Authors
Martin K Van Ittersum, Lenny GJ Van Bussel, Joost Wolf, Patricio Grassini, Justin Van Wart, Nicolas Guilpart, Lieven Claessens, Hugo De Groot, Keith Wiebe, Daniel Mason-D’Croz, Haishun Yang, Hendrik Boogaard, Pepijn AJ Van Oort, Marloes P Van Loon, Kazuki Saito, Ochieng Adimo, Samuel Adjei-Nsiah, Alhassane Agali, Abdullahi Bala, Regis Chikowo, Kayuki Kaizzi, Mamoutou Kouressy, Joachim HJR Makoi, Korodjouma Ouattara, Kindie Tesfaye, Kenneth G Cassman
Publication date
2016/12/27
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
113
Issue
52
Pages
14964-14969
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
Although global food demand is expected to increase 60% by 2050 compared with 2005/2007, the rise will be much greater in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). Indeed, SSA is the region at greatest food security risk because by 2050 its population will increase 2.5-fold and demand for cereals approximately triple, whereas current levels of cereal consumption already depend on substantial imports. At issue is whether SSA can meet this vast increase in cereal demand without greater reliance on cereal imports or major expansion of agricultural area and associated biodiversity loss and greenhouse gas emissions. Recent studies indicate that the global increase in food demand by 2050 can be met through closing the gap between current farm yield and yield potential on existing cropland. Here, however, we estimate it will not be feasible to meet future SSA cereal demand on existing production area by yield gap closure …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
MK Van Ittersum, LGJ Van Bussel, J Wolf, P Grassini… - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2016
MK van Ittersum, LG van Bussel, J Wolf, P Grassini… - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences