Skip to main content
Day Three at Davos: Shaping the Future of Food

The World Economic Forum declared Wednesday “Future Food” day, when delegates were served vegetarian and locally sourced food to highlight the coming challenge of feeding a world of 10 billion people. The inconvenient message: We may need 60% more food to keep pace with demographic change, even as climate change disrupts croplands everywhere. Business as usual won’t cut it. Today, more than 10% of the world’s population remains undernourished, and the things we’re doing to feed the world may one day starve the planet. Exhibit A: Food production accounts for just over one-quarter of global emissions. Adding concern: global food loss and waste generate about 8% of annual greenhouse gas emissions, according to the FAO. It’s a troubling paradox.

Almost everywhere food is grown, there are stories of supply disruption: fields too wet to plant, weather-damaged orchards, and rain-starved vineyards. But food shortages are likely to hit poorer parts of the world much more severely than richer ones. In particular, global warming will have a badly negative impact on nutrition in Africa and Asia. It’s difficult to overstate the ripple effects of food shortages. Notably, it could lead to an increase in cross-border migration, which even at current levels is already redefining the political landscape in places like North American and Europe.

At one lunch today, a few dozen food experts ate mixed salad with seeds, mushroom risotto, and apple pie, and tried to figure out why innovation is falling short. Abi Ramanan, an AI specialist, noted: “agriculture has been mechanized but not digitalized.” She co-founded ImpactVision, a San Francisco-based company which applies hyperspectral imaging technology to improve food supply chains.

Agtech is hot in Silicon Valley, but even still agriculture isn’t attracting the scale of research funding – or venture capital – it needs for breakthroughs. There are exceptions, of course. Cellular agriculture is a fascinating next-step to plant-based alternatives. It uses cultures to build cell-based products outside of an organism that tastes like the real thing, be it meat, eggs, dairy or even byproducts like leather. While investment in agri-food innovation and more sustainable farming practices has climbed to nearly US$5 billion in the last five years, it still lags substantially behind cleantech.

Instead, governments spend $300 billion on food subsidies, with very little focused on transformation. “Farmers don’t need subsidies. They need support for investments,” said Wiebe Draijer, chair of Rabobank. But as big planning schemes for food have always shown, it can’t be centrally planned. It depends hugely on local farmers and consumers – the original and ultimate value chain

It doesn’t help that the world’s farmers can be a cautious lot, perhaps because their risk appetite is consumed by weather and climate disruptions. Then there’s price-obsessed consumers who aren’t willing to pay for innovation. Matt Barnard, the CEO of Plenty, said consumers everywhere want only “pleasure and convenience.” In some countries, insurers and banks are helping farmers transition their operations so they can invest in new technologies. But a more ambitious approach is needed. At the main forum, Ramon Laguarta, CEO of Pepsico, pushed for a bolder global approach, with five or six ag tech hubs – “connected with real farmers.” It may be the sort of scale needed to match the scale of challenge.

Until then, we may need to focus on that other thing we do with the land – forestry. At the Forum today, Klaus Schwab unveiled an initiative with the world’s leading governments and businesses to plant, grow and restore one trillion trees. Nature-based solutions that lock up carbon in forests, grasslands and wetlands can provide up to one-third of the emissions reductions required by 2030 to meet the Paris Agreement targets, according to the Forum’s calculations.

But here too, we run into a paradox where protecting the food supply and cutting greenhouse emissions collide. Planting large numbers of trees can push crops and livestock onto less productive land. That in turn could raise food prices. Regardless of the math, the economics of food will be back at Davos.

For insights into how the coming skills revolution can transform agriculture, read our recent RBC report Farmer 4.0.

 

This article is intended as general information only and is not to be relied upon as constituting legal, financial or other professional advice. The reader is solely liable for any use of the information contained in this document and Royal Bank of Canada (“RBC”) nor any of its affiliates nor any of their respective directors, officers, employees or agents shall be held responsible for any direct or indirect damages arising from the use of this document by the reader. A professional advisor should be consulted regarding your specific situation. Information presented is believed to be factual and up-to-date but we do not guarantee its accuracy and it should not be regarded as a complete analysis of the subjects discussed. All expressions of opinion reflect the judgment of the authors as of the date of publication and are subject to change. No endorsement of any third parties or their advice, opinions, information, products or services is expressly given or implied by Royal Bank of Canada or any of its affiliates. This document may contain forward-looking statements within the meaning of certain securities laws, which are subject to RBC’s caution regarding forward- looking statements. ESG (including climate) metrics, data and other information contained on this website are or may be based on assumptions, estimates and judgements. For cautionary statements relating to the information on this website, refer to the “Caution regarding forward-looking statements” and the “Important notice regarding this document” sections in our latest climate report or sustainability report, available at: https://www.rbc.com/community-social- impact/reporting-performance/index.html. Except as required by law, none of RBC nor any of its affiliates undertake to update any information in this document.