Home Subtitle videos A global food crisis may be less than a decade away

A global food crisis may be less than a decade away

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00:04

Since 2009, the world has been stuck

00:08

on a single narrative around a coming global food crisis

00:13

and what we need to do to avoid it.

00:16

How do we feed nine billion people by 2050?

00:21

Every conference, podcast and dialogue around global food security

00:26

starts with this question

00:28

and goes on to answer it

00:30

by saying we need to produce 70 percent more food.

00:36

The 2050 narrative started to evolve

00:39

shortly after global food prices hit all-time highs in 2008.

00:44

People were suffering and struggling,

00:47

governments and world leaders

00:49

needed to show us that they were paying attention

00:51

and were working to solve it.

00:55

The thing is, 2050 is so far into the future

00:59

that we can't even relate to it,

01:01

and more importantly,

01:03

if we keep doing what we're doing,

01:05

it's going to hit us a lot sooner than that.

01:09

I believe we need to ask a different question.

01:13

The answer to that question

01:16

needs to be framed differently.

01:20

If we can reframe the old narrative

01:23

and replace it with new numbers

01:25

that tell us a more complete pictures,

01:29

numbers that everyone can understand

01:32

and relate to,

01:34

we can avoid the crisis altogether.

01:40

I was a commodities trader in my past life

01:42

and one of the things that I learned trading

01:45

is that every market has a tipping point,

01:48

the point at which change occurs so rapidly

01:52

that it impacts the world

01:54

and things change forever.

01:57

Think of the last financial crisis,

02:01

or the dot-com crash.

02:04

So here's my concern.

02:08

We could have a tipping point

02:10

in global food and agriculture

02:12

if surging demand

02:14

surpasses the agricultural system's structural capacity to produce food.

02:21

This means at this point supply can no longer keep up with demand

02:26

despite exploding prices,

02:28

unless we can commit to some type of structural change.

02:34

This time around,

02:35

it won't be about stock markets and money.

02:38

It's about people.

02:39

People could starve and governments may fall.

02:44

This question of at what point does supply struggle

02:49

to keep up with surging demand

02:50

is one that started off as an interest for me while I was trading

02:54

and became an absolute obsession.

02:57

It went from interest to obsession

03:00

when I realized through my research how broken the system was

03:04

and how very little data was being used to make such critical decisions.

03:09

That's the point I decided to walk away from a career on Wall Street

03:13

and start an entrepreneurial journey

03:15

to start Gro Intelligence.

03:18

At Gro, we focus on bringing this data

03:21

and doing the work to make it actionable,

03:24

to empower decision-makers at every level.

03:28

But doing this work,

03:30

we also realized that the world,

03:32

not just world leaders,

03:33

but businesses and citizens like every single person in this room,

03:38

lacked an actionable guide

03:41

on how we can avoid a coming global food security crisis.

03:45

And so we built a model,

03:47

leveraging the petabytes of data we sit on,

03:50

and we solved for the tipping point.

03:54

Now, no one knows we've been working on this problem

03:57

and this is the first time that I'm sharing what we discovered.

04:03

We discovered that the tipping point is actually a decade from now.

04:09

We discovered that the world

04:12

will be short 214 trillion calories

04:18

by 2027.

04:20

The world is not in a position to fill this gap.

04:25

Now, you'll notice

04:28

that the way I'm framing this is different from how I started,

04:32

and that's intentional, because until now

04:34

this problem has been quantified using mass:

04:38

think kilograms, tons, hectograms,

04:41

whatever your unit of choice is in mass.

04:43

Why do we talk about food in terms of weight?

04:46

Because it's easy.

04:48

We can look at a photograph and determine tonnage on a ship

04:51

by using a simple pocket calculator.

04:54

We can weigh trucks, airplanes and oxcarts.

04:57

But what we care about in food is nutritional value.

05:02

Not all foods are created equal,

05:05

even if they weigh the same.

05:08

This I learned firsthand

05:10

when I moved from Ethiopia to the US for university.

05:14

Upon my return back home,

05:16

my father, who was so excited to see me,

05:20

greeted me by asking why I was fat.

05:24

Now, turns out that eating

05:30

approximately the same amount of food as I did in Ethiopia, but in America,

05:35

had actually lent a certain fullness to my figure.

05:40

This is why we should care about calories,

05:44

not about mass.

05:46

It is calories which sustain us.

05:50

So 214 trillion calories is a very large number,

05:56

and not even the most dedicated of us

05:59

think in the hundreds of trillions of calories.

06:02

So let me break this down differently.

06:05

An alternative way to think about this

06:08

is to think about it in Big Macs.

06:11

214 trillion calories.

06:14

A single Big Mac has 563 calories.

06:17

That means the world will be short 379 billion Big Macs in 2027.

06:23

That is more Big Macs than McDonald's has ever produced.

06:29

So how did we get to these numbers in the first place?

06:33

They're not made up.

06:35

This map shows you where the world was 40 years ago.

06:40

It shows you net calorie gaps in every country in the world.

06:44

Now, simply put,

06:46

this is just calories consumed in that country

06:49

minus calories produced in that same country.

06:52

This is not a statement on malnutrition or anything else.

06:55

It's simply saying how many calories are consumed in a single year

06:59

minus how many are produced.

07:01

Blue countries are net calorie exporters,

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or self-sufficient.

07:05

They have some in storage for a rainy day.

07:08

Red countries are net calorie importers.

07:11

The deeper, the brighter the red,

07:13

the more you're importing.

07:15

40 years ago, such few countries were net exporters of calories,

07:20

I could count them with one hand.

07:22

Most of the African continent,

07:24

Europe, most of Asia,

07:27

South America excluding Argentina,

07:29

were all net importers of calories.

07:32

And what's surprising is that China used to actually be food self-sufficient.

07:36

India was a big net importer of calories.

07:40

40 years later, this is today.

07:43

You can see the drastic transformation that's occurred in the world.

07:47

Brazil has emerged as an agricultural powerhouse.

07:51

Europe is dominant in global agriculture.

07:54

India has actually flipped from red to blue.

07:57

It's become food self-sufficient.

07:59

And China went from that light blue

08:02

to the brightest red that you see on this map.

08:05

How did we get here? What happened?

08:09

So this chart shows you India and Africa.

08:12

Blue line is India, red line is Africa.

08:15

How is it that two regions that started off so similarly

08:20

in such similar trajectories

08:22

take such different paths?

08:24

India had a green revolution.

08:27

Not a single African country had a green revolution.

08:31

The net outcome?

08:32

India is food self-sufficient

08:34

and in the past decade has actually been exporting calories.

08:37

The African continent now imports over 300 trillion calories a year.

08:42

Then we add China, the green line.

08:47

Remember the switch from the blue to the bright red?

08:50

What happened and when did it happen?

08:53

China seemed to be on a very similar path to India

08:56

until the start of the 21st century,

08:59

where it suddenly flipped.

09:01

A young and growing population

09:03

combined with significant economic growth

09:07

made its mark with a big bang

09:09

and no one in the markets saw it coming.

09:13

This flip was everything to global agricultural markets.

09:16

Luckily now, South America

09:19

was starting to boom at the same time as China's rise,

09:24

and so therefore, supply and demand were still somewhat balanced.

09:29

So the question becomes,

09:32

where do we go from here?

09:35

Oddly enough,

09:36

it's not a new story,

09:39

except this time it's not just a story of China.

09:42

It's a continuation of China,

09:45

an amplification of Africa

09:47

and a paradigm shift in India.

09:50

By 2023,

09:52

Africa's population is forecasted to overtake that of India's and China's.

09:57

By 2023, these three regions combined

10:00

will make up over half the world's population.

10:04

This crossover point starts to present really interesting challenges

10:08

for global food security.

10:10

And a few years later, we're hit hard with that reality.

10:15

What does the world look like in 10 years?

10:20

So far, as I mentioned, India has been food self-sufficient.

10:24

Most forecasters predict that this will continue.

10:28

We disagree.

10:30

India will soon become a net importer of calories.

10:34

This will be driven both by the fact

10:37

that demand is growing from a population growth standpoint

10:40

plus economic growth.

10:41

It will be driven by both.

10:43

And even if you have optimistic assumptions

10:45

around production growth,

10:47

it will make that slight flip.

10:50

That slight flip can have huge implications.

10:55

Next, Africa will continue to be a net importer of calories,

10:59

again driven by population growth and economic growth.

11:03

This is again assuming optimistic production growth assumptions.

11:07

Then China,

11:08

where population is flattening out,

11:11

calorie consumption will explode

11:13

because the types of calories consumed

11:16

are also starting to be higher-calorie-content foods.

11:21

And so therefore,

11:22

these three regions combined

11:24

start to present a really interesting challenge for the world.

11:28

Until now, countries with calorie deficits

11:32

have been able to meet these deficits

11:34

by importing from surplus regions.

11:37

By surplus regions, I'm talking about

11:40

North America, South America and Europe.

11:43

This line chart over here shows you

11:45

the growth and the projected growth over the next decade of production

11:49

from North America, South America and Europe.

11:52

What it doesn't show you

11:53

is that most of this growth is actually going to come from South America.

11:58

And most of this growth

11:59

is going to come at the huge cost of deforestation.

12:05

And so when you look at the combined demand increase

12:09

coming from India, China and the African continent,

12:13

and look at it versus the combined increase in production

12:16

coming from India, China, the African continent,

12:19

North America, South America and Europe,

12:22

you are left with a 214-trillion-calorie deficit,

12:28

one we can't produce.

12:29

And this, by the way, is actually assuming we take all the extra calories

12:33

produced in North America, South America and Europe

12:37

and export them solely to India, China and Africa.

12:42

What I just presented to you is a vision of an impossible world.

12:47

We can do something to change that.

12:49

We can change consumption patterns,

12:52

we can reduce food waste,

12:54

or we can make a bold commitment

12:57

to increasing yields exponentially.

13:01

Now, I'm not going to go into discussing

13:03

changing consumption patterns or reducing food waste,

13:05

because those conversations have been going on for some time now.

13:08

Nothing has happened.

13:10

Nothing has happened because those arguments

13:13

ask the surplus regions to change their behavior

13:16

on behalf of deficit regions.

13:20

Waiting for others to change their behavior

13:22

on your behalf, for your survival,

13:25

is a terrible idea.

13:27

It's unproductive.

13:29

So I'd like to suggest an alternative that comes from the red regions.

13:35

China, India, Africa.

13:37

China is constrained in terms of how much more land it actually has

13:41

available for agriculture,

13:42

and it has massive water resource availability issues.

13:46

So the answer really lies in India and in Africa.

13:51

India has some upside in terms of potential yield increases.

13:56

Now this is the gap between its current yield

13:58

and the theoretical maximum yield it can achieve.

14:03

It has some unfarmed arable land remaining, but not much,

14:06

India is quite land-constrained.

14:09

Now, the African continent, on the other hand,

14:12

has vast amounts of arable land remaining

14:15

and significant upside potential in yields.

14:19

Somewhat simplified picture here,

14:21

but if you look at sub-Saharan African yields in corn today,

14:26

they are where North American yields were in 1940.

14:32

We don't have 70-plus years to figure this out,

14:35

so it means we need to try something new

14:38

and we need to try something different.

14:41

The solution starts with reforms.

14:45

We need to reform and commercialize

14:49

the agricultural industries in Africa

14:51

and in India.

14:53

Now, by commercialization --

14:55

commercialization is not about commercial farming alone.

14:59

Commercialization is about leveraging data

15:01

to craft better policies,

15:04

to improve infrastructure,

15:05

to lower the transportation costs

15:07

and to completely reform banking and insurance industries.

15:11

Commercialization is about taking agriculture

15:14

from too risky an endeavor to one where fortunes can be made.

15:19

Commercialization is not about just farmers.

15:22

Commercialization is about the entire agricultural system.

15:28

But commercialization also means confronting the fact

15:32

that we can no longer place the burden of growth

15:35

on small-scale farmers alone,

15:40

and accepting that commercial farms and the introduction of commercial farms

15:45

could provide certain economies of scale

15:48

that even small-scale farmers can leverage.

15:51

It is not about small-scale farming or commercial agriculture,

15:55

or big agriculture.

15:57

We can create the first successful models of the coexistence and success

16:02

of small-scale farming alongside commercial agriculture.

16:06

This is because, for the first time ever,

16:09

the most critical tool for success in the industry --

16:13

data and knowledge --

16:14

is becoming cheaper by the day.

16:18

And very soon, it won't matter how much money you have

16:21

or how big you are

16:23

to make optimal decisions and maximize probability of success

16:27

in reaching your intended goal.

16:30

Companies like Gro are working really hard to make this a reality.

16:35

So if we can commit to this new, bold initiative,

16:39

to this new, bold change,

16:41

not only can we solve the 214-trillion gap that I talked about,

16:47

but we can actually set the world on a whole new path.

16:50

India can remain food self-sufficient

16:54

and Africa can emerge as the world's next dark blue region.

17:00

The new question is,

17:02

how do we produce 214 trillion calories

17:07

to feed 8.3 billion people by 2027?

17:12

We have the solution.

17:14

We just need to act on it.

17:17

Thank you.

AITransDub

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