Thursday, January 19, 2017

Food Disaster?

Recently there's been a rise in salmon prices due to the outbreak of sea lice. The Guardian reports that there was a 50% rise in whole sale cost. Over the past year the global supply of salmon decreased by 9% will likely continue to fall. Experts attribute the recent increase in parasites to rising sea temperatures due to climate change. 

In class we discussed what qualifies as a disaster. The rise in salmon prices is not a disaster, more of a concern than anything. However, the rise of parasites due to climate change is a worrying development. Climate change obviously qualifies as a disaster, since it results in a variety of disasters: extreme weather, water shortages, rising sea levels, rising sea temperatures, food shortages, thinning of the ozone layer, melting ice caps, etc. Although this specific instance may not qualify as a disaster, food shortages (as well as water shortages) are becoming more and more common due to climate change. The constant increase in population will also lead to more cases of food insecurity.


The question then becomes: when is food security a disaster? Are famines disasters? When will it become a worldwide issue instead of one that disproportionately affects underdeveloped and developing countries? Will developed countries begin focusing on finding solutions for food and water scarcity soon or only when it affects them or their interests? Even the media hasn’t been reporting much on the famine in Yemen. In the U.S. we are used to having an abundance of food in our supermarkets, obesity is a larger concern than starvation. This makes it difficult for us to actually pay attention and see how recent events such as sea lice indicate a larger issue of food insecurity.  

2 comments:

  1. The topic you've brought up in your final paragraph is similar to what we were discussing in class in regards to not only what gets classified as a disaster but who it is that decides this!

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  2. The questions you brought up are some of the same questions that I have spent time thinking about as well! Maybe famines can be classified as products of disasters, since may times they occur in regions of the world where land is not fertile or suffering from drought and desertification. But this also makes me think- where do the roles of humans fit in, and are all disasters human-induced? What disasters occurred before neanderthals roamed the earth, and was climate change inevitable?

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