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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Global inequalities in food consumption, cropland demand and land-use efficiency: A decomposition analysis

TLDR
In this paper, the authors analyzed trajectories in cropland demand and their main basic drivers food consumption and land-use efficiency, for 123 countries (clustered in four income groups, covering 94% of the world population).
Abstract
The world population is expected to rise to 9.7 billion by 2050 and to ~11 billion by 2100, and securing its healthy nutrition is a key concern. As global fertile land is limited, the question arises whether growth in food consumption associated with increased affluence surmounts increases in land-use efficiency (measured as food supply per cropland area) associated with technological progress. Furthermore, substantial inequalities prevail in the global food system: While overly rich diets represent a serious health issue for many of the world’s most affluent inhabitants and constitute a critical climate-change driver, undernourishment and hunger still threaten a considerable fraction of the world population, mostly in low-income countries. We here analyze trajectories in cropland demand and their main basic drivers food consumption (measured by a food index reflecting the share of animal products in diets) and land-use efficiency, for 123 countries (clustered in four income groups, covering 94% of the world population). We cover the period 1990–2013 and assess if these trajectories are associated with changes in inequality between countries. We find that while all groups of countries converged towards the high level of the per-capita food consumption of high-income countries, differences between income groups remained pronounced. Overall, cropland demand per capita declined over the entire period in all regions except low income countries, resulting in a tendency towards global convergence. However, the trend slowed in the last years. In contrast, land-use efficiency increased in all income groups with a similar trend, hence international inequalites in land-use efficiency remained almost unaltered. Because population and food requirements per capita are expected to grow in all income groups except the richest ones, failure to improve land efficiency sufficiently could lead to a less unequal but at the same time less ecologically sustainable world. Avoiding such outcomes may be possible by reducing the consumption of animal products in the richer countries and raising land-use efficiency in the poorer countries.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Extended water-energy nexus contribution to environmentally-related sustainable development goals

TL;DR: A review of water-energy extended nexuses (e.g., food, greenhouse gases, waste, pollution, land and others) from the perspective of relationship and practicability in relieving the challenges towards environmentally-related sustainable development goals is presented in this paper.
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Spatial effect of innovation efficiency on ecological footprint: City-level empirical evidence from China

TL;DR: Wang et al. as discussed by the authors investigated 280 cities in China and measured their innovation efficiency during 2012-2018, and a spatial measurement model was applied to analyse the impact of innovation efficiency on ecological footprint.
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An insight into medicinal attributes of dithiocarbamates: Bird's eye view.

TL;DR: The present review aims to highlight various synthetic approaches for dithiocarbamates with the major emphasis on medicinal attributes of these architectures as leads in the drug discovery of small molecules such as HDAC inhibitor, lysine-specific demethylase 1 (LSD1) down-regulator, kinase inhibitor, carbonic anhydrase inhibitor, DNA intercalators, and apoptosis-inducing agents.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sustainable Agri-Food Systems: Environment, Economy, Society, and Policy

TL;DR: In this paper, a systematic review delineated the contours of this growing research strand and analyzed how it relates to sustainability, concluding that while environmental aspects are sufficiently addressed, social, economic, and political ones are generally overlooked.
Journal ArticleDOI

Water, energy and land insecurity in global supply chains

TL;DR: In this article, the water, energy and land footprints of 189 countries and 14838 country sectors are analysed by source (domestic, macro-regional and remote) and risk (high, medium and low).
References
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Global food demand and the sustainable intensification of agriculture

TL;DR: Per capita demand for crops, when measured as caloric or protein content of all crops combined, has been a similarly increasing function of per capita real income since 1960 and forecasts a 100–110% increase in global crop demand from 2005 to 2050.
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Global diets link environmental sustainability and human health

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