The Broker

Food Security

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Food Security

How to feed the growing world population, alleviate poverty and combat climate change. read more

How to feed the growing world population, alleviate poverty and combat climate change.

The Broker explores comprehensive food security strategies that ensure a secure supply of affordable food using less land and water, produce less waste and emissions, and alleviate worldwide poverty.

Food security is sure to be a major challenge in future decades. The growing world population and the rapidly expanding middle classes in countries such as China, Brazil and India (not to mention over-consumption in rich countries) will trigger a surge in the demand for food, water and energy over the next two decades. This surge will come at a time when governments must also make major progress in combating climate change.

Food security is a global public good. The challenge of securing food supplies at local, national and international levels is a global commons problem that needs a global strategy. The Broker intends with this theme page to produce and gather knowledge that will help policy makers, scientists, and representatives of civil society organizations and the private sector to develop such a global strategy on food security.

The issue of food security is multidisciplinary. For that reason The Broker aims to bring together experts in development, climate change and sustainability, and gather their opinions on for example technology and innovation, trade policies, new agricultural models, access to natural resources, and supply chain management.

The way food is currently produced, traded, distributed and consumed is unsustainable. Indeed, this system will not end hunger unless radically redesigned. Research is crucial in that respect. The Broker has already published a good number of articles outlining a rich body of scientific evidence for sustainable agricultural solutions. And yet there still does not seem to be common ground, at least due to the many political and economic interests that are at stake.

Some of the controversial issues pertaining to the food security debate include smallholders versus large-scale agriculture, biofuels, the use of chemical fertilizers, genetically modified foods, and free trade versus regulation and export restrictions. Agreement has to be reached on how innovative ideas can be implemented and how to reconcile conflicting interests.

Until the end of 2012, the food security debate on The Broker's website will focus on price volatility, climate compatible and sustainable agriculture, and land grabbing. These three topics are interrelated in ways that impact food security. To give an example, the 2010-2011 spike in food prices is being discussed more in relation to climate change than the 2007 worldwide rise in food prices.

Climate change does not only concern direct threats to food production, such as temperature rises, unpredictable weather patterns and rising sea levels. Policies with the aim to combat climate change - for example those that advocate the use of biofuels and reforestation - can have tremendous impact on food prices and food security. On the other hand agriculture itself, if developed in the right way, can help solve climate related problems – so called climate smart/compatible agriculture.

The agricultural renaissance is not just an academic exercise. It has meanwhile become a staple on policy makers’ agendas. The challenge for this theme page on food security is to bridge the gap between academia and policy making to help develop a global vision and strategy that will feed the current and future generations in a sustainable way.

Editor's Blog

Editor's choice

Malfunctioning markets

Malfunctioning markets

Carlos Oya | December 07, 2010

The global food system is a sick patient, suffering from unequal distribution and excessive liberalization. Indeed, there is a striking parallel between the 2007...

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Special reports

What's more

Latest blog post

Smart-agriculture agenda

The way forward

Evert-jan Quak | January 05, 2011

History shows us how difficult it is to adhere to roadmaps and commitments after international conferences have come to a close. Will it be different after the 'It's Down2Earth' conference?

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Access to land

Feed yourselves first

Feed yourselves first

Ko Colijn | April 02, 2009

In 2008, the South Korean electronics company Daewoo agreed to lease 1.3 million hectares of land in Madagascar. Daewoo pays no rent for the land and intends to...

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Promised land

Promised land

Yongjun Zhao | April 07, 2008

In China, illegal evictions disenfranchise farmers and threaten agricultural development. The government claims to have introduced the world’s strictest measures...

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Family farming

Family farming first

The opinion article of the December issue of The Broker notes that approximately 1.5 billion family farmers in the world live by producing food for themselve...

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Latest post

Featured authors

Carlos Oya

Carlos Oya is senior lecturer in political economy of development at the School of Oriental and African studies, University of London, UK.

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Anna Laven

Anna Laven is an advisor on sustainable economic development at the Royal Tropical Institute (KIT), Amsterdam, the Netherlands.

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Roldan Muradian

Roldan Muradian is senior research fellow at the Centre for International Development Studies Nijmegen (CIDIN), Radboud University Nijmegen, and liaison officer at Agriterra, the Netherlands.

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Video

Video: Video interview with Louise Fresco Video: Video interview with Louise Fresco Video:

Video interview with Louise Fresco

Anna Meijer van Putten | June 29, 2011
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Interview