Industrial food production is driving the biodiversity and climate crises. Our food systems leave 900 million people with food insecurity and over 3 billion people unable to afford a healthy diet.
Changing how we produce and consume food is critical to tackling the polycrises of poor health, climate devastation and biodiversity loss. Communities and small-holder food producers must be in charge of this transition. The transition needs to put their livelihoods, future and well-being at the center.
Agroecology and regenerative approaches to agriculture protects nature and conserves biodiversity. Farmers using these approaches can produce healthy, nutritious and culturally appropriate food. These approaches hold promise to scale up a transition based on equity and justice.
Our report Cultivating Change calculates the cost of the transition to agroecology and regenerative food systems. The transition will require USD 430 billion annually but right now only USD 44 billion goes towards this. In contrast, nearly USD 630 billion goes annually towards agriculture subsidies, half of which are harmful.
The cost to transition to regenerative, resilient, equitable food systems is dwarfed by the massive costs of damage caused by industrial food systems to our health, the environment, and society.
Year of publication | |
Geographic coverage | Global |
Originally published | 19 Jun 2024 |
Related organisation(s) | Global Alliance for the Future of Food (GFAR) |
Knowledge service | Metadata | Global Food and Nutrition Security | Agroecology | Food systems transformation |
Digital Europa Thesaurus (DET) | sustainable agricultureinvestmentprivate sector |