How much food is actually produced and how much is consumed?
Below there is an extract from Global Eating Disorder, which explains it all.
From farm to table
Note
|
kcal/per
capita/day
|
|
Gross crop production per
capita
|
|
+5600
|
Used as seed
|
1
|
-130
|
Waste on farm &
post-harvest
|
2
|
-560
|
Used as feed
|
3
|
-1543
|
From livestock products
|
4
|
+510
|
Biofuel
|
5
|
-480
|
Other industrial uses
|
6
|
-200
|
Waste in food processing
|
7
|
-400
|
Food from other sources
|
|
+50
|
Total food available
|
|
2,847
|
Sources:
1.
Calculated from FAOSTAT data for the main 20 crops + 10%for the rest of the
corps.
2.
Based on FAO (2001), Global Food Losses and Food Waste, probably an
overestimate.
3.
Calculated from FAOSTAT data for the main 20 crops + 20%of the rest of the
crops.
4.
FAOSTAT. Some of this is from grazing and some comes from cultivated feed.
5.
Calculated from United States Energy Information Administration (EIA) data on
amounts of biofuel produced and the raw materials used. No calories are counted
for the feed value of residual products as they come into the food system via
livestock products.
6.
Guesstimate, bio-plastics, starch, medicines, cosmetics and fiber.
7.
Based on FAO (2011), Global Food Losses and Food Waste.
8.
Wild fish, game and other wild collection. Own estimate and FAOSTAT
This coincides
more or less with FAO data on food availability 2009. The figure is an average
for all individuals on the planet, including children and the elderly. Small
children don’t eat much and old people also eat considerably less. By and
large, even with a wastage rate of ten percent, there is more than enough food
to feed the global population, if
it was evenly distributed. Which it is not. But if food were evenly
distributed, what would the global menu look like? The table below gives an
idea. People consume some 1.8 kg of food per day (675kg per year). Looking at
calories in our food, 46% came from cereals (with rice and wheat contributing
19% each), 18% from animal products, 10% from vegetable oils, 8% from sugar, 5%
from root crops, 3% respectively from vegetables, fruits and alcoholic
beverages and 5% from other (fish & sea food, algae and pulses). In terms
of protein and fat, animal products play a much bigger role, contributing 45%
of all dietary fat and 39% of all protein.
Global food supply per capita per day 2009
|
grams
|
kcal
|
%kcal
|
Wheat
|
181
|
532
|
19%
|
Rice
|
146
|
536
|
19%
|
Maize
|
47
|
141
|
5%
|
Cereals,
other
|
28
|
82
|
3%
|
Starchy
roots (potatoes, cassava etc.)
|
167
|
136
|
5%
|
Sugar
and sweeteners
|
64
|
224
|
8%
|
Beans
and peas
|
18
|
62
|
2%
|
Soybeans
and groundnuts
|
20
|
56
|
2%
|
Vegetable
oils
|
32
|
277
|
10%
|
Vegetables
|
361
|
87
|
3%
|
Fruits
|
200
|
92
|
3%
|
Alcoholic
beverages
|
98
|
67
|
2%
|
Meat
|
115
|
230
|
8%
|
Animal
fats
|
9
|
60
|
2%
|
Milk
|
239
|
134
|
5%
|
Fish,
seafood
|
51
|
33
|
1%
|
Other
|
82
|
100
|
3%
|
Total
|
1,857
|
2,849
|
100%
|
Source: FAOSTAT,
To make this
more vivid let’s try to make a day’s diet out of it. Perhaps it would look like
this:
- For breakfast you drink tea or coffee with sugar, eat three slices of bread (or cereal based porridge) upon which you use a vegetable oil based margarine and a sweet fruit-based condiment.
- For lunch you eat tortillas, and two potatoes (or yams, cassava or sweet potatoes), with tomatoes and onions fried in vegetable oil. Once a week you also have a fish.
- For dinner you eat boiled rice with a stew of beans, cabbage and a small piece of meat. You round off with a banana, an apple, an orange or half a mango.
- In the evening you drink a very small soda or a beer and snack on roasted groundnuts or soybeans.
But the
average food supply varies greatly geographically. The food supply per Indian
is 2,321 kcal while it is 3,688 for the average American. The average Indian
gets almost two thirds of their calories from cereals, pulses and root crops
while these crops only contribute a quarter of the calories of the American.
Sugar and fats contribute almost 40% of the American’s calories but just 21% of
the Indian’s. Animal products, including fish, make up 28% of the calorie
supply of an American but only 9% for the average Indian. Clearly, the
agriculture systems that produce those two diets are very different and the
ecological footprints of the diets are also very different.
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