
The world has a massive food crisis — so big that
the World Bank and the United Nations say there won’t be enough food to feed
the global population by 2050. But feeding the world is big business.
The
world has a massive food crisis on its hands. The crisis is so big that
organizations like the World Bank and the United Nations say there won’t be enough food to feed the
global population when it jumps from the current seven billion people to nine
billion by 2050.
Some
research even suggests a food scarcity crunch as early as 2030 – just 15
years from now.
The
reasons? Severe weather events like droughts and floods, economic hardships,
and political unrest in underdeveloped countries, as well as agribusiness
expansion.
While
many experts say that producing more food will make the crisis go away, others
contend it’s not that simple.
“To
address food security, we need a shift in the way we address poverty and
inequality in the world,” Stephen Scanlan, a professor of sociology at Ohio University.
“There should be a reframing of food as a fundamental human right in a way that
governments actually stand by.”
But feeding
the world is big business. Multinational food companies and retailers are
heavily involved in food production. Corporations such as Kraft KRFT 0.98% ,
ConAgra CAG -0.43% , Cargill, and PepsiCo PEP 1.17% dominate
global food distribution.
Companies
like Monsanto MON 0.48% , the biggest maker of genetically modified
organisms (GMOs) seeds, promote their high tech products as a way to increase
food production.
For the rest of the story: http://fortune.com/2014/12/21/why-the-next-world-war-will-be-fought-over-food/
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