Consumers are asking
questions about the food production system they’ve rarely asked before. Everybody
should understand where their food comes from. That’s good for society, that’s
good for public health, that’s good for stewardship of the environment. Current
food systems are unsustainable and unhealthy. Malnutrition
affects the most vulnerable in society, and it hurts most in the earliest
stages of life. Today, more than 800 million people are chronically hungry,
about 11 per cent of the global population. Undernutrition is the underlying
cause of almost half of all child deaths, and a quarter of living children are
stunted due to inadequate nutrition. Micronutrient deficiencies — due to diets
lacking in vitamins and minerals, also known as “hidden hunger” — affects 2
billion people.
Another worrying form of malnutrition — obesity — is on the
rise. More than 500 million adults are obese as a result of diets containing
excess fat, sugars and salt. This exposes people to a greater risk of
non-communicable diseases — like heart disease, diabetes and cancer — now the
top causes of death in the world.
Consumption of refined sugars, refined fats, oils and red
meats such as beef, which have increased as cities and incomes have grown and
are expected to do so further in the future, has long been known to be
detrimental to health and a contributing factor in type II diabetes, heart disease
and some cancers. More people are now aware of the need for a better diet, but
major trends have not been reversed. A vegetarian diet reduces the incidence of
type 2 diabetes by 41 percent; a diet that includes fish yields a 25 percent
decline (No mention was made of the potential impact of a global shift from
meat to fish on already overfished waters and on traditional fishing
communities whose livelihoods have been significantly affected by existing
numbers of industrial fishing trawlers.) and the so-called Mediterranean diet
(lots of fruits and vegetables and seafood, with some meat) is associated with
a 16 percent drop. Likewise, these diets have been linked to a reduction in your
risk for death from heart disease by 20–26 percent, and a 7–13 percent
reduction in cancer risk.
In the U.S., farming accounts for 10 percent of total
greenhouse gas emissions. Methane emitted by cattle is 20 times more potent a
greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide and the nitrous oxide that’s generated when
chemical fertilizer is applied to soil some 300 times more potent. If current
trends continue, with rising affluence around the world leading to more people
adopting an American-style diet, G. David Tilman, a professor of ecology at the
University of Minnesota, estimates that by 2050 we could see an 80 percent
increase in annual greenhouse gas emissions related to food production, from
2.27 gigatons to 4.1 gigatons. The Environmental Working Group has charted,
bringing a single kilogram of beef to your dinner table generates 27 kilograms
of global warming pollution. Compare that with, say, just 1–3 kilograms for an
equivalent amount of food such as beans, nuts, and vegetables.
Food production has tripled since 1945, while average food
availability per person has risen by only 40 per cent. Our food systems have
succeeded in increasing production, however, this has come at a high
environmental cost and has not been enough to end hunger.
Put simply: we need to produce the right balance of foods,
in sufficient quantity and quality, and that is accessible to all — if we want
to lead healthy, productive and sustainable lives. Only socialism can succeed
in doing that. There is nowhere else to go except failure. Wake up, people! We
can and must rebuild into a renewable and sustainable economy. Shall we really continue
a way of life that is deadly to all of us?
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