Mineral Fertilizer Use and the Environment International Fertilizer Industry Association United Nations Environment Programme
Mineral Fertilizer Use and the Environment 3. The demand for mineral fertilizers
Download 213.65 Kb. Pdf ko'rish
|
2000 ifa unep use
- Bu sahifa navigatsiya:
- 3.1. The future demand for agricultural products 3.1.1. Population
12
Mineral Fertilizer Use and the Environment 3. The demand for mineral fertilizers 3.1.2. Income According to the International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI, 1997), between 1993 and 2020, the global demand for cereals is expected to increase by 41%. The developing countries’ demand for cereals for feeding to livestock is expected to double, while demand for direct human consumption is expected to rise by 47%, although the largest absolute increase will be greater for the latter. There will be similar large increases in the demand for other crops. Global income growth is projected to average 2.7% per year between 1993 and 2020, the growth rate in developing countries being almost twice that of developed countries. Economic growth, rising incomes and urbanization, particularly in Asia and Latin America, are leading to rapid changes in diets, in favour of more grain-intensive food such as meat, particularly red meat. This leads to a substantial increase in the demand for grain to feed livestock, the impact on cereal requirements being magnified by the rather low feed conversion efficiency of livestock. IFPRI (1999) estimates that the world's farmers will have to produce 40% more grain in 2020, compared with 1995. However, the expansion of the cereal area is unlikely to be more than 5%, almost two thirds of which will be in the difficult region of sub-Saharan Africa. Inevitably most of the higher production must come from higher yields per unit area, which will require a correspondingly larger quantity of plant nutrients, from one source or another. 3.1. The future demand for agricultural products 3.1.1. Population Between today and, say, 2020, the world’s population is going to increase, mostly in the developing countries. According to the World Bank’s 1994-1995 population projections, the world’s population will increase from 5.7 billion people in 1995 to 7 billion in 2020. This includes increases in China from 1.2 to almost 1.5 billion, South Asia from 1.3 to 1.9 billion, Africa from 0.7 to 1.2 billion. The rate of increase is likely to be highest in Africa but in view of the large population base in South Asia and China, there will inevitably be a substantial increase in these regions. IFPRI (1999) estimates that developing countries will account for about 85% of the increase in the global demand for cereals and meat between 1995 and 2020. FAO projects that 680 million people, 12% of the world’s population, could be chronically under-nourished in 2010, down from 840 million in 1990-92 but still a very substantial number. 70% of these will be in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia, especially Bangladesh. In Africa and the Near East, the absolute number of hungry people will increase, though the proportion of the population that is undernourished will decline. Many of these people are the rural poor, who lack the buying power to satisfy their nutritional needs, even when the supplies exist. Women and children are most affected. The issue in their case is to develop agricultural systems which will provide them with sustenance and income. |
Ma'lumotlar bazasi mualliflik huquqi bilan himoyalangan ©fayllar.org 2024
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling