Can we end hunger and malnutrition and reduce the impact of agriculture on global warming?

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DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18537/mskn.13.01.00

Keywords:

Hunger, malnutrition, global warming, balanced diet, agriculture

Abstract

The effects of global warming are becoming more visible every day. Droughts, floods, and heat waves that used to occur once every 10 years now occur 4-6 times a decade, increasingly threatening planet Earth and the world's food supply. Climate changes and ongoing conflicts are contributing to a worsening global hunger crisis. If current trends continue, it is estimated that by 2030 the number of undernourished people will reach 840 million. Undoubtedly, expanding the agricultural area for greater food production will also increase carbon emissions, so it would be more beneficial to increase the production of the existing cultivated area. Also, switching to a more plant-based diet will help combat climate change. Responsibility for the global reduction in meat consumption falls overwhelmingly on the shoulders of the world's richest countries. If 10% of people around the world switched from meat to a plant-based diet, or if we all ate 10% less meat, 38 million hectares could be forested. With this in mind, why not adopt the diet recommended by the World Health Organization throughout the world? If we make this change, it will be possible to feed the world population in 2055, 10 billion people, with dignity, without the need to expand the current area occupied by agriculture.

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Published

2022-06-30

How to Cite

Feyen, J. (2022). Can we end hunger and malnutrition and reduce the impact of agriculture on global warming?. Maskana, 13(1), 1–3. https://doi.org/10.18537/mskn.13.01.00

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