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    Showing posts with label Food Security. Show all posts
    Showing posts with label Food Security. Show all posts

    Food security under threat despite surplus food

    Despite the country is enjoying surplus crops especially of wheat and rice, the food security seems extremely chaotic, as high inflation, declining income, unequal distribution of resources and stagnating domestic productivity are hampering attempts to achieve food security.
    Experts are critically examining this situation giving a warning that the country’s food security is under threat due to the shallow approach of the economic managers.
    Pakistan Agriculture Scientists Association Chairman Jamshed Iqbal Cheema said that there is a significant increase in the number of food insecure people in Pakistan, which now stands at 51 per cent of the total population as compared to about 22 per cent six years back; this is largely due to decline in agricultural production, especially in the Punjab, caused by ill-conceived policies.
    Food security under threat despite surplus foodHe said that investment in agriculture sector not only ensures food security of any country but also help to produce a healthy nation besides promoting rule of law in the society. Farming is just not a profession but an effort to save 194 million people of Pakistan from hunger.
    Keeping in view the population growth, Pakistan needs 50 percent more agricultural production by 2025 and it can only be done by strengthening the agricultural sector and promoting good agricultural practices for maximum per acre yield.
    He was of the view that the government should reduce the input cost by waiving taxes on the inputs and bringing down diesel and electricity prices. He was of the view that it would enhance usage of quality seeds, fertilizers, pesticides and other inputs which would result in better production thus ensuring more grain for ever increasing population of Pakistan.
    PASA Chairman believed that undernourished Pakistani population were reduced to two meals a days from three meals. Due to increase in input cost, the per head person cost of Pakistani has increased to Rs 3,000 per month, Cheema said and added that due to increase in this cost people were compromising their meals to manage the other day to day affairs.
    He said average family size in Pakistan was 5.5 persons which mean a family have to spend Rs 16,500 per month to ensure three meals a day.
    He regretted that Pakistan which is attributed as basically agricultural country lacks in provision of sufficient food and it is in the ranks of those countries which have low grains per capita for its citizens.
    Agri Forum Pakistan Chairman, Ibrahim Mughal, while commenting on the food security in Pakistan said that it happened first time in the history of Pakistan that despite food surplus, shortage and price hike has been created several times during last one decade. While farmer is producing more and more wheat but not getting any benefit,” he commented.

    Source: The Nation

    Food Shortage in Pakistan

    Saturday, July 20, 2013  By:  Baqar Shah
    I venture to put my proposal to fight hunger, before I pen my suggestions, I fear
    That this Summer, we might have to face floods, due heavy snow this winter. We have not thought about it.. If it comes, then we will start the rescue operation. . Why not nip it in the bud. Building Dams, help in production of Electricity as a heavy cost and time. It does not control floods.  Here are my proposals.
    This year we may face more flooding, due heavy show this winter. Result rivers will overflow, break banks, flood  our agricultural lands. Then we start the rescue operation. FOOD SHORTAGE IN PAKISTAN
    Before this situation arises, why not prepare for it before hand and avoid such a situation.  How ?
    To my mind the solution is to build artificial lakes, which cost less than building dams, repair canals and so on.
    These artificial lakes can then filled with flood waters, which can be used at times when water is needed, especially in dry season.
    It may be seen as a simple solution,
    Yet it is the best solution, to save our agriculture.
    How to fight inflation
    In order to fight the spiral rise in cost of consumable items, we have to find ways and means to hold it down
    “god help those who help themselves”
    Utility stores are not the only solution.
    There are other means too.
    Ways to solve the problem this problem
    Is as follows
    1. Conservation of food. You must have observed that how much cooked food is wasted at home, parties & hotels.   These could be preserved by food dehydartors available both for domestic & commercial purposes. You can store these foods for one year without refrigeration. Likewise it could be used commercially to produce dehydated food for marketingdomestic dehyderators are available at us $ 30-40
    2. Vegetables.  The district administration, could 1/3 of the parks, gardens to grow vegetables and sell it at a low cost. It is bound to bring down the cost and induce other dealers to bring down prices in competition
    3. Poultry  to bring the cost of poultry, we use kerosene incubators for hatching for deshi murghees. These cost low .sould be distributed to the poor and sold by them it will be their source of income and will  bring down the market prices.
    4.food grains  to preserve food grains & lenthils use clove a little to preserve it for a longer preiod. It is higly antiseptic.
    Copyright: agrinfobank.com

    Food security issues and the challenges

    By  Tahir Hasnain
    Food security is in fact much more than just food production, distribution and consumption. Food is the top most priority of everybody since our inception.
    It gives us energy to grow and live stronger. Apart from dietary needs, food has a cultural value as well. Many cultures hold some food preferences and some food taboos. Dietary choices can also define cultures and play a role in religion.
    For example, only halal foods are permitted by Islam, kosher foods by Judaism, and in Hinduism beef is restricted.


    In addition, the dietary choices of different countries or regions have different characteristics. This is highly related to a culture's cuisine.How to define food security? The World Food Summit (1996) defines it as, "food security exists when all people, at all times, have physical and economic access to sufficient, safe and nutritious food to meet their dietary needs, and their food preferences are met for an active and healthy life.
    " The right to food is a human right derived from the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR), recognizing the "right to an adequate standard of living, including adequate food", as well as the "fundamental right to be free from hunger".
    Food safety and food sovereignty are other terminologies very common in the food related discussions. Food safety describes handling, preparation, and storage of food in ways that prevent foodborne illness. Food can transmit disease from person to person as well as serve as a growth medium for bacteria that can cause food poisoning. In some countries, there are complex standards for food preparation, whereas in poor countries the main issue is simply the availability of adequate safe water, which is usually a critical item. The five key principles of food hygiene, according to WHO, are:
    1. Prevent contaminating food with pathogens spreading from people, pets, and pests.
    2. Separate raw and cooked foods to prevent contaminating the cooked foods.
    3. Cook foods for the appropriate length of time and at the appropriate temperature to kill pathogens.
    4. Store food at the proper temperature.
    5. Do use safe water and cooked materials.
    Food security issues and the challengesFood sovereignty, a term coined by members of Via Campesina in 1996, is about the right of peoples to define their own food systems. Advocates of food sovereignty puts the people who produce, distribute and consume food at the centre of decisions on food systems and policies, rather than the demands of markets and corporations that they believe have come to dominate the global food system. This movement is advocated by a number of farmers, peasants, pastoralists, fisherfolk, indigenous peoples, women, rural youth and environmental organizations.
    How to secure food? If the food distribution systems and the patterns of food consumption in our society are somehow rationalized, there is enough food already being produced and available all over the world. For instance, let us take the food consumption aspect alone and we find that our dietary needs have already been reduced over the time due to our changing lifestyle in which we do not have much physical activity. Essentially, we need small amount of food to provide energy to our body. Since eating is also a source of leisure and amusement, we serve and eat food irrationally.
    Moreover, we also abandoned our traditional healthy food habits substituting them with packed and fast foods. Fatness, obesity and related medical disorders are now very common as a result of new lifestyle and changing food habits.
    Food for thought: if we go through our routine food menu or the food we currently take in, the "real-food" is in fact meager as compared to a large quantity & variety of "junk-food". Junk-food is injurious to health but we still prefer to take it because we consider food as an enjoyment rather than a body-need. Or in other words, "we take it because it tastes good and it satisfies our obsessive appetite"
    In spite of appended above facts, there are many issues to be rectified in the system of food production as well. Modern agricultural technologies have affected the aroma, taste and the culture of food. New food varieties with increased use of chemical fertilizers and pesticides have had a severe health impact directly and indirectly. Direct health impacts involve consumption of contaminated food and water with chemical pesticides & fertilizers. The indirect health impacts involve environmental degradation; climate change; extermination of local variety of food and uncultivated food; loss of biodiversity; etc.
    Other issues that contribute to ongoing food insecurity in the country are discussed as under:
    Population: Pakistan's current estimated population is over 188 millionmaking it the world's sixth most-populous country in the world. During 1950–2012, Pakistan's urban population expanded over sevenfold, while the total population increased by over fourfold. As a consequence, a lot more food is currently needed to meet dietary requirements of the masses.
    Urbanization: The growing populations of urban areas and new urban settlements are currently making food security even more challenging. The fertile land outside cities available and used earlier for food cultivation, livestock and dairy farming is now increasingly been converted into housing sectors. As consequence, rural agriculture sector has got immense pressure to produce and provide food to huge numbers of urban settlers. Kitchen gardening has traditionally been the central feature of households and a source of fresh vegetables and fruits. Houses were often had a garden space in the backyard for kitchen gardening that has completely been abandoned due to population and housing pressure.
    Cash Crops replacing Food Crops: With the introduction of so called Green Revolution agriculture technologies in the country, agriculture has become a rich-men business. While poor farmers are failing to meet the increased cost of agricultural production and are suffering economic losses; the rich-ones and opportunist investors have replaced food crops with cash crops such as cotton, sugarcane, Kinoo, tobacco, banana, etc.
    Gender Role and Discrimination: Women are involved from three dimensions of food security, i.e., production, availability and accessibility. At household level, women play a decisive role in food security, dietary diversity and children's health. Pakistani women remain involved in various stages of food production not only in family farms but also in others farms in the village. Because of their responsibilities of fetching water, collecting fodder, firewood and crop residue, grazing animals, and collecting plants and herbs for either own use or to sell as food or medicine, they remain closely associated with natural resources and therefore have better knowledge about them.
    It has been observed that with the introduction of green revolution technologies and heavy farm machinery i.e. tractor, harvester, thresher, etc., women participation in agricultural activities have consistently been limiting and food insecurity at the rural level is linked with change in gender roles in agriculture. Given women's crucial role in food production and provision, strategies for sustainable food security must address their limited access to productive resources including access to land, assets and financial resources.
    Degradation of Ecology: Due to local interventions i.e. use of chemicals in agriculture, deforestation and industrial pollution, and natural disorders i.e. climate change and global warming, the ecosystems of the country have been effected negatively. As a consequence, cultivable land in consistently decreasing and weathers are consistently changing that have an impact on food production.
    Food Sovereignty being compromised: The major food sector is currently being controlled by the multinational/national corporate sector i.e. Monsanto, Engro, etc. and the market forces. The government has repeatedly failed to protect right of its peoples to produce, distribute and consume food for themselves, rather than on the demands of markets and corporations.
    Politics in Food: Lastly, the food has remained a subject of politics as well. At many instances, surplus food remained available in one corner of the country but poor people were allowed to die of hunger at other corner at the same time. Similarly, it has also been reported repeatedly in the media that a bulk of food was exported by the government and vested groups despite food insecurity prevailing in the country.
    Source: scoop.co.nz

    Agriculture and Poverty

    FOR those of us who live in urban areas, the depths of poverty can be measured, for instance, by what a typical urban-poor family eats. In most cases, it’s just rice and vegetables, or fish, for lunch or dinner. The desperately poor make do with rice and salt, or its variant, rice and soy sauce. That’s what they can afford from scavenging from garbage dumps for recyclables, which gives them, on a good day, about P100, more or less. Still, others make do with eating pagpag, or scrap chicken from fast-food chains, which can be bought dirt-cheap.FOOD SHORTAGE IN PAKISTAN 2-horz
    But how do poor urban dwellers compare in terms of earnings to farmers and fishermen in rural areas?FOOD SHORTAGE IN PAKISTAN 2
    Not much, according to the National Statistical Coordination Board (NSCB). The wages and salaries received by those in agriculture are comparable to those of private households with employed persons (i.e., domestic help) at P138.99 per day, the NSCB said.
    In short, farmers and fishermen are in the same economic category as domestic workers and just a notch higher than the scavengers in urban areas.
    Which brings us to the assertion of the NSCB that the declining share of agriculture in the Philippine economy could be a reason for the country’s high poverty incidence.
    FOOD SHORTAGE IN PAKISTAN 1According to the agency, the share of the agriculture sector in the Philippine economy significantly declined to only 11.1 percent in 2012. Compare that to 1946, when the sector accounted for about a third, or 29.7 percent, of the economy. That’s a one-third decline that puts at grave risk the nation’s food security.
    Most of the poor are in agriculture despite the efforts of previous administrations to boost agricultural modernization, provide more agricultural inputs and implement agrarian reform. In the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao, for instance, agriculture accounts for 63 percent of its economy, while poverty incidence in the region remains one of the highest in the country at 45.6 percent in 2009.
    Economists have long pointed out that because of government neglect of agriculture, farmers and fishermen have remained among the poorest in the country. Wonder no more, therefore, that the exodus of people from the countryside to urban centers such as Metro Manila in search of a better life continues unabated, only for them to discover that life in the big city is not a bed of roses and could even be worse than before, with some of them having to eat from discards from trash cans.
    Would an increase in government support for agriculture lead to lower poverty rates? That’s the obvious conclusion, and the government, if it is really committed to inclusive growth, should begin putting more attention to the countryside and improving the lives of our farmers and fishermen. World Agriculture.
    Source: Business Mirror








    Land reforms, food security: experts call for making joint efforts

    Environment, agriculture and media experts at a workshop have called for making joint efforts to bring land reforms, ensure food security and halt onslaught of corporate farming in the country by taking all stakeholders on board.

    "The government should change its outdated mindset and come forward with a positive and farmers-friendly approach to redistribute land among peasants and provide financial backup aid to them for growing crops so that they could get their livelihood peacefully," the experts said, while speaking at the capacity-building workshop for media persons, land reforms, food security and poverty organised by the Society for Conservation and Protection of Environment (Scope) and the National Peasants Coalition of Pakistan (NPCP) in collaboration with the Oxfam Novib and the International Land Coalition.

    "Agriculture is the mainstay of the Pakistan economy, accounting for 25% of GDP, 60 percent of export earnings and 48 percent of employment," said Tanveer Arif, Chief Executive Officer (CEO) SCOPE in his presentation on land reforms.

    He said that poverty and food security issues are closely linked to land and that was why the International Land Coalition was formed. "We are working on benefits and losses of corporate sector. Food and fuel prices are rising world-wide and they have become a global issue, causing agriculture crisis. Climate change is also affecting agriculture sector," he observed. He said that some 20.9 million hectares of land (26% of the country) is cultivated, of which 76% is irrigated by a vast network of canals, dams and barrages of Indus River System.

    NPCP Network Co-ordinator Waheed Jamali said that several organisations are working for brining agrarian reforms, but work in this regard is still not effective, hence, there is dire need to work with concrete measures to raise land reforms issue at government level.

    He said, "The media is our big stakeholder, but the coverage on land reforms has been low. Hence there is also need to expand coverage on land reforms, food security and other farmers' issues. We will visit different areas of the country and invite media persons so as to guide them in highlighting peasants' issues in real manner, he said. Mehmood, a peasant's leader, said that poor people had been compelled to compromise on education of their children, particularly girls due to food and other needs as they could not afford education expenses. 

    Courtesy Business Recoder
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