Abstract

AbstractIn recent years, global hunger has begun to rise, returning to levels from a decade ago. Climate change is a key driver behind these recent rises and is one of the leading causes of severe food crises. When coupled with population growth and land use change, future climate variability is predicted to have profound impacts on global food security. We examine future global impacts of climate variability, population, and land use change on food security to 2050, using the modeling framework FEEDME (Food Estimation and Export for Diet and Malnutrition Evaluation). The model uses national food balance sheets (FBS) to determine mean per capita calories, hence incorporating an assumption that minimum dietary energy requirements (MDER) remain constant. To account for climate variability, we use two Representative Concentration Pathway (RCP) scenarios from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), alongside three Shared Socio‐economic Pathway (SSP) scenarios incorporating land use and population change within the model. Our results indicate that SSP scenarios have a larger impact on future food insecurity, in particular because of projected changes in population. Countries with a projected decrease in population growth had higher food security, while those with a projected rapid population growth tended to experience the worst impacts on food security. Although climate change scenarios had an effect on future crop yields, population growth appeared to be the dominant driver of change in undernourishment prevalence. Therefore, strategies to mitigate the consequences of projected population growth, including improved maternal health care, increasing equality of access to food at the national level, closing the yield gap, and changes in trade patterns, are essential to ensuring severe future food insecurity is avoided.

Highlights

  • Global hunger is currently rising and has been since 2014, after years of decline (FAO et al, 2018)

  • Undernourishment for the baseline period 2000–2002 is shown in Figure 2 for which the prevalence of undernourishment scale was adopted from the Food and Agricultural Organisation (FAO) Hunger Map 2015

  • Undernourishment prevalence for RCP2.6 SSP1 and RCP6.0 SSP3 are presented (Figures 3 and 4), which incorporate land use change. These scenarios are the lowest and highest impact on global food security, with RCP2.6 SSP1 having the lowest average prevalence of undernourishment globally and RCP6.0 SSP3 having the highest (Figure 5). In both the lowest and highest global impact scenarios, there is a considerable increase in the number of countries with a very high prevalence of undernourishment (Figures 2– 4), in the HGI scenario (Figure 4)

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Summary

Introduction

Global hunger is currently rising and has been since 2014, after years of decline (FAO et al, 2018). According to the Food and Agricultural Organisation (FAO) of the United Nations, the number of undernourished people in the world reached an estimated 821 million in 2017, which is around one in nine people (FAO et al, 2018) This rise in food insecurity indicates a significant risk of falling short of achieving the Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) target of hunger eradication by 2030 (FAO et al, 2018). Food security was defined at the 1996 World Food summit as “existing when all people, at all times, have physical and economic access to sufficient, safe, and nutritious food that meets their dietary needs and food preferences for an active and healthy life” (FAO, 2008) It is determined by four main factors: (1) availability, for example, access to productive land and agricultural production, (2) access, physically, socially and economically, (3) utilization, for example, food preparation and diversity of diet, and (4) stability across the first three dimensions. For example, would affect the stability of a countries’ food security, of which 80% of those internationally reported are climate related (FAO et al, 2018)

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