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MnDRIVE - Global food supply study - Food - 300x225

Nine billion people are expected on the planet by 2050—likely demanding a doubling of the world’s food supply. It’s critical to know where the world is heading, so that we all have enough to eat in the future.

Can we feed the world?

It’s especially gratifying as a researcher—as a human, really—when your work doesn’t land with a thud. A bang or a splash—always better. In particular, when you’ve put three years of your life into a project, you hope that people will take notice, that it will make an impact, leave a mark. In doing so, it helps to conduct research that affects every single person on the planet.

Start with this: Everyone eats. Whether we all have enough to eat in the future, and how to make sure we get there—that’s an attention getter.

U of M research led by Deepak Ray and scientists with the U’s Institute on the Environment (IonE) and McGill University in Montreal, Canada, certainly has people talking. The research, published recently in Nature Communications (where it was the most shared paper for nearly three weeks), showed with more specificity than any previous research where important food crop yields are stagnating or declining, and where they’re still rapidly improving.

“The next question is trying to answer whether we are on track—a very profound question. Given the current rates—if nothing happens, where will we be? Will we reach the moon or end up in the gutter?” –Deepak Ray.

In their study, the researchers developed geographically detailed maps of annual yields of the world’s four key crops (corn, rice, wheat, and soybean) from 1961 to 2008. These crops currently provide about 64 percent of agricultural calorie production. They distilled the information to such specificity that it includes about 3,800 percent more data than any previous research, says Ray—thus the three-year duration of the project. They examined 13,500 land areas, with crop yields fine-tuned by county whenever possible—not just by country, as in most previous research. That, in turn, yielded big data.

Hunger
According to the FAO, 36 million people die each year of hunger and poor nutrition. An estimated 868 million people—12 percent of the population—are undernourished.

Making a splash

News organizations around the world picked up on the research, and Ray himself was, for weeks, fielding near-hourly requests to share his findings. He received emails from NGOs and researchers in Japan, the Philippines, China, India, Pakistan, South Africa, Sweden, the UK, France, Italy, Slovenia, Canada, Mexico, Brazil, Argentina, Chile—to name more than a few. The research has practical information that enables policymakers to identify successes and failures, and to propel food production by modeling those successes.

“Other research may have shown that ‘you have a problem,’ but not the ‘What are you going to do about it?’” says Ray.

By providing data on the county level whenever possible, says Ray, a municipality or its policymakers can compare and say, “So, on the county level we have data that says that compared to our neighboring county, or a county 10 counties away, we are not doing so well—and why is that so? And they can perhaps discuss. It’s actionable intelligence,” he says.

It wasn’t perfect—in China they could only get provincial-level data. And Russia’s data, too, was hard to come by. But previously, the best measurement of crop yields came from national data, like that from the United Nations Food and Agricultural Organization’s (FAO) national crop statistics. That’s problematic, says Ray, because it takes too broad a view. The FAO, for example, suggests that American wheat yields increased everywhere between 1999 and 2008. In fact, Ray’s study showed that yields in approximately 36 percent of the American wheat-harvested areas are not improving.

It also showed that among the top crop-producing nations, vast areas of China and India—where more than a third of the world’s population resides—are witnessing especially concerning stagnation or decline in yields.

Sustainable Agriculture
"Thirty percent of greenhouse gases entering the atmosphere today are from human agricultural activity. That's more than from all of our transportation, it's more than from all our electricity, and it's more than from all manufacturing. Agriculture has been the single most powerful force unleashed on this planet since the end of the ice age—no question. But agriculture is not an option. It's a necessity." –Jon Foley. Learn more by taking a short course (one day) with instructor Jon Foley: What's Next? Feeding the World and Sustaining the Planet.

Research on food is an area near and dear to the U’s Institute on the Environment. IonE’s director, Jon Foley, a coauthor on this study, has hammered repeatedly on the theme of agriculture and feeding the world sustainably in previous research, and supports IonE’s researchers—even if their work takes three years.

Nine billion people who increasingly want to eat Western, meat-rich diets are expected on the planet by 2050—likely demanding a doubling of the world’s food supply. It’s critical to know where the world is heading—to emulate successes and avoid pitfalls and missteps—because righting a ship the size of a planet is not easy.

“We are still building on this research,” says Ray. “This step told us how much area has witnessed yield improvement. The next question is trying to answer whether we are on track—a very profound question. Given the current rates—if nothing happens, where will we be? Will we reach the moon or end up in the gutter?”

Ray says we can expect IonE’s answer to that question soon.

Tags: Institute on Environment

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Related Links

Full Nature Communications paper

Institute on the Environment

MnDRIVE: securing the global food supply

Closing yield gaps through nutrient and water management

Read more on the U's work to safeguard the world's food supply

Learn more about the U's budget request