Welcome To Website IAS

Hot news
Achievement

Independence Award

- First Rank - Second Rank - Third Rank

Labour Award

- First Rank - Second Rank -Third Rank

National Award

 - Study on food stuff for animal(2005)

 - Study on rice breeding for export and domestic consumption(2005)

VIFOTEC Award

- Hybrid Maize by Single Cross V2002 (2003)

- Tomato Grafting to Manage Ralstonia Disease(2005)

- Cassava variety KM140(2010)

Centres
Website links
Vietnamese calendar
Library
Visitors summary
 Curently online :  68
 Total visitors :  7671752

From obese to starving, nutrition crisis prompts SOS call for new approach
Wednesday, 2019/01/16 | 08:26:24

CGIAR News January 11 2019

 

Calls are being made for a new approach in 2019 to how food is produced to stem rising rates of malnutrition. Read the full article via Thomson Reuters Foundation News

 

Reporting By Thin Lei Win @thinink, Editing by Belinda Goldsmith (Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, climate change, women’s and LGBT+ rights, human trafficking, and property rights. Visit www.trust.org)

 

ROME, Dec 28 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - With billions of people either starving or obese, poor diets have become a leading cause of disease and death, prompting calls for a new approach in 2019 to how food is produced to stem rising rates of malnutrition.

 

Eating unhealthy food, or not having enough food, has led to rising rates of malnutrition, with one in eight adults globally now obese - while one in nine go hungry and almost 2 billion lack essential vitamins and minerals.

 

Per Pinstrup-Andersen, professor emeritus at New York's Cornell University, said these figures were a wake-up call to change the focus on food production which for decades had aimed to boost crop yields and calories to save people from starving.

 

But he said it was now time to focus on nutrients.

 

"You can go blind from not getting enough vitamin A," said Pinstrup-Andersen, who used to head the Washington-based International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI).

 

Yet agricultural researchers have been reluctant to shift the focus from calories to nutrients, he said, arguing they are still struggling to supply enough calories to a growing population to worry about the quality of the diet.

 

But the argument for change is growing.

 

In January, a report by Oslo-based EAT Foundation, which aims to transform the global food system, launched by The Lancet, plans to propose, for the first time, scientific targets for what constitutes a healthy diet and sustainable food system.

 

GLOBAL CRISIS

 

CGIAR, the global agricultural research network whose annual funding of more than $900 million goes mainly towards staple crops, also plans to intensify efforts to address the nutrition challenge, said chair of its management board Marco Ferroni.

 

Economists and scientists said another sign of change was the fact the 2018 World Food Prize, dubbed the Nobel for agriculture, went to champions of nutrition - only the third time since 1986 that nutrition-related efforts were recognised.

 

The prize credited Lawrence Haddad and David Nabarro with cutting the number of stunted children in the world by 10 million by lobbying governments and donors to improve nutrition.

 

Haddad, executive director of Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition (GAIN), said poor nutrition was now a global crisis.

 

"In 2018, we have hunger numbers rising for the first time in 10 years and obesity figures going through the roof in every country. We have a crisis but we don't really have political leadership," he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

 

Still, governments and international bodies were increasingly aware of agriculture's role in nutrition, said Anna Lartey, who leads the nutrition division at the United Nations' Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO).

 

The FAO started looking closely at nutrition a few years ago, but the organisation's next annual flagship report on hunger and nutrition would look at obesity, she said.

 

"This is a big change because five years ago, people were telling me: "FAO doesn't do obesity. We only do under-nutrition"," said Lartey, former president of the International Union of Nutritional Sciences.

 

SOS

 

Addressing malnutrition requires producing the right kind of food and ensuring there is consumer demand for such food, said Jessica Fanzo, a professor at Johns Hopkins University and a lead author of the 2018 Global Nutrition report.

 

This means more funding to research and develop nutritious foods such as fruits and vegetables which are currently unaffordable for many families, she said.

 

Cost was critical, said Nabarro, co-winner of the World Food Prize, adding that government policies focused on grain subsidies needed to change to reduce the cost of producing fruits and vegetables.

 

"The challenge is to ensure what is nutritious, healthy and sustainable is available for everybody," said Nabarro, who now leads 4SD, a Swiss-based social enterprise supporting sustainable development.

 

To change people's eating habits, it was key to talk about widespread problems such as diabetes and blood pressure, and not only issues caused by long-term malnutrition, said Haddad.

 

"(Malnutrition) no longer really respects geography. It doesn't respect age groups or income groups. It's affecting everybody. If you can harness that agency, there could be powerful alliances," he said.

 

The call for more funding was echoed by a global study published this month which found by 2050, people would still lack nutrients essential for a healthy life, such as iron, calcium and Vitamin A.

 

The world would be awash in carbohydrate rich foods, even after taking into climate change into account, but nutrient-dense foods would be in short supply, said the authors which included researchers from IFPRI and University of Illinois.

 

The private sector needed to be involved to produce more affordable healthy food too, said Pinstrup-Andersen.

 

This included the processing industry which turns "perfectly good raw materials from farmers into unhealthy stuff", he said, citing the use of maize to make into high fructose corn syrup.

 

Lartey warned that the cost of inaction would be huge.

 

"With the way things are right now, if we don't do something in the next few years, we will be the first generation where we will have a longer lifespan than our children," she said.

 

"Because of the way we eat, it's going to kill (our children) faster ... It's SOS right now."

 

See: http://news.trust.org/item/20181228005416-xm4s0/

Back      Print      View: 383

[ Other News ]___________________________________________________
  • Egypt Holds Workshop on New Biotech Applications
  • UN Agencies Urge Transformation of Food Systems
  • Taiwan strongly supports management of brown planthopper—a major threat to rice production
  • IRRI Director General enjoins ASEAN states to invest in science for global food security
  • Rabies: Educate, vaccinate and eliminate
  • “As a wife I will help, manage, and love”: The value of qualitative research in understanding land tenure and gender in Ghana
  • CIP Director General Wells Reflects on CIP’s 45th Anniversary
  • Setting the record straight on oil palm and peat in SE Asia
  • Why insect pests love monocultures, and how plant diversity could change that
  • Researchers Modify Yeast to Show How Plants Respond to Auxin
  • GM Maize MIR162 Harvested in Large Scale Field Trial in Vinh Phuc, Vietnam
  • Conference Tackles Legal Obligations and Compensation on Biosafety Regulations in Vietnam
  • Iloilo Stakeholders Informed about New Biosafety Regulations in PH
  • Global wheat and rice harvests poised to set new record
  • GM Maize Harvested in Vietnam Field Trial Sites
  • New label for mountain products puts premium on biological and cultural diversity
  • The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 2016
  • Shalabh Dixit: The link between rice genes and rice farmers
  • People need affordable food, but prices must provide decent livelihoods for small-scale family farmers
  • GM Seeds Market Growth to Increase through 2020 Due to Rise in Biofuels Use

 

Designed & Powered by WEBSO CO.,LTD