FAO report reveals GM
crops not needed to feed the world
(the address of this page
is www.btinternet.com/~nlpwessex/Documents/faoreport.htm )
By 2030 the world's population is expected to top eight
billion. Can the world produce enough food to meet global
demands? The answer is yes,
according to a new report
from the UN's Food and Agriculture Organisation's (FAO) Global
Perspective Studies Unit completed in April and released at the
end of July.
This conclusion is reached by FAO experts whose quantitative
analysis specifically does NOT allow
for any production improvements from genetically modified
(GM) crops. These are not factored in by FAO due to the
ongoing uncertainties regarding the technical performance, safety
and consumer acceptance of GM crops. (p.2)
Accordingly the FAO projections are restricted to being
based on 'present-day' technical knowledge only (p.1, 2, 95,
117). Ignoring the impact of any future developments in
genetic engineering, and using a baseline year of 1995/7, the FAO
report reveals that:
* the latest assessment of world population trends by the UN
(UN,1999) indicates that there is a 'drastic deceleration' in
world demographic growth in prospect. (p.3)
* the growth rate of the world population, which had peaked in
the second half of the 1960s at 2.1 percent p.a. and had fallen
to 1.3 percent p.a. by the late 1990s, is projected to fall
further to 1.0 percent by 2015, to 0.7 percent by 2030 and to 0.3
percent by 2050. (p.4, 25)
* although the annual rate of growth in global crop production is
expected to reduce, the projected overall increment in world crop
production to 2030 of 57% (p.95, 96) will exceed population
growth. (p.25)
* global per capita food consumption will grow significantly. The
world average will approach 3000 kcal/person/day in 2015 and
exceed 3000 by 2030. Average consumption in developing countries
will rise from 2626 in the 1990's to 3020 in 2030. (p.4, 23, 29)
* the number of well-fed people (i.e. not classed as
undernourished) in developing countries will increase by 75% by
2030, to produce a level equivalent to 94% of their population.
(p.5) (The outstanding balance will reflect the failure of
countries to transit to rapid economic development and poverty
reduction.(p.40))
* in parallel the number of countries having high incidence of
undernourishment will reduce by 84% by 2030. (p.5)
* by 2030, crop production in the developing countries is
projected to be 70 percent higher than in the 1990s. (p.11)
* projected faster growth in crop production in developing
countries, as compared to the world average, means that by 2030
this group of countries will account for almost three-quarters
(72 percent) of world crop production, up from two-thirds (66
percent) in 1995/97 and just over half (53 percent) in 1961/63.
(p.95). [Given this prognosis it is not surprising that
biotechnology companies are currently keen to gain a foothold for
GM crops in developing countries.]
The FAO report emphasises that:
"Concerning the future, a number of
projection studies have addressed and largely answered in the
positive the issue whether the resource base of world
agriculture, including its land component, can continue to evolve
in a flexible and adaptable manner as it did in the past, and
also whether it can continue to exert downward pressure on the
real price of food (see for example Pinstrup-Andersen et al.,
1999). The largely positive answers mean essentially that for the
world as a whole there is enough, or more than enough, food
production potential to meet the growth of effective demand, i.e.
the demand for food of those who can afford to pay farmers to
produce it." (p.109)
[i.e. any residual hunger problems will be largely poverty,
rather than production related (p.40) - e.g: as is the case in
India at present where millions of people go hungry despite the
country holding massive grain surpluses in store: for more on
this shameful situation see - http://biotech-info.net/Biotechnology_not_answer.html
. Notwithstanding this overriding poverty factor absolute numbers
of those undernourished are expected to halve globally by 2030
despite the projected increase in total population. (p.40)].
The Food and Agriculture Organisation is the largest autonomous
agency within the United Nations. Its report "Agriculture:
Towards 2015/30", can be obtained at http://www.fao.org/es/ESD/at2015/toc-e.htm
.
Whilst the FAO's quantitative projections avoid the GM factor
altogether, it is worth noting that such crops frequently perform
worse for farmers than conventional crops - for more on this see,
http://www.btinternet.com/~nlpwessex/Documents/gmagric.htm
.
So the obvious remaining question is - why are we
taking unnecessary risks with global food security and the
environment by introducing GM crops incorporating recombinant
DNA?
For more information on the nature of those risks see 'The
Promise of Plant Biotechnology - The Threat of
Genetically Modified Organisms', an excellent review by
Patrick Brown, Professor of Pomology and Director of
International Programs, College of Agriculture &
Environmental Science, University of California, Davis: http://www.lifesciencenz.com/repository/external_news_material/promise_opponent.htm
(New Zealand Life Sciences Network web site).
"RDNA techniques are profoundly different from
traditional breeding methods and are well known to cause
unexpected metabolic perturbations. The principle of
substantial equivalence is not scientifically justifiable; hence
we can make no a priori assumption of the safety of any rDNA
manipulation." Patrick Brown, July 2000.
Further information on GM crop risks is available at: www.btinternet.com/~nlpwessex/Documents/gmocarto.htm
August 2000
NATURAL LAW PARTY WESSEX
nlpwessex@bigfoot.com
www.btinternet.com/~nlpwessex
Letter to Director General of the UN's Food and Agriculture Organisation - June 2001
Monsanto 'MAB'
progress reinforces positive FAO world food forecast - May 2001![]()
'Dismantling
the myth of genetics as the principal constraint on responsible
global agricultural production'
More
web links on 'feeding the world'
How much do we actually need GMOs
in world agriculture? - meeting of Assn of Formulation Chemists
Reducing Food Poverty with
Sustainable Agriculture: A Summary of New Evidence - University
of Essex - 2001
Return to NLP
Wessex GM page
Will GM crops deliver benefits to
farmers? - some realities behind biotechnology myths
Can Organic Agriculture Feed the World?
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