4.7 Review

Horizon scanning and review of the impact of five food and food production models for the global food system in 2050

Journal

TRENDS IN FOOD SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 119, Issue -, Pages 550-564

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE LONDON
DOI: 10.1016/j.tifs.2021.11.013

Keywords

Entomophagy; Controlled environment agriculture; Northern agriculture expansion; Cultured protein; Seaweed aquaculture; Global food security; Cellular agriculture

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This paper critically reviews five food frontiers and assesses their potential in reducing environmental footprints and enhancing food system sustainability. The findings suggest that cellular agriculture, controlled environment agriculture, entomophagy, and seaweed aquaculture have similar positive impacts, with controlled environment agriculture appearing to be the most feasible technology for large-scale implementation. The potential impacts of climate-driven northern agricultural expansion are mixed and may pose multiple risks to the global food system.
Background: There is recognition that a reduction of consumer demand for foods that have large environmental footprints is necessary. Recent innovations in food production technologies (food frontiers) claim to offer gains in ecological sustainability and global food security, thereby transitioning our food system toward a more sustainable future. Yet, scientific evidence to support these claims has not been critically reviewed for several high profile innovations. Scope and approach: In this paper, we undertake a critical review of the literature on five food frontiers: cellular agriculture, climate-driven northern agricultural expansion (NAE), controlled environment agriculture (CEA), entomophagy, and seaweed aquaculture. We estimate the feasibility of each frontier's widespread implementation by 2050 and their potential positive impacts on food system sustainability. We highlight uncertainty regarding ecological tradeoffs and future production potential in the literature, research gaps, and policy pathways that may maximize the benefits of these food frontiers. Key findings and conclusions: Entomophagy, cellular agriculture, CEA, and seaweed aquaculture have similar positive impact values. Yet, CEA appears to be the most feasible technology to implement at scale. The mixed potential impacts of NAE suggest that such expansion poses multiple risks to the global food system. Standardized approaches to modeling environmental parameters in life cycle analyses are required, so that predicted impacts can be reasonably compared within and among these bodies of literature. Further critical social scientific engagement is needed to better understand the political and institutional frameworks in which these food frontiers will be implemented.

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