The United Nations marked World Food Day on Wednesday warning
against food waste, as amid rising obesity, 842 million people go hungry
and stressing the importance of healthy diets.
Around a third of food produced globally currently goes to waste
-- some 1.3 billion tonnes a year according to the Rome-based UN Food
and Agriculture Organisation (FAO). "With just a quarter of that, we could feed the 842 million hungry,"
said Robert van Otterdijk, an agriculture industry expert at FAO. Halving the amount of food wasted would mean having to raise world food
production by 32 percent to feed the world's population in 2050, instead
of the 60 percent currently estimated. Mathilde Iweins, coordinator of a report on the cost of food waste, said
that "the agricultural areas used to produce the food that will never
be eaten are as big as Canada and India combined". But the FAO said focusing on the type of food being consumed was just as
important, warning that malnutrition and poorly-balanced diets impose
high costs on society -- from towering health care bills to lost
productivity. "One out of every four children in the world under the age of five is stunted," the FAO said in a report. "This means 165 million children who are so malnourished they will never
reach their full physical and cognitive potential," it said. About two billion people in the world lack vitamins and minerals that
are essential for good health while 1.4 billion people are overweight. Children with stunted growth may be at greater risk of developing
obesity problems and related diseases in adulthood in a worrying cycle
of malnutrition. Of those overweight "about one-third are obese and at risk of coronary
heart disease, diabetes or other health problems", the FAO said. The agency said that while wiping out malnutrition worldwide "is a daunting challenge, the return on investment would be high". "If the global community invested $1.2 billion (888 million euros) per
year for five years on reducing micronutrient deficiencies, the results
would be better health, fewer child deaths and increased future
earnings," it said. "It would generate annual gains worth $15.3 billion," it added. The FAO said it was particularly excited by projects aimed at "raising
the micronutrient content of staple foods -- either through
'biofortification' or by encouraging the use of varieties with higher
nutrient content". There are hopes that underutilised, nutrient-rich staple crop species
might come into fashion, as well as eating insects such as beetles. With the fight against malnutrition excelling in some countries and
lagging behind in others, the FAO gave examples of methods to help
improve food systems. In rural Vietnam, fish-stocked ponds, chickens used as a source of
fertiliser and garden-grown crops have reduced child malnutrition and
chronic energy deficiency in women of child-bearing age, while raising
incomes. In Ethiopia, a project involving goats has upped milk consumption and
incomes by teaching women better goat management and genetically
improving the animals. The FAO insisted however that country-specific projects must be backed up by global efforts to stem waste. "Getting the most food from every drop of water, plot of land, speck of
fertiliser and minute of labour saves resources for the future and makes
systems more sustainable," the organisation said.
Source-AFP
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