecology, others sustainable
agriculture, but the underlying idea is revolutionary: that we must
stop focusing on simply maximizing grain yields at any cost and
consider the environmental and social impacts of food production.
Vandana Shiva is a nuclear physicist turned agroecologist who is
India's harshest critic of the green revolution. "I call it
monocultures of the mind," she says. "They just look at
yields of wheat and rice, but overall the food basket is going down.
There were 250 kinds of crops in Punjab before the green revolution."
Shiva argues that small-scale, biologically diverse farms can produce
more food with fewer petroleum-based inputs. Her research has shown
that using compost instead of natural-gas-derived fertilizer increases
organic matter in the soil, sequestering carbon and holding
moisture-two key advantages for farmers facing climate change.
"If you are talking about solving the food crisis, these are the
methods you need," adds Shiva.
In northern
Malawi one project is getting many of the same results as the
Millennium Villages project, at a fraction of the cost. There are no
hybrid corn seeds, free fertilizers, or new roads here in the village
of Ekwendeni. Instead the Soils, Food and Healthy Communities (SFHC)
project distributes legume seeds, recipes, and technical advice for
growing nutritious crops like peanuts, pigeon peas, and soybeans,
which enrich the soil by fixing nitrogen while also enriching
children's diets. The program began in 2000 at Ekwendeni Hospital,
where the staff was seeing high rates of malnutrition. Research
suggested the culprit was the corn monoculture that had left small
farmers with poor yields due to depleted soils and the high price of
fertilizer.
The project's old
pickup needs a push to get it going, but soon Boyd Zimba, the
project's assistant coordinator, and Zacharia Nkhonya, its
food-security supervisor, are rattling down the road, talking about
what they see as the downside of the Malawi Miracle. "First, the
fertilizer subsidy cannot last long," says Nkhonya, a compact man
with a quick smile. "Second, it doesn't go to everyone. And
third, it only comes once a year, while legumes are long-term-soils
get improved every year, unlike with fertilizers."
At the small
village of Encongolweni, a group of two dozen SFHC farmers greet us
with a song about the dishes they make from soybeans and pigeon peas.
We sit in their meetinghouse as if at an old-time tent revival, as
they testify about how planting legumes has changed their lives. Ackim
Mhone's story is typical. By incorporating legumes into his rotation,
he's doubled his corn yield on his small plot of land while cutting
his fertilizer use in half. "That was enough to change the life
of my family," Mhone says, and to enable him to improve his house
and buy livestock. Later, Alice Sumphi, a 67-year-old farmer with a
mischievous smile, dances in her plot of young knee-high tomatoes,
proudly pointing out that they bested those of the younger men.
Canadian researchers found that after eight years, the children of
more than 7,000 families involved in the project showed significant
weight increases, making a pretty good case that soil health and
community health are connected in Malawi.
Which is why the
project's research coordinator, Rachel Bezner Kerr, is alarmed that
big-money foundations are pushing for a new green revolution in
Africa. "I find it deeply disturbing," she says. "It's
getting farmers to rely on expensive inputs produced from afar that
are making money for big companies rather than on agroecological
methods for using local resources and skills. I don't think that's the
solution."
Regardless of which model prevails-agriculture as a diverse
ecological art, as a high-tech industry, or some combination of the
two-the challenge of putting enough food in nine billion mouths by
2050 is daunting. Two billion people already live in the driest parts
of the globe, and climate change is projected to slash yields in these
regions even further. No matter how great their yield potential,
plants still need water to grow. And in the not too distant future,
every year could be a drought year for much of the globe.
New climate
studies show that extreme heat waves, such as the one that withered
crops and killed thousands in western Europe in 2003, are very likely
to become common in the tropics and subtropics by century's end.
Himalayan glaciers that now provide water for hundreds of millions of
people, livestock, and farmland in China and India are melting faster
and could vanish completely by 2035. In the worst-case scenario,
yields for some grains could decline by 10 to 15 percent in South Asia
by 2030. Projections for southern Africa are even more dire. In a
region already racked by water scarcity and food insecurity, the
all-important corn harvest could drop by 30 percent-47 percent in
the worst-case scenario. All the while the population clock keeps
ticking, with a net of 2.5 more mouths to feed born every second. That
amounts to 4,500 more mouths in the time it takes you to read this
article.
Which leads us,
inevitably, back to Malthus.
On a brisk fall
day that has put color into the cheeks of the most die-hard Londoners,
I visit the British Library and check out the first edition of the
book that still generates such heated debate. Malthus's Essay on the
Principle of Population looks like an eighth-grade science primer. From its
strong, clear prose comes the voice of a humble parish priest who
hoped, as much as anything, to be proved wrong.
"People who
say Malthus is wrong usually haven't read him," says Tim Dyson, a
professor of population studies at the London School of Economics.
"He was not taking a view any different than what Adam Smith took
in the first volume of The Wealth of Nations. No one in their right mind doubts the idea
that populations have to live within their resource base. And that the
capacity of society to increase resources from that base is ultimately
limited."
Though his essays emphasized "positive checks" on population
from famine, disease, and war, his "preventative checks" may
have been more important. A growing workforce, Malthus explained,
depresses wages, which tends to make people delay marriage until they
can better support a family. Delaying marriage reduces fertility
rates, creating an equally powerful check on populations. It has now
been shown that this is the basic mechanism that regulated population
growth in western Europe for some 300 years before the industrial
revolution-a pretty good record for any social scientist, says
Dyson.
Yet when Britain
recently issued a new 20-pound note, it put Adam Smith on the back,
not T. R. Malthus. He doesn't fit the ethos of the moment. We don't
want to think about limits. But as we approach nine billion people on
the planet, all clamoring for the same opportunities, the same
lifestyles, the same hamburgers, we ignore them at our risk.
None of the great classical economists saw the industrial revolution
coming, or the transformation of economies and agriculture that it
would bring about. The cheap, readily available energy contained in
coal-and later in other fossil fuels-unleashed the greatest
increase in food, personal wealth, and people the world has ever seen,
enabling Earth's population to increase sevenfold since Malthus's day.
And yet hunger, famine, and malnutrition are with us still, just as
Malthus said they would be.
"Years ago I
was working with a Chinese demographer," Dyson says. "One
day he pointed out to me the two Chinese characters above his office
door that spelled the word 'population.' You had the character for a
person and the character for an open mouth. It really struck me.
Ultimately there has to be a balance between population and resources.
And this notion that we can continue to grow forever, well it's
ridiculous."
Perhaps somewhere deep in his crypt in Bath Abbey, Malthus is quietly
wagging a bony finger and saying, "Told you
so."?
Egypt
Stung by soaring food prices,
angry Egyptians throng a kiosk selling government-subsidized bread
near the Great Pyramid at Giza. Across the globe, rising demand and
flat supplies have rekindled the old debate over whether production
can keep up with population.
Our Fragile
Food Web
The challenge today
is not to deal with a short-term rise in grain prices, but to find
ways to avoid a perpetual food crisis.