One of the defining challenges of the 21st century is how to adequately and sustainably feed a growing global population. By 2050, the world population is projected to exceed 9.7 billion people. Understanding the key issues, current realities of food insecurity, and proposed solutions is central to VCE Food Studies Unit 4.
Food insecurity exists when people lack reliable access to sufficient, safe, and nutritious food. Key statistics:
- Approximately 733 million people experience chronic hunger (FAO, 2023)
- Over 2.3 billion people face moderate or severe food insecurity
- At the same time, approximately 1 in 3 people are overweight or obese — the double burden of malnutrition
- Global food waste: ~1.3 billion tonnes of food wasted annually (FAO), representing ~30% of all food produced
Enough food is produced globally to feed everyone — but distribution is unequal:
- Poverty limits food purchasing power
- Political instability and conflict disrupt food supply chains
- Trade policies and subsidies in wealthy nations disadvantage farmers in developing countries
| Innovation | Potential Contribution |
|---|---|
| Precision agriculture | GPS and sensor technology to optimise inputs (water, fertiliser) and reduce waste |
| Vertical farming | High-yield, low-water, land-efficient urban food production |
| Lab-grown meat | Reduces land, water, and greenhouse gas emissions vs. conventional livestock |
| Drought-resistant crop varieties | Genetic engineering or selective breeding for climate resilience |
| Aquaculture | Sustainable fish protein production to supplement ocean catches |
| Biofortification | Breeding staple crops with higher micronutrient content (e.g., golden rice) |
KEY TAKEAWAY: Global food insecurity persists despite sufficient global production, due to climate change, inequitable distribution, and resource constraints. Solutions require a combination of technological innovation, reduced food waste, improved equity in food access, and dietary shifts — no single solution is sufficient.
VCAA FOCUS: Questions often ask you to evaluate a specific solution (e.g., vertical farming or lab-grown meat) against the context of global food insecurity. Assess potential contribution, limitations, and equity dimensions — who benefits from this technology and who may be excluded?
COMMON MISTAKE: Framing this issue as purely about producing more food. The problem includes distribution, access, affordability, and waste — more production without addressing these structural issues will not eliminate food insecurity.