FOOD SECURITY AS A MATTER OF NATIONAL SECURITY
Many of us nowadays want to know what is the best definition of FOOD SECURITY?. From my knowledge that based on the 1996 World Food Summit, food security is defined when all people, at all times, have physical and economic access to sufficient safe and nutritious food that meets their dietary needs and food preferences for an active and healthy life. In Malaysia there is a question of food-insecurity asked recently. The nation want to know the fact flies in the face of abundance especially at Ramadan bazaars, buffet tables and the food waste in our landfills, which reached more than 16,000 tonnes in 2019. Reported in 2018 Malaysia ranked 39th out of 113 countries in the global food security index (GFSI). This data rankings measure food affordability, availability, quality and safety, including "natural resources and resilience" to assess a country's exposure to the impacts of climate change. Malaysia came eighth in the Asia-Pacific region and ranked second in Southeast Asia behind Singapore. Our southern neighbour with only one per cent of land available for food production and lacking in natural resources relies on a complex global supply chain to ensure food security for its 5.7 million residents. For me tha in Malaysia, on the other hand that we have 800,000ha for agro-food and yet cannot feed itself. Reported that no nation can afford to be complacent when it comes to food security and the urgency is compounded by events in Europe and increasingly, the climate crisis. In this blog "Anim Agriculture Technology'' I would like to write about the food security as a matter of national security importance in Malaysia.
As a report that on March 28, 2020, the head of the FAO or United Nations World Food Programme warned that the war in Ukraine is creating an agricultural crisis not seen since World War 2. Ukraine and Russia are the nations that produce 30 per cent of the world's supply of wheat and 20 per cent of its maize. Russia and its ally, Belarus, are also among the top three potash used as fertiliser and as the producers in the world. The war's impact on agriculture is not just skyrocketing food prices but the world risks famine, destabilisation of countries and mass migrations, warns WFP. Even before the war started in February, the global food supply chain was buckling under the strain of two years of Covid and dealing with natural disasters, such as droughts and flooding. Disruptions in supply chains pushed up transport cost and commodity prices. The ongoing conflict will only escalate global hunger, poverty and worsen inflation. The Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) reports that the food price index reached an all-time high in February, up by almost 20 per cent compared with a year ago. In Malaysia reported that the consumer price index (CPI) increased 2.2 per cent to 125.2 in February 2020 from 122.5 in the same month of the preceding year and driven mainly by the increase in food inflation. A food security problem could turn easily into a national security issue. Malaysia's agricultural sector accounts for only 7 per cent of GDP (2019 figures) and with a relatively small population, it is still unable to be self-sufficient in basic food production. The self-sufficiency level of major food commodities of rice, vegetables, fruits, beef and milk stood at 63 per cent, 44.4 per cent, 78.2 per cent, 22.3 per cent and 63 per cent in 2019. We rely heavily on imports to feed ourselves and our foodstuff import bill hit RM51.4 billion in 2019 compared with RM50.14 billion in 2018.
The National Food Policy Action Plan 2021-2025 is the strategy to secure our future food systems in Malaysia. It places heavy emphasis on digital transformation to ensure the sector can meet future demands. The goal is to forge a resilient, inclusive, competitive and sustainable agro-food sector that is prepared to mitigate and manage food security crises and disruptions of agro-food value chains. The urgency is compounded by global warming with experts already warning that last year's "once-in-a-century" floods will become increasingly a norm. The agro-food sector recorded losses of more than RM67 million from December's flooding. The cost of such natural disasters and their impact on food production will be more severe. One unlikely nation from which we can learn about food self-sufficiency is Qatar. As one of the most water-stressed nations in the world, it offers some important lessons on the nexus between food security and national security. There are report on June 5, 2017 that Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and Egypt imposed an air and maritime blockade against Qatar that ostensibly over Doha's support for terrorism. The Gulf neighbours effectively strangled Qatar's food supply lines overnight but while the blockade was designed to "punish" Doha, it had the opposite effect. It pushed Qatar further away from the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) and created a more independent nation, which has spent the last five years transforming its food and resource security. Before the blockade, Qatar imported nearly 40 per cent of its goods and services through Saudi Arabia. All its fresh fruits and vegetables were also imported but the blockade forced it to hasten its economic diversification efforts. Reported that the country remarkably is now self-sufficient in dairy when it once relied on imports for 72 per cent of its supplies. A company called Baladna is now one of the largest cattle farms in the region. It started with 4,000 dairy cows in 2017 and today, has more than 20,000 cows housed in special "cool" sheds. Cows are milked daily using the most advanced rotary milking system to provide a wide selection of dairy products. The farm is also open to the public with popular schoolchildren touring the milking parlours. Two years after it was set up, Baladna exported its products to Afghanistan, Yemen and Oman. Born out of a blockade, the company ensured that Qatar went from being dependent on dairy imports to 100 per cent milk self-sufficiency. Qatar's National Food Security Strategy (2018-23) outlines five main pillars: international trade and logistics, local self-sufficiency, strategic stocks, local markets and supply chains, and research and development. The production of vegetables increased from 66,000 tonnes in 2018 to about 103,000 tonnes, a 41 per cent self-sufficiency rate, with the target set to reach 70 per cent self-sufficiency rate in 2023. The Qatari example shows that if there's political will to act, it is possible to transform our agro-food sector into a more resilient, inclusive, sustainable and competitive one while striving to "leave no one behind" within the Sustainable Development Goal framework. Source of information - NST. Thanks. M Anem,
Putrajaya,
Malaysia.
(January 2024).
Updated May 2025.
No comments:
Post a Comment