The Global Food Crisis

718 Words2 Pages

The 2007-2008 global food crises, which are widely connected to both the biophysical environment and energy crises, do not provide a clear casualization. The event was indirectly manifested in both the deficiency of supply and exponential increase of prices of staple food. Through understanding multiple dimensions of the global food crises of 2007-2008, the paper identifies a number of inter-linkages between questions of food, poverty and power contracts, and conflicting roles between the corporate food regime and food sovereignty. Yet, there is no simple solution to sustainably feeding seven billion people in the world today, especially as many become increasingly better off and converge on higher income consumption patterns. The answer to prevent the future catastrophe is no only to maximize productivity, but to optimize complex supply chain across the globe through environmental and socio-political outcomes according to the values and ethical perspectives we value. Many of the disagreements about sustainable intensification arise because the values and ethical perspectives we bring to the discussion have different indicators of sustainability that science provides, the power and motivations we attribute to individuals, businesses and governments and the scale and time frame we adopt. There is a real need for policy makers to take values more seriously and to explicitly incorporate analysis of the different perspectives that people bring into discussions about food security and sustainability.

The Role of Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR)
In order to attain greater commodity usage efficiency and sustainability, two objectives can be attained through the role of CSR: sustainable technological innovation, currently, genetic...

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...ies such as that on sell-by dates that has inadvertently increased food waste should be reexamined within a more inclusive competing-risks framework (Godfray et al., 2010).
A final thought on the role of CSR is that one essential step is to find a way to reward farmers what it takes to produce high-quality (sustainable) food, but also to look after the environment and production system for the longer term. In his book Coming Famine Julian Cribb’s recommends steps to develop low-energy sustainable farming by reducing waste in the food chain, establishing and promoting low-energy diets, recycling urban waste into food-producing systems, and for establishing green cities. He says: “People have no problem with the idea of fair pay for bankers, lawyers, unionists, nurses, actors, public servants, economists, or politicians—so what is wrong with fair pay for farmers?”

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