It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to gauge that the number of warning signs over the past few years which threaten global food security is growing. First the pandemic, followed by the war in Ukraine, then heatwaves and droughts, the latter linked to a much bigger problem: climate change. These factors have triggered rocketing prices which have squeezed wallets and left the poor even worse off.
‘Leave No One Behind’ is the key theme of this year’s World Food Day by the FAO (Food and Agriculture Organisation of the United Nations). Seven years ago, world leaders committed to a highly ambitious target to end hunger by 2030. That goal now appears more distant than ever. The United Nations estimates that the number of people in “hunger emergencies” – just one step away from famine – has jumped from 135 million in 2019 to 345 million.
A recent article in The Guardian highlights a “crisis . . . laying bare the broken food system that underlies it”, going on to say that “Any long-term solution will require curbing carbon emissions, adapting crops as the climate crisis takes hold, reducing dependence on chemical fertilisers – and challenging the dominance of a small number of players in food markets.”
While this needn’t be a blog echoing the same gloomy rhetoric we’re reading about almost on a daily basis, it’s nevertheless an understatement that the need for a secure, self-sufficient food system where everyone, everywhere has regular access to enough nutritious food is becoming ever more urgent. So, in the context of indoor farming being one such long-term solution, let’s look at three ways it can help world hunger:
- Curbing carbon emissions



