Wednesday, June 20, 2012

More CO2 plant fertilizer allegedly increasing malnutrition

The alleged impact of man-made climate change on world food production. Graph: World Bank
Climate change to worsen hunger as UN's Rio+20 begins 
USA Today 6/20/12

As leaders from more than 130 nations convene a United Nations conference on sustainable development Wednesday, new research shows how climate change will likely exacerbate a key issue: hunger.

The number of undernourished women and young children could increase 20% and affect one of every five within a decade because of climate change's impact on food production, according to an analysis by the World Health Organization and other groups. Today, one in seven or 495 million women and children under age 5 lack sufficient food, the report says, adding population growth will worsen the problem.

Food security is a top issue -- along with poverty, energy shortages and rain forest destruction -- at this week's U.N. Conference on Sustainable Development in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, also known as Rio+20 to mark the 20th anniversary of the initial Earth Summit. Delegates will try to negotiate commitments for spurring economic growth without harming the environment. The WHO analysis shows that of the 495 million women and children under age 5 who are undernourished, 150 million live in Africa, 315 million in Asia and 30 million in Latin America and the Caribbean. It expects about 465 million more will live in developing countries by 2020, boosting food demand.

"Undernutrition is a determinant of poor health and it is women and children who suffer the most," Julio Frenk, dean of Harvard University's School of Public Health, said in announcing the findings. "Maternal undernutrition can continue in children, extending the cycle for at least three generations." The report says climate change will also affect food prices. Citing World Bank data, it says those prices jumped 8% in the first quarter of 2012, partly due to extreme cold in Europe that affected wheat crops and excessive heat in South America that lower production of sugar, maize, and soybeans.

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