Feeding a growing world

| 3 June 2013
minute reading time

Demands on food production are ever-increasing and meeting them is proving to be a substantial challenge all over the world. Authors of a recently published study decided to investigate how the world’s crops are allocated to different uses and whether it is possible to feed more people with current levels of crop production. Their detailed calculations revealed that 36 per cent of calories produced by the world’s crops are currently being used for animal feed and only 12 per cent of these feed calories eventually find their way into the human diet as meat and other animal products. They also found that growing food solely for human consumption, without first recycling it through farmed animals, could increase available calories by as much as 70 per cent, which could feed an additional 4 billion people! The scientists pointed out that reductions in in the consumption of meat and other animal products could significantly increase global food availability. There really is no longer any excuse for wasteful ‘Western’ diets now.

Cassidy, E.S., West, P.C., Gerber, J.S., Foley, J.A., 2013. Redefining agricultural yields: from tonnes to people nourished per hectare. Environmental Research Letters. 8: 034015

About the author
Dr. Justine Butler
Justine joined Viva! in 2005 after graduating from Bristol University with a PhD in molecular biology. After working as a campaigner, then researcher and writer, she is now Viva!’s head of research and her work focuses on animals, the environment and health. Justine’s scientific training helps her research and write both in-depth scientific reports, such as White Lies and the Meat Report, as well as easy-to-read factsheets and myth-busting articles for consumer magazines and updates on the latest research. Justine also recently wrote the Vegan for the Planet guide for Viva!’s Vegan Now campaign.

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