13 ways to feed the world | Lifestyle.INQ

OCTOBER 27, 2022

Organic vegetables at Sidcor Market. Inquirer Photo/Ernie Sarmiento
Organic vegetables at Sidcor Market. Inquirer Photo/Ernie Sarmiento

Your mother’s stern reminder at the dinner table may be off the mark.  “Finish your food.  Millions are going hungry,” may not be entirely true.  “Almost a billion” is more like it.

Estimates from the Oxfam publication, “Growing a Better Future (Food justice in a resource-constrained world),”  show that the world needs 70 percent more food by 2050, when the population hits 9 billion.

How to hit this target?  Oxfam has two major suggestions:

1. Prioritize the needs of food producers, most of them women. Increase investments in extension services, technical support, credit facilities and other production-enhancing measures to help marginalized fishers and small-scale farmers.

2. Develop national strategies to tackle hunger and vulnerability through a combination of climate adaptation, disaster risk reduction and social protection. A fair, ambitious and legally binding accord on climate change is a critical step towards achieving a world that will produce enough for everybody for all time.

The rest of us can make a difference as well, as Agriculture Secretary Proceso Alcala, Oxfam-UK CEO Dame Barbara Stocking, Sen. Francisco Pangilinan, and several women farmers suggested. A few things we can do:

Learn to eat rice with extenders like root crops and bananas

Go organic; pesticides and chemical fertilizers strip the earth of its nutrients

Support small-scale farms

Buy local and cut down on the consumption of imported food items

Offer scholarships for agriculture-related courses

Demand incentives for small-scale farmers in the form of credit, training, irrigation facilities and regulated ownership of agri-business like fishpens

Develop better access to markets to do away with middlemen and obtain better prices for small-scale farmers

Review laws and regulations on agri resources (i.e. fish cages) to favor the communities hosting them

Offer socialized credit

Restore government subsidy for rice farmers

Offer access to seeds that can adopt to climate change conditions

As Oxfam puts it, “The decisions we take, and the choices we make, matter.”

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