Food Industry Warns Of Devastating Food Shortages Amid Climate Inaction

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Leaders from the food industry issued a warning to Congress recently, telling elected politicians to take action on climate change or face a global food shortage.ย  Leaders from companies such as Kelloggโ€™s, General Mills, Nestle, Mars, and many others co-signed a letter published in The Washington Post, where they warned about the threats that climate change poses to the foodย industry.

From the letter:

Byย  2050, it is estimated that the worldโ€™s population will exceed nine billion, with two-thirds of all people living in urban areas. This increase in population and urbanization will require more water, energy and food, all of which are compromised by warmingย temperatures.

The challenge presented by climate change will require all of us โ€“ government, civil society and business โ€“ to do more with less. For companies like ours, that means producing more food on less land using fewer natural resources. If we donโ€™t take action now, we risk not only todayโ€™s livelihoods, but also those of futureย generations.

The industry is hoping to convince our government to support strong emission reductions and a strong climate deal at the Paris climate talks in December, and they join other businesses including the banking industry, the insurance industry, and companies like Nike, Johnson & Johnson, and Starbucks in calling for support of a strong climateย deal.

Experts have warned for some time about the havoc that climate change will wreck upon our food system, and theyโ€™ve told us that, by the end of this century, we could be facing catastrophic food and crop shortages that actually threatenย civilization.

But we donโ€™t have to wait until the end of the century to see what could happen.ย  The evidence is already all aroundย us.

In Mali, armed conflict has been taking place for several years in the fight for food sources, as the country has been ravaged by droughts linked to man-made climateย change.ย 

Syria has been locked in a bitter civil war for the last four years, and this conflict has been intensified by food shortages and crop losses linked to climate change.ย 

Californiaโ€™s drought has put a strain on Americaโ€™s food supply.ย  Even the rise of ISIS has been linked to Middle Eastern farmers losing their way of life and being forced to join the militant group in an attempt to find a new way ofย life.

The planet is running out of farmland, and itโ€™s because of climate change.ย  Those who argue that point should take a trip through California, or Syria, or Mali.ย  Maybe a first hand look at the tragedies playing out in those areas will be enough to send a wake up call to climate change deniers that this issue is real, itโ€™s serious, and itโ€™s happening rightย now.

Image Source โ€“ The Borgen Project.

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Farron Cousins is the executive editor of The Trial Lawyer magazine, and his articles have appeared on The Huffington Post, Alternet, and The Progressive Magazine. He has worked for the Ring of Fire radio program with hosts Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., Mike Papantonio, and Sam Seder since August 2004, and is currently the co-host and producer of the program. He also currently serves as the co-host of Ring of Fire on Free Speech TV, a daily program airing nightly at 8:30pm eastern. Farron received his bachelor's degree in Political Science from the University of West Florida in 2005 and became a member of American MENSA in 2009.ย  Follow him on Twitterย @farronbalanced.

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