This is who we’re feeding with our extra food. And you’ll spit out your corn as soon as you know.

This article originally appeared on 12.17.14 Here’s something you may not have known: In 2008, we grew enough food for 11 billion people. [rebelmouse-image 19501926 dam=”1″ original_size=”500×282″ expand=1] (Reminder: There are just over 7 billion humans here on Earth.) [rebelmouse-image 19501927 dam=”1″ original_size=”500×481″ expand=1] But half of that food went to feeding animals (you know,…

Array
Photo credit: ArrayArray

This article originally appeared on 12.17.14


Here’s something you may not have known: In 2008, we grew enough food for 11 billion people.

[rebelmouse-image 19501926 dam=”1″ original_size=”500×282″ expand=1]


(Reminder: There are just over 7 billion humans here on Earth.)

[rebelmouse-image 19501927 dam=”1″ original_size=”500×481″ expand=1]

But half of that food went to feeding animals (you know, so we could eat them). And a great deal also went to fueling cars.

[rebelmouse-image 19501928 dam=”1″ original_size=”500×282″ expand=1]

Clearly, we’re not hurting when it comes to our ability to grow food. But how we grow that food matters. In the industrial system that feeds much of the globe, it takes 10 calories of fuel to produce one calorie of food.

[rebelmouse-image 19501930 dam=”1″ original_size=”500×282″ expand=1]

Which, let’s be honest, is not the most efficient process. That’s why so many people are keen on growing food organically — by which Wikipedia tells me means:

[rebelmouse-image 19501931 dam=”1″ original_size=”500×88″ expand=1]

In other words, organic farming involves growing food more naturally with fewer resources. But here’s a good question: Can organic food feed the world?

[rebelmouse-image 19501932 dam=”1″ original_size=”500×282″ expand=1]

Allow me to quote noted food expert Michael Pollan:

“In industrial areas, organic [farming] achieves 92% of the yield of industrial [farming]. But you go to the developing world, and it produces 182% of current yield.”

[rebelmouse-image 19501933 dam=”1″ original_size=”500×282″ expand=1]

Not too shabby, eh? Maybe there’s some hope for our food system after all.

For the full talk (don’t worry, it’s short), check out the clip below.

Culture

108-year-old great-grandmother from Delaware is still driving, and renewed her license through 2033

Culture

Oregon triumphs in hilariously heated battle that removed a state from the U.S. each day

Family

Science says your sister made you a better person. She’ll never let you forget it.

Culture

Man cuts off MAGA friend over a song lyric, sparking conversation about confirmation bias