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  • my name is evan fraser and i work at the university of coffin ontario canada

  • mostly what i do is to try and understand one of the biggest issues

  • facing our world over the next fifty years

  • how can we feed nine billion people

  • start let's consider two images

  • the first shows us how much food you could buy for one dollar

  • on a market in the african nation of zambia

  • in two thousand and eight

  • the second shows us how much you could buy on the same market for one dollar

  • in two thousand and nine

  • what happened in between was skyrocketing food prices

  • a crisis for the strong tense

  • maybe even hundreds of millions into poverty

  • what's more

  • the victims haven't suffered quietly

  • they have rioted

  • smashed markets

  • and toppled governments

  • remember the revolutions that swept the middle east in two thousand eleven

  • they all began

  • with people in the street

  • upset over the price of food

  • what's more

  • many of the world's top agricultural experts believe that this is just a tip

  • of the iceberg

  • unless we figure out new strategies to deal with global food security

  • we may be entering a new and dangerous fades of human history

  • where food

  • and energy shortages

  • threatened not only worse poverty

  • but also civic unrest

  • and international conflict

  • there are a number of reasons for this alarm

  • the first reason is that in most years we produced only just enough food to

  • cover our uses

  • in fact

  • in six of the last eleven years we actually consumed slightly more food

  • than we produced

  • and the buffer we take from one year to the next has been steadily

  • so our system already seems pretty fragile

  • it's when we look into the future that things grow very dire indeed

  • rising populations

  • and are rich diets that take a lot more resources to produce than they used to

  • are driving our demand for food up

  • and scientists figure will need

  • fifty percent more food by twenty fifty

  • but producing this food is going to be hard

  • this is because the rising demand is coming precisely at the same time

  • as high energy prices and climate change

  • are making food harder

  • and more expensive to produce

  • shaking in these grim statistics is a four apart blueprint we need to follow

  • but since each of these strategies is extremely controversial

  • each requires careful analysis

  • the first strategy include science and technology

  • a major scientific hurdle is to develop technologies that will help farmers

  • reach their potential in terms of the amount of food they produce

  • some scientists figure we could easily boost production by fifty percent

  • just fighter plane currently available technologies

  • this is especially important in regions like sub-saharan africa

  • where many farmers only produce about twenty percent of what they could

  • due to a lack of good quality seeds

  • fertilizer

  • and better equipment

  • but it's not as if we can take the seeds equipment that seem to work on north

  • american firms

  • and simply give them away to african farmers

  • this doesn't work because african soils

  • cultures and communities

  • are totally different than in north america or europe

  • so scientists must partner with farmers

  • to develop locally appropriate solutions

  • to local challenges

  • just using science and technology won't be enough however

  • and this is where the second strategy comes in

  • we must do a better job of distributing the food we've got

  • to develop a strategy we need to consider an uncomfortable truth about

  • today's food system

  • if you take all the food on the planet

  • and divided equally by all the people on the planet

  • their is plenty

  • about twenty seven hundred calories per person per day

  • and seventy five grams of protein per person per day

  • that's more than enough

  • but because we feed a lot of our food animals

  • or true corn into ethanol or simply waste vast amounts

  • maybe twenty to fifty percent of the world's food is wasted

  • or because the people who need the food are too poor to afford it

  • hunger abounds

  • so we need to establish waste of making sure that less food is wasted

  • and the food we do have is better distributed

  • one way of doing this is through ensuring that international aid

  • organizations

  • have better access to food stories that can be used as short term food aid

  • in times of crisis

  • if we want to avoid hungry future

  • we need to make sure we keep the healthy population of farms and farmers around

  • our cities

  • this means we need to support local food systems which are important because they

  • stand as a buffer between individual consumers

  • and problems that might ocr in global markets

  • even if local food systems do not feed all of us all the time very critical

  • line of defense against hunger

  • none of this will be possible without stronger regulation and proactive

  • government policy

  • i was confronted with the need for better regulation while on a recent tour

  • of a feedlot that was license to hold a hundred thousand cows

  • there i saw a four hundred and ten thousand ton pile of newer

  • that's the weight of about thirty five thousand elephants

  • it was a sad reminder of the need for governments to get serious about

  • promoting more sustainable farming

  • course

  • each of these four strategies has its drawbacks

  • critics of technology and markets argued at new technologies inevitably seemed to

  • enrich corporations

  • more than helping humanity or the environment

  • anti regulation voices argue that all governments ever do is tight farmers in

  • red tape and stifle innovation

  • arguments for more equitable food redistribution

  • causes sometime after about the effects of big brother

  • forcing us all to read a uniform diet

  • but most often perhaps is the argument that with the world population poised to

  • reach nine billion by mid century

  • there will never be away for modern communities to feed themselves by means

  • of local

  • small farms

  • our cities are simply too big

  • our demands to great to be able to feed ourselves without relying on extremely

  • intense farms

  • but luckily based isn't a lost cause

  • takes southern africa in nineteen ninety two

  • that year it suffered the worst drought in a hundred years

  • purpose ranked by half stockpiles disappeared and seventeen to twenty

  • million people almost starved

  • yet apart from in war-torn mozambique there was no real crisis

  • and the story of how southern africa overcame the drought is a modern parable

  • for how to feed nine billion humans

  • it was the famine that wasn't

  • and the reasons for this

  • are that africans adopted the four strategies proposed here

  • before the emergency local plant breeding programs introduced drought

  • resistant varieties of the crops that small-scale farmers traditionally

  • cultivate

  • this meant that people had some food to fall back on when their main crops

  • failed

  • famine early warning systems

  • used up-to-date data and weather forecast to alert officials to the

  • problems months in advance

  • meanwhile international donors adopted proactive policies like for giving loans

  • they also contributed to food storage centers closed abominable communities

  • and so food prices stayed level

  • as such

  • local production systems on which poorer communities depend

  • bounced back

  • the key lesson from southern africa in nineteen ninety two

  • is that while all these criticisms have their points

  • they aren't universally applicable

  • and not across the entire complex landscape of the twenty first century

  • food system

  • to effectively tackle the challenges of feeding the future

  • the most sensible approach is to imagine these four types of solutions

  • as components of a well-balanced investment portfolio

  • one that's resilient enough to whether economic storms

  • is still able to provide strong year over year returns

  • and a secure against fraud

  • think of new agricultural technologies as similar to high-octane alrighty

  • stocks they're an important part of a profitable investment strategy

  • but in over-reliance on them

  • could cost you your shirt if the market turns against you

  • likewise local food systems are similar to more modest

  • rainy day investments

  • they can't be relied upon to feed everyone all the time

  • but there are a vital buffer between consumers

  • and the dangerous wings of the international market

  • and of course

  • every sound portfolio includes a cash reserve in case of emergencies

  • hence the need for more mechanisms to the store and distribute food

  • in times of crisis

  • lastly

  • one of the lessons of the present economic crisis is that left unregulated

  • financial institutions behave badly

  • in the same way we need a robust legal framework to restrain agriculture from

  • destroying the environment

  • in nineteen ninety-two southern african drew passed without excessive hardship

  • and the agricultural cycle trundle onwards

  • historically and always has

  • one of the few old testament stories to have a happy ending was the tale of

  • joseph enough

  • farrow's dream

  • this story recounts how the pharaoh dreamt that seven fac

  • cows emerged from the nile

  • followed by seven th in cows fold them and doubled the fat ones out

  • if era ended up listening to joseph

  • a prisoner has dungeons for the correct interpretation

  • joseph told him that the seven th fact housework good weather reports

  • signifying seven

  • years

  • they would be followed by seven dr years of no rainfall whatsoever

  • the signature from the famine

  • joseph it buys the pharaoh to taxes farms store the grain silos

  • and prepare for the rough times ahead

  • farah purposes vice the heart and age it was saved

  • today in stopping the global food crisis may seem like an impossible task

  • the stakes could not be higher

  • if we don't change how the world produces and distributes its food

  • then the suffering and violence of the past few years will be repeated

  • but a thousand times worse

  • but luckily today we have climate

  • and demographic modeling software that are far more reliable

  • then waiting for god to send a dream to a monarch

  • these models are quite clear

  • the years twenty fifty

  • two-twenty eighty are probably not going to be as productive as the ones between

  • nineteen fifty in nineteen eighty

  • but this doesn't necessarily mean disaster

  • we can avoid this nightmare

  • and replace it with a vision of a world where no one needs to starve

  • we have the solutions

  • all we need now

  • is the will to act on them

  • what can you do to help

  • first go to our website

  • there's more information about the each of the four strategies

  • and things you can do to make a difference locally

  • and internationally

  • we'll release an in-depth video and associated campaign for each of the four

  • strategies over the next year

  • but we need to know which you are most interested in

  • soco w_w_w_

  • dot feeding nine billion dot com

  • and vote on your favorite topic

  • then share this on twitter and face book

  • send it to your friends your colleagues your neighbors your families and get

  • them to do the same

  • our funding will flow if we have enough demand

  • and votes

  • to make the next video

  • until then

  • thanks for watching

  • and good luck

my name is evan fraser and i work at the university of coffin ontario canada

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9億人に食料を供給するビデオ1. エヴァン・フレイザー博士による世界的な食糧危機の解決策の紹介 (Feeding Nine Billion Video 1: Introducing Solutions to the Global Food Crisis by Dr. Evan Fraser)

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    Wenjia Tang に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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