
By Elizabeth Leake, InSTePP Communication Specialist, University of Minnesota
The outlook for feeding a growing global population may not be as bleak as some fear, says a new study by InSTePP researchers at the University of Minnesota. The report, A Bounds Analysis of World Food Futures, challenges many perceptions about the prospects for global agriculture in the coming decades. Population, income and biofuels growth lead many to conclude that demand for agricultural output will double by 2050, and some foresee looming land shortages. In contrast, the study’s authors find in favor of a future in which agricultural consumption grows more modestly.
International Science and Technology Practice and Policy Center (InSTePP) authors Philip Pardey, Jason Beddow, Terrance Hurley, Vernon Eidman, and Timothy Beatty prepared this report with support from the University of Minnesota and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation by way of the HarvestChoice project. Photo by Malcolm Carlaw.
