This informs us that by simply adopting best practice uniformly will
add food for one billion new mouths. This is very reassuring. Now
we add in the conversion globally to the biochar protocol and the
prospective total elimination of fertilizer as a result and we set
the stage for global optimization of agriculture itself. Ensuring
manpower availability allows just that.
What I am saying is that the same land base is able to support
plausibly twice what it is now doing. And this all is without the
Eden Machine reclaiming deserts and moose salmon cattail culture
claiming all the boreal forest.
As I have posted in the past, I think it is possible to support one
hundred billion on a fully terraformed Earth. The details are buried
in this blog but the support for that position is here.
For this to happen, it is only necessary to ensure that every child
is raised inside an ethos of ecological responsibility and with the
skills needed to enhance the biome he is locally part of.
Halving the food
losses would feed an additional billion people
by Staff Writers
Aalto, Finland (SPX) Oct 11, 2012
More
efficient use of the food production chain and a decrease
in the amount of food losses will dramatically help maintaining the
planet's natural resources and improve people's lives. Researchers in
Aalto University have proved a valid estimation, for the first
time, for how many people could be fed with reducing food losses.
The world's population
is an estimated seven billion people. An additional one billion can
be fed from our current resources, if the food losses could be
halved. This can be achieved if the lowest loss percentage
achieved in any region could be reached globally.
-
There isn't enough clean water everywhere on Earth. Significantly
more agricultural land cannot be cleared as well as certain raw
material minerals for fertilizers are running low. At the
same time, a quarter of the amount of calories in produced food is
lost or wasted at different stages of food production chain, which
results in unnecessary resources loss, says Matti Kummu,
post-doctoral researcher at Aalto University.
The new study is the
first to evaluate the impact of food losses and its relationship to
resources on a global scale. Annually 27 m3 of clean water, 0.031
hectares of agricultural land and 4.3 kilos of fertilizers per every
inhabitant in the world is wasted in food losses.
-
Agriculture uses over 90 percent of the fresh water consumed by
humans and most of the raw materials used in fertilizers. More
efficient food production and the reduction of food losses are very
important matters for the environment as well as
future food security, Kummu adds.
Further, for the first
time, the global food losses in terms of kilocalories per person were
estimated.
As
a result of food loss in the food production chain, it was determined
that globally 614 kilocalories per every person a day are lost.
Without this loss, present global food production would
yield 2,609 kilocalories of edible food a day for every inhabitant in
the world. Thus, by halving the food losses, we could feed 8 billion
people with the currently used resources.
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