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Crop harvests for direct food use insufficient to meet the UN's food security goal

Agriculture

Crop harvests for direct food use insufficient to meet the UN's food security goal

D. K. Ray, L. L. Sloat, et al.

Explore groundbreaking research by Deepak K. Ray and colleagues that reveals the stark reality of global crop harvesting for food. Despite harvesting sufficient calories across multiple categories, Sub-Saharan Africa is projected to struggle in eliminating food undernourishment by 2030. Get insights into where crops are actually utilized and the challenges faced in feeding growing populations.... show more
Abstract
Rising competition for crop usage presents policy challenges exacerbated by poor understanding of where crops are harvested for various uses. Here we create high-resolution global maps showing where crops are harvested for seven broad use categories—food, feed, processing, export, industrial, seed and losses. Yields for food crops are low relative to other crop-use categories. It is unlikely, given current trends, that the minimum calorie requirement to eliminate projected food undernourishment by 2030 will be met through crops harvested for direct food consumption, although enough calories will be harvested across all usages. Sub-Saharan African nations will probably fall short of feeding their increased population and eliminating undernourishment in 2030, even if all harvested calories are used directly as food.
Publisher
Nature Food
Published On
May 12, 2022
Authors
Deepak K. Ray, Lindsey L. Sloat, Andrea S. Garcia, Kyle F. Davis, Tariq Ali, Wei Xie
Tags
crop usage
food undernourishment
global maps
Sub-Saharan Africa
calorie requirements
policy challenges
yields
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