Future food systems: challenges and consequences of the current food system

Humanity is in a planetary emergency. Agriculture and food systems are contributing to an interconnected global environmental crisis, with increasing risks, social instability, and conflict. This chapter examines the challenges, drivers, and consequences of unsustainable agriculture and food systems...

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Autores principales: Tutundjian, S., Clarke, M., Egal, F., Dixson-Decleve, S., Candotti, S. W., Schmitter, Petra S., Lovins, L. H.
Formato: Capítulo de libro
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Springer 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/114829
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author Tutundjian, S.
Clarke, M.
Egal, F.
Dixson-Decleve, S.
Candotti, S. W.
Schmitter, Petra S.
Lovins, L. H.
author_browse Candotti, S. W.
Clarke, M.
Dixson-Decleve, S.
Egal, F.
Lovins, L. H.
Schmitter, Petra S.
Tutundjian, S.
author_facet Tutundjian, S.
Clarke, M.
Egal, F.
Dixson-Decleve, S.
Candotti, S. W.
Schmitter, Petra S.
Lovins, L. H.
author_sort Tutundjian, S.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Humanity is in a planetary emergency. Agriculture and food systems are contributing to an interconnected global environmental crisis, with increasing risks, social instability, and conflict. This chapter examines the challenges, drivers, and consequences of unsustainable agriculture and food systems, recognizing these are diverse and multi-scale. It presents a vision for sustainable, nutritious, and equitable food systems. Currently, food systems are a significant driver of climate change, nature loss, and pollution, as well as poor health and poverty, with inequitable access to resources and benefits from food systems. Fundamentally, the systems change needed is to transform terrestrial and aquatic food systems so that they become part of the solution for sustainability, not part of the problem. A safe future for humanity requires radical transformations ranging from agricultural production systems through dietary patterns and waste disposal. The focus is on the broad categories of innovation and sustainable technologies considered to have critical potential in pathways that enable transition to a more resilient and equitable system. Governance is a key enabling condition and needs to be based on food as a human right, not simply as a commodity. Multilevel governance underpins the development and implementation of territorial food systems strategies, which can provide effective integration of multiple solutions. Humanity is at an existential turning point and has a narrow window to act now to reduce risk and avoid catastrophe. The rules governing our food systems are human made – and it is within the gift of humanity to change them.
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spelling CGSpace1148292023-12-08T19:36:04Z Future food systems: challenges and consequences of the current food system Tutundjian, S. Clarke, M. Egal, F. Dixson-Decleve, S. Candotti, S. W. Schmitter, Petra S. Lovins, L. H. food systems agriculture governance sustainability innovation risk environmental impact transformation technology Humanity is in a planetary emergency. Agriculture and food systems are contributing to an interconnected global environmental crisis, with increasing risks, social instability, and conflict. This chapter examines the challenges, drivers, and consequences of unsustainable agriculture and food systems, recognizing these are diverse and multi-scale. It presents a vision for sustainable, nutritious, and equitable food systems. Currently, food systems are a significant driver of climate change, nature loss, and pollution, as well as poor health and poverty, with inequitable access to resources and benefits from food systems. Fundamentally, the systems change needed is to transform terrestrial and aquatic food systems so that they become part of the solution for sustainability, not part of the problem. A safe future for humanity requires radical transformations ranging from agricultural production systems through dietary patterns and waste disposal. The focus is on the broad categories of innovation and sustainable technologies considered to have critical potential in pathways that enable transition to a more resilient and equitable system. Governance is a key enabling condition and needs to be based on food as a human right, not simply as a commodity. Multilevel governance underpins the development and implementation of territorial food systems strategies, which can provide effective integration of multiple solutions. Humanity is at an existential turning point and has a narrow window to act now to reduce risk and avoid catastrophe. The rules governing our food systems are human made – and it is within the gift of humanity to change them. 2021 2021-08-31T16:24:58Z 2021-08-31T16:24:58Z Book Chapter https://hdl.handle.net/10568/114829 en Open Access Springer Tutundjian, S.; Clarke, M.; Egal, F.; Dixson-Decleve, S.; Candotti, S. W.; Schmitter, Petra; Lovins, L. H. 2021. Future food systems: challenges and consequences of the current food system. In Brears, R. C. (Ed.). The Palgrave handbook of climate resilient societies. Cham, Switzerland: Palgrave Macmillan. 29p. (Online first) [doi: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-32811-5_43-1#DOI]
spellingShingle food systems
agriculture
governance
sustainability
innovation
risk
environmental impact
transformation
technology
Tutundjian, S.
Clarke, M.
Egal, F.
Dixson-Decleve, S.
Candotti, S. W.
Schmitter, Petra S.
Lovins, L. H.
Future food systems: challenges and consequences of the current food system
title Future food systems: challenges and consequences of the current food system
title_full Future food systems: challenges and consequences of the current food system
title_fullStr Future food systems: challenges and consequences of the current food system
title_full_unstemmed Future food systems: challenges and consequences of the current food system
title_short Future food systems: challenges and consequences of the current food system
title_sort future food systems challenges and consequences of the current food system
topic food systems
agriculture
governance
sustainability
innovation
risk
environmental impact
transformation
technology
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/114829
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