Spelling suggestions: "subject:"blobal food security"" "subject:"clobal food security""
1 |
Sustainability and its impact on Food Security : An overview using Ordinary Least Squares Regression.Jansén, Leon January 2024 (has links)
No description available.
|
2 |
Reassessment of trade openness impact on food security : A comprehensive analysis using the Global Food Security Index / Omvärdering av handelsöppenhetens påverkan på livsmedelssäkerheten : En omfattande analys med Global Food Security IndexDesiré, Persson January 2024 (has links)
The research focuses on understanding the gap between trade openness and food security complexity. Existing literature has examined trade openness's effect on food security indicators and stated that it has a positive impact. However, this is the first study that has examined this relationship holistically. Food insecurity is at its worst in Africa, and the continent is highly dependent on trade. Hence, the paper aims to investigate if trade openness impacts food security overall in Africa, using the Global Food Security Index as a proxy indicator. It also examines whether the individual four dimensions of food security are impacted. The research conducts a quantitative analysis with secondary panel data to fulfill this objective. The data span from 2012 to 2021, and 23 African countries were included. The paper employs The Newey–West estimator with OLS to address existing autocorrelation and heteroskedasticity in the data. In this study, globalization was added as a substitute for trade openness to improve the robustness of the trade openness impact on the Global Food Security Index in a separate model. The results reveal that trade openness does not significantly relate to Food security overall or in specific dimensions. Globalization, on the other hand, has a positive impact on food security overall and in three out of the four dimensions. The result suggests that globalization is Africa's primary driver of food security rather than trade openness.
|
3 |
Application of machine learning for the clustering of wheat transcription factor proteins into families and sub-familiesSameer, Haleemath Sameena January 2022 (has links)
Wheat plays an important role in ensuring the global food security. Salinity of soil and water poses a major threat to its production and it affects both growth and development of wheat in a negative way. Wheat plants uses certain molecular mechanisms to adapt themselves under the salt stress.Transcription factor proteins are the proteins that control the response of the wheat towards abiotic stress like salinity.There are 56 transcription factor protein families in the wheat genome. However these transcription factor protein families are not classified into subfamilies.The main goal of this research study is to understand how machine learning algorithm can be used to identify and cluster the transcription factor proteins into sub families that can help in associating them with specific biological processes like salt stress. In this project K Mean Clustering method is used to cluster the WRKY transcription factor family into subfamilies. WRKY is identified and clustered into three distinct clusters. Cluster validation is performed using external validation and resulted in 90% validation score. This method can be applied to other transcription factor families also. This can ultimately be helpful in producing salt-tolerant varieties of the wheat that are resistant to abiotic stress like salinity and this can help to improve crop yield.
|
4 |
The Story of Phosphorus : Sustainability implications of global phosphorus scarcity for food security / Historien om fosfor : Långsiktig inverkan av fosforbrist på global matsäkerhetCordell, Dana January 2010 (has links)
The story of phosphorus began with the search for the philosopher’s stone, and centuries later the critical role of phosphorus in soil fertility and crop growth was highlighted. Eventually, phosphorus was implicated in the global environmental challenge of eutrophication. Now, we are on the brink of yet another emerging chapter in the story: global phosphorus scarcity linked to food security. Through a transdisciplinary and systemic inquiry, this thesis has analyzed, reconceptualized and synthesized the physical and institutional dimensions of global phosphorus scarcity in the context of food security, leading to a new framing, ‘phosphorus security’ to guide future work towards a more sustainable and food secure pathway. In a world which will be home to nine billion people by the middle of this century, producing enough food and other vital resources is likely to be a substantial challenge for humanity. Phosphorus, together with nitrogen and potassium, is an essential plant nutrient. It is applied to agricultural soils in fertilizers to maintain high crop yields. Phosphorus has no substitute in food production. Therefore, securing the long-term availability and accessibility of phosphorus is crucial to global food security. However the major source of phosphorus today, phosphate rock, is a non-renewable resource and high quality reserves are becoming increasingly scarce. This thesis estimates peak phosphorus to occur before 2035, after which demand will exceed supply. Phosphorus scarcity is defined by more than just physical scarcity of phosphate rock and this thesis develops five important dimensions. For example, there is a scarcity of management of phosphorus throughout the entire food production and consumption system: the global phosphorus flows analysis found that only 20% of phosphorus in phosphate rock mined for food production actually reaches the food consumed by the global population due to substantial inefficiencies and losses from mine to field to fork. There is also an economic scarcity, where for example, while all the world’s farmers need access to sufficient fertilizers, only those with sufficient purchasing power can access fertilizer markets. Institutional scarcity, such as the lack of governance structures at the international level that explicitly aim to ensure long-term availability of and access to global phosphorus resources for food production that has led to ineffective and fragmented governance of phosphorus, including a lack of: overall coordination, monitoring and feedback, clear roles and responsibilities, long-term planning and equitable distribution. Finally, geopolitical scarcity arising from 90% of the world’s remaining high-grade phosphate rock reserves being controlled by just five countries (a majority of which are subject to geopolitical tensions) can limit the availability of phosphorus on the market and raises serious ethical questions. The long-term future scenarios presented in this thesis indicate that meeting future global food demand will likely require a substantial reduction in the global demand for phosphorus through not only improved efficient use of phosphorus in agriculture, but also through changing diets and increasing efficiency in the food chain. The unavoidable demand for phosphorus could then be met through a high recovery and reuse rate of all sources of phosphorus (crop residues, food waste, manure, excreta) and other sources including some phosphate rock. A ‘hard-landing’ situation could involve further fertilizer price spikes, increased waste and pollution (including eutrophication), increased energy consumption associated with the production and trade of phosphorus fertilizers, reduced farmer access to phosphorus, reduced global crop yields and increased food insecurity. A preferred ‘soft landing’ situation will however require substantial changes to physical and institutional infrastructure, including improved governance structures at the global, national and other levels, such as new policies, partnerships and roles to bring together the food, fertilizer, agriculture, sanitation and waste sectors for a coordinated response. Finally, this thesis proposes a new global goal – phosphorus security – to be integrated in the dominant research discourses and policy debates on global food security and global environmental change. Among other criteria, phosphorus security requires that phosphorus use is decoupled from environmental degradation and that farmers’ access to phosphorus is secured.
|
Page generated in 0.0433 seconds