Jonathan Foley â€å“can We Sustain the World and Feed the Planetã¢â‚¬âÂ
Jon Foley of the University of Minnesota's Institute on the Environment is a food security rock star, plain and simple. And he deserves that lofty status in part because he explains our complex 21st century agriculture challenges in such a clear and accessible fashion. See him present (like in the TEDx video above), and you are left wishing all scientists would drop in on the "how to make your work understandable" class that Foley must have aced.
But Foley and his colleagues retain their scientific union cards while suggesting specific ways the world might meet the three food security goals listed above. In what must be considered the academic equivalent of a walk-off grand slam, they will be featured as next week's cover story in Nature and a more accessible derivative in the November issue of Scientific American. "Today, humans are farming more of the planet than ever, with higher resource intensity and staggering environmental impacts, while diverting an increasing fraction of crops to animals, biofuels and other nonfood uses," Foley et al. write in Nature. "Meanwhile, almost a billion people are chronically hungry. This must not continue: the requirements of current and future generations demand that we transform agriculture to meet the twin challenges of food security and environmental sustainability." Their four-step plan in brief: Sources: Nature. Video Credit: "TEDxTC – Jonathan Foley – The Other Inconvenient Truth," courtesy of Youtube user TEDxTalks.
Foley brought that clarity of presentation, mixed with self-deprecating humor, to this past week's inaugural South by Southwest (SXSW) Eco conference in Austin, Texas. Foley said we must meet three big challenges in the realm of agriculture:
To meet the demands of the future, we must double world food supplies by 2050, if not sooner, said Foley, all while reducing our impact on the environment. After laying out a daunting menu of problems, some scientists would retreat from the debates over solutions, claiming scientists must leave the responses to the farmers, industry, civil society, and of course policymakers. Scientists do science, not politics.
Foley cautions that none of these strategies alone is sufficient to deal with food insecurity or address ecological problems caused by agriculture. We need to reinvent agriculture from the ground up and transition to what he calls "terraculture" – farming as if the planet really matters.
Source: https://www.newsecuritybeat.org/2011/10/jon-foley-how-to-feed-nine-billion-and-keep-the-planet-too/
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