food crisis water hungry virtual water

Waste, Not Supply, Blamed for Food Crisis
food chain Stockholm sustainable

Half of All Food Produced Worldwide is Wasted

Another reminder that most economic problems lie not in the stage of production but in the stage of distribution. We trim this 2008 article by Environment News Service of August 22, noted by OneWorld.

by ENS

Tremendous quantities of food are wasted after production -- discarded in processing, transport, supermarkets, and kitchens -- and this wasted food is also wasted water.

In a brief authored by the Stockholm International Water Institute, the UN Food and Agriculture Organization, and the International Water Management Institute it’s shown that the current food crisis is less a crisis of production than a crisis of waste. Tossing food away is like leaving the tap running, the authors say.

"More than enough food is produced to feed a healthy global population. Distribution and access to food is a problem -- many are hungry, while at the same time many overeat," the brief states. But, it says, "we are providing food to take care of not only our necessary consumption but also our wasteful habits."

Dr. Charlotte de Fraiture, a researcher at IWMI , says, "As much as half of the water used to grow food globally may be lost or wasted.”

"Curbing these losses provides win-win opportunities for farmers, business, ecosystems, and the global hungry,” she added. "An effective water-saving strategy requires that minimizing food wastage is firmly placed on the political agenda," she said.

In the United States, for instance, as much as 30 percent of food, worth some $48.3 billion, is thrown away. "That's like leaving the tap running and pouring 40 trillion liters of water into the garbage can -- enough water to meet the household needs of 500 million people," says the report.

Water losses accumulate as food is wasted before and after it reaches the consumer.

In poorer countries, a majority of uneaten food is lost before it has a chance to be consumed. Depending on the crop, an estimated 15 to 35 percent of food may be lost in the field. Another 10 to15 percent is discarded during processing, transport, and storage, the brief states.

In richer countries, production is more efficient but waste is greater, the report says. "People toss the food they buy and all the resources used to grow, ship, and produce the food along with it."

As this wasted food rots in landfills it generates methane, a gas that causes climate change and is 21 times more potent than carbon dioxide. Jan Lundqvist of the Stockholm International Water Institute said, "Reaching the target we propose, a 50 percent reduction of losses and wastage in the production and consumption chain is a necessary and achievable goal.”

The Stockholm International Water Institute, a policy institute that contributes to international efforts to combat the world's escalating water crisis, hosts World Water Week. The annual event features the award of the Water Prize, which this year was bestowed upon Professor John Anthony Allan for his "virtual water" concept.

Virtual water is a measurement of how water is embedded in the production and trade of food and consumer products and is the concept on which the policy brief, "Saving Water: From Field to Fork - Curbing Losses and Wastage in the Food Chain," is based.

While studying water scarcity in the Middle East, Professor Allan developed the theory of using virtual water import, via food, as an alternative water "source" to reduce pressure on the scarcely available domestic water resources there and in other water-short regions.

By explaining how and why nations such as the United States, Argentina, and Brazil export billions of liters of water each year, while others like Japan, Egypt, and Italy import billions, the virtual water concept has opened the door to more productive water use, said the Water Prize Nominating Committee.

National, regional and global water and food security, for example, can be enhanced when water intensive commodities are traded from places where they are economically viable to produce to places where they are not.

"The improved understanding of trade and water management issues on local, regional, and global scales are of the highest relevance for the successful and sustainable use of water resources," the committee said.

The Stockholm Water Prize Laureate receives US$150,000 and a crystal sculpture. H.M. King Carl XVI Gustaf of Sweden is the Patron of the Stockholm Water Prize.

The policy brief, "Saving Water: From Field to Forkn," calls on governments to reduce by half, by 2025, the amount of food that is wasted after it is grown and outlines attainable steps for this be achieved.

Through international trade, savings in one country might benefit communities in other parts of the world.

Also see:

Wow, did ethanol subsidies ever backfire; will GMOs, too?
http://www.progress.org/2008/arbenz.htm

Rising Food Prices -- What Should Be Done?
http://www.progress.org/2008/foodriot.htm

South Africa: A Revolution Fuelled By Organic Vegetables
http://www.progress.org/2008/africa.htm

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