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Threats to Food Security

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Title: Threats to Food Security


1
Threats to Food Security
  • Fall 2012 , Lecture 4

2
Food Crisis
  • Beginning in 2007, the world faced a food crisis
  • Food riots occurred in India, Mexico, and Yemen
  • In late October, the Russian government, hoping
    to ease tensions ahead of parliamentary elections
    early next year, announced a price freeze for
    milk, bread and other foods through the end of
    January
  • The principle cause was the rising price of oil,
    which had reached about 100/barrel near the end
    of the year

2
3
Food Cost Increases in 2007
  • Inflation was driven by double-digit price hikes
    for almost every basic foodstuff
  • Dairy products prices rose as much as 200 in
    some countries
  • Maize prices hit a 10-year high in February
  • Wheat was up 50, rice up 16 and poultry nearly
    10
  • Retail prices are up 18 in China, 17 in Sri
    Lanka and 10 or more throughout Latin America
    and Russia. Zimbabwe tops the chart with a more
    than a 25 increase.

3
4
Biofuel vs. Food
  • Certain foods can be converted into biofuels,
    such as ethanol or biodiesel
  • Use of food for energy production drives up the
    price of food
  • World Banks food price index rose by 15 between
    October 2010 and January 2011, and was 29 above
    its level a year earlier
  • The quarterly increase was driven largely by
    increases in the price of sugar (20), fats and
    oils (22), wheat (20), and maize (12)

4
5
Maize (corn)
  • Maize prices have increased sharply and are
    affected by complex linkages with other markets
  • In January 2011, maize prices were about 73
    higher than June 2010 - These increases are due
    to
  • A series of downward revisions of crop forecasts
  • Low stocks (U.S. stocks-to-use ratio for 2010/11
    is projected to be 5 the lowest since 1995)
  • Positive relationship between maize and wheat
    prices
  • The use of corn for biofuels

5
6
Use of Maize for Biofuel
  • Ethanol production demand for corn increases as
    oil prices go up, with sugar-based ethanol less
    competitive at current sugar prices
  • United States Department of Agriculture estimates
    show the share of ethanol for fuel rising from
    31 of U.S. corn output in 2008/9 to a projected
    40 in 2010/11

6
7
Impact of Rising Food Prices
  • World Bank estimates that the fourth quarter 2010
    rise in food prices may have put 44 million
    people into poverty
  • 68 million people who fell below the 1.25 per
    person per day poverty line and 24 million net
    food producers who were able to escape extreme
    poverty, due to rising rice prices

7
8
Relation of Food and Petroleum Prices
  • Prices of oil affect food prices through
  • Their effects on the prices of fertilizers
  • Their effects on transportation costs
  • Incentives for the diversion of food production
    into biofuels

8
9
Biofuels Animated Diagram
  • National Geographic Biofuels

9
10
Biofuel Sources
  • Corn (maize)
  • Sugar cane
  • Jatropha
  • Cellulose (crop residue)

10
11
National Corn Growers Association
11
12
Before Spin
  • Ethanol production makes huge amounts of the
    nations corn disappear some 1.4 billion
    bushels went into ethanol production in 2004
    and that affects overall corn supply and helps
    shore up corn prices nationwide.
  • From NCGA website, July 2, 2005, as cited in
    Thermodynamics of the Corn-Ethanol Biofuel
    Cycle by Tad W. Patzek, Department of Civil and
    Environmental Engineering, University of
    California, Berkeley, page 2

12
13
Thermodynamic Analysis
  • Patzak concludes, the total energy inputs into
    ethanol production are equivalent to 45 metric
    tonnes of gasoline per hectare
  • The ethanols calorific value is equal to 11.3
    metric tonnes of gasoline.
  • This is based on an exhaustive analyses (96 page
    report)

13
14
Corn
  • Despite industry spin, corn is, at best, a
    marginal source for ethanol production
  • Ethanol has lower energy content per unit volume
    than gasoline, so a gallon of E10 fuel does not
    propel a vehicle as far as a gallon of pure
    gasoline
  • Corn used to make ethanol converts 0.5 of solar
    energy to fuel
  • Solar photovoltaic panels or solar thermal plants
    are about 15 efficient

14
15
Fuel Efficiency
  • vehicles will typically go 34 fewer miles per
    gallon on E10 than on straight gasoline.
  • Flexible fuel vehicles operating on E85 usually
    experience a 2530 drop in miles per gallon due
    to ethanols lower energy content
  • From http//www.fueleconomy.gov/feg/ethanol.shtml,
    the official U.S. government source for fuel
    economy information

15
16
Mike Krueger Interview
  • Interview with Mike Krueger, is the founder and
    President of The Money Farm
  • The Money Farm is a grain marketing advisory
    service located near Fargo, North Dakota, that
    works with individual farmers, country elevators
    and others associated with agriculture
  • He is a licensed commodity broker
  • This interview appeared on  Oklahoma Horizon TV
    as Show 639, probably in 2007

17
Sugar Cane
  • Sugar cane has been used for ethanol production,
    starting in the 1970s in Brazil
  • The ratio of output energy (renewable) to input
    energy (fossil) for sugar cane varies between are
    8.3 and 10.2
  • Both former presidents George W. Bush and Bill
    Clinton have endorsed the use of sugar cane for
    biofuel production
  • Clinton added a warning against deforestation,
    however

17
18
Jatropha
  • A plant native to Central America, which produces
    seeds which have long been used around the world
    as a source of lamp oil and soap
  • It is not a food crop, and can grow on eroded
    farmland or land considered non-arable for food
    crops
  • Jatropha seeds can be crushed to yield jatropha
    oil, which can be processed to produce biodiesel
    fuel suitable for use in a standard diesel car
  • The residue from crushing can be processed and
    used as biomass feedstock to power electricity
    plants or used as fertilizer

18
19
Jatropha Advantages
  • Can be ground on marginal land, not competing
    with food crops
  • Can be converted in very small scale plants to
    biodiesel fuel say in a rural village
  • Grow crop
  • Press oil
  • Convert to biodiesel for use in village, with no
    transportation costs

19
20
Jatropha Drawbacks
  • Has not been domestically cultivated, although
    work is on-going in both China and India towards
    cultivation
  • Many species produce toxic compounds, and
    ingesting as little as three seeds of one species
    can be fatal

20
21
Cellulose
  • Plant residue is composed mainly of cellulose
  • Cellulose is an organic compound with the formula
    (C6H10O5)n
  • It is a a polysaccharide consisting of a linear
    chain of several hundred to over ten thousand
    linked glucose units (the n in the formula)

22
Uses of cellulose
  • Cellulose is used to make paper and paperboard
  • It may be converted to cellophane or rayon
  • Research is underway to convert cellulose to
    cellulosic ethanol as an alternative fuel source
  • No cost effective method exists today
  • Cellulose offers a vast source of energy, if such
    a method is developed, so there is economic
    incentive
  • Cellulosic ethanol would not compete with food

23
Negative Impacts of Biofuel Production
  • Increased biofuel production is expected to have
    large impacts on biological diversity in the
    coming decades
  • Habitat loss mainly from cropland expansion will
    be most important impact
  • In Brazil, the planted area of sugar cane
    comprised 9 million hectares in 2008 (up 27
    since 2007).
  • In Southeast Asia, palm oil expansion for food
    and non-food purposes is regarded as one of the
    leading causes of rainforest destruction
  • Two-thirds of the current expansion of palm oil
    cultivation in Indonesia is based on the
    conversion of rainforests, one third is based on
    previously cultivated or to-date fallow land

23
24
Negative Impacts, cont.
  • Increased invasive species and nutrient
    pollution.
  • Species and genotypes of grasses suggested as
    future feedstocks of biofuels may become critical
    as invaders
  • Nutrient emissions to water and air resulting
    from intensive fuel cropping will impact species
    composition in aquatic and terrestrial systems.
  • Modeling the future biodiversity balance for
    different crops on different land types has shown
    that GHG reductions from biofuel production would
    often not be enough to compensate for the
    biodiversity losses from increased land use
    conversion, not even within a time frame of
    several decades

24
25
Negative Carbon Offset
  • In a study by Lapola et al., which appeared in
    PNAS, the authors conclude that, The planned
    expansion of biofuel plantations in Brazil could
    potentially cause both direct and indirect
    land-use changes.
  • Biofuel plantations replace rangelands
  • Rangelands replace forest
  • Any resulting deforestation can offset carbon
    savings through biofuel use

25
26
Negative Carbon Offset 2
  • Palm oil would cause the least land use change,
    and resulting negative carbon offset
  • Lapola et al. recommend that, a closer
    collaboration or strengthened institutional link
    between the biofuel and cattle-ranching sectors
    in the coming years is crucial for effective
    carbon savings from biofuels in Brazil

26
27
Bioethanol Production
27
28
Biodiesel Production
28
29
OECD-FAO Food Price Forecast
  • OECD-FAO Agricultural Outlook states that over
    the coming decade real prices for cereals could
    average as much as 20 higher and those for meats
    as much as 30 higher, compared to 2001-10.

29
30
OECD-FAO Agricultural Outlook
  • The OECD-FAO Agricultural Outlook 2011-2020 says,
    Higher prices for commodities are being passed
    through the food chain, leading to rising
    consumer price inflation in most countries
  • This raises concerns for economic stability and
    food security in some developing countries, with
    poor consumers most at risk of malnutrition, the
    report says

31
Agricultural Outlook Report
  • When inflation is factored in, the nominal prices
    what people actually pay will be still
    higher, making food bills yet harder to stomach.
  • People are going be forced, either to literally
    eat less, or find other sources of income," said
    Angel Gurría, the head of OECD
  • The worlds slow growing supply of food coupled
    with high demand will be to blame for the rising
    prices, according to the experts behind the
    report.

32
Voice of America Newscast
  • Aired 8-12-12

33
KCCI Video
  • Video segment from Des Moines TV station, 8/6/12

34
Changing Dietary Preferences
  • Economic growth, urbanization and rising
    affluence are influencing diet preferences
  • Higher demand for
  • Convenient, processed foods
  • Meat
  • Dairy products
  • A western diet!

35
Malnourishment
  • Under eating, leading to starvation
  • Overeating, leading to obesity, diabetes, etc.
  • Increasing strain on health-care systems

36
Over-Indulgence and Waste
  • In 2007, the average American ate more than twice
    as much meat as the average Chinese resident
  • At the same time, consumers in rich countries
    waste almost as much food as the entire food
    production of sub-Saharan Africa

37
Different Patterns of Obesity
  • In the U.S., seven of the 10 states with the
    highest poverty levels are also among the 10
    states with the highest rates of obesity
  • In emerging countries obesity tends to be
    concentrated in the middle classes those who
    lead more sedentary lifestyles and consume more
    processed foods.
  • Countries such as Mexico and South Africa are
    having to increasingly deal with problems of the
    over-fed at the same time as those of the
    under-fed.

38
Livestock
  • One kilogram of beef requires
  • Twelve times the water needed to produce 1 kg of
    wheat
  • More than five times as much land

39
Protein Prices
  • Aired 8-7-12
  • WTHI TV, Terra Haute, Indiana

40
Crop Yield and Fertilizer Input
  • Green revolution
  • High-yielding crop varieties
  • Chemical fertilizers
  • Pesticides
  • Irrigation
  • Mechanization

Global Fertilizer use
40
41
Corn, Wheat Comparison
  • Recent increase in corn production due to use of
    corn for biofuel production
  • Input costs have been stable over the last 10
    years, increasing with inflation however,
    fertilizer has more doubled in price
  • Per acre, the cost of a nitrogen-based
    fertilizer is now almost double that of the seed
    cost
  • Why has fertilizer cost outpaced that of
    labor, machinery, land, and seed costs?

41
42
Energy Costs of N-fertilizer
  • Production of 1 kg Nitrogen fertilizer requires
    an amount of energy equal to 1.5 liters of diesel
    fuel (1)
  • The cost of natural gas now accounts for up to 90
    percent of the cost of making nitrogen
    fertilizer, according to the U.S. Government
    Accountability Office (2)
  • Sources (1) and (2) are shown in lower pane
    (applies to all future presentations)

42
43
U.S. Food System
  • The US food production system uses about 50 of
    the total US land area, 80 of the fresh water,
    and 17 of the fossil energy used in the country
  • The heavy dependence on fossil energy suggests
    that the US food system, whether meat-based or
    plant-based, is not sustainable
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