Center for Energy and Environmental Sciences, University of Groningen, 9747 AG Groningen, The Netherlands.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2012 May 1;109(18):6868-72. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1117054109. Epub 2012 Apr 16.
Provision of food is a prerequisite for the functioning of human society. Cropland where food and feed are grown is the central, limiting resource for food production. The amount of cropland needed depends on population numbers, average food consumption patterns, and output per unit of land. Around the globe, these factors show large differences. We use data from the Food and Agriculture Organization to consistently assess subcontinental dynamics of how much land was needed to supply the prevailing diets during a span of 46 y, from 1961 to 2007. We find that, in most regions, diets became richer while the land needed to feed one person decreased. A decomposition approach is used to quantify the contributions of the main drivers of cropland requirements for food: changes in population, agricultural technology, and diet. We compare the impact of these drivers for different subcontinents and find that potential land savings through yield increases were offset by a combination of population growth and dietary change. The dynamics of the three factors were the largest in developing regions and emerging economies. The results indicate an inverse relationship between the two main drivers behind increased land requirements for food: with socioeconomic development, population growth decreases and, at the same time, diets become richer. In many regions, dietary change may override population growth as major driver behind land requirements for food in the near future.
提供食物是人类社会运作的前提。种植粮食和饲料的耕地是粮食生产的核心、有限资源。所需耕地的数量取决于人口数量、平均食物消费模式以及单位土地的产量。在全球范围内,这些因素存在很大差异。我们使用来自联合国粮食及农业组织的数据,一致评估了从 1961 年到 2007 年的 46 年间,为供应现有饮食所需的土地量在各大洲的分区域动态变化情况。我们发现,在大多数地区,饮食变得更加丰富,而养活一个人的土地需求却减少了。我们采用一种分解方法来量化粮食需求耕地的主要驱动因素的贡献:人口变化、农业技术和饮食变化。我们比较了这些驱动因素对不同分区域的影响,发现通过提高产量实现的潜在土地节约被人口增长和饮食变化的组合所抵消。这三个因素的动态变化在发展中地区和新兴经济体中最大。研究结果表明,导致粮食需求耕地增加的两个主要驱动因素之间存在反比关系:随着社会经济的发展,人口增长减少,同时,饮食变得更加丰富。在许多地区,饮食变化可能会超过人口增长,成为未来粮食需求耕地的主要驱动因素。