推动变革:可持续粮食系统和前进之路

Q2 Agricultural and Biological Sciences Food Science and Technology Pub Date : 2024-09-04 DOI:10.1002/fsat.3803_4.x
{"title":"推动变革:可持续粮食系统和前进之路","authors":"","doi":"10.1002/fsat.3803_4.x","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><b><i>Gavin Milligan explores the multifaceted concept of sustainability within supply chain management, examining its intersection with the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), addressing environmental, social, and economic challenges, and advocating for collaborative efforts to foster a more sustainable future</i>.</b></p><p>When we mention the word ‘sustainability’, we are mostly aware that it can be rather a slippery thing as the term is used to cover many different concepts. As Humpty-Dumpty said to Alice, a word ‘means just what I choose it to mean — neither more nor less’<sup>(</sup><span><sup>1</sup></span><sup>)</sup>. People often cite the so-called Brundtland definition (which was initially coined to describe sustainable development rather than ‘sustainability’) which says that to be sustainable something must meet the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.</p><p>Leaving aside quite what constitutes a ‘need’ and the unknowability of the needs of future generations, social conditions today vary hugely and what is taken for granted in one location might be the stuff of fantasy somewhere else. As I write this introduction, there is widespread coverage in the UK media of contamination of the public water supply by <i>Cryptosporidium</i>, with 77 reported cases of cryptosporidiosis as of May 24<sup>th</sup>. That is undoubtedly very unpleasant for those individuals, but globally one in four people does not have access to safe drinking water every day of their lives and according to the charity WaterAid UK, 1,000 children die every day for lack of access to clean water.</p><p><b><i>The united nations’ sustainable development goals</i>.</b></p><p>So what, then, do we mean when we use the term ‘sustainability’ throughout this issue of the Food Science and Technology Journal? Firstly, sustainability is not a thing in its own right, it is rather a characteristic of other things. I have a straightforward non-technical definition of sustainability which is simply the capacity to prosper over the long term. What individuals, organisations and governments need to do to ensure prosperity will inevitably change over time, as will the definition of prosperity and the types of actions which are acceptable to deliver it. The concept of a Minimum Digital Living Standard<sup>(</sup><span><sup>2</sup></span><sup>)</sup> is now mainstream, for instance, but the internet didn’t even exist a generation ago.</p><p>The IFST takes very seriously its role as an independent expert body across the food system and recognises that members are highly likely to have a professional need to understand the key issues under the umbrella term of sustainability. Technical managers are very often the custodians of food waste reporting, for instance, and people working in product development are exposed to supply chain issues with every new ingredient. Both groups, and others where IFST members work, will have to consider issues relating to product quality, availability, consistency and more, and factors beyond the product itself, such as the working conditions of people in the supply chain, will be of interest to customers and other stakeholders.</p><p>As a consequence and recognising that expertise in sustainable food systems is increasingly important to the Institute and its individual members, IFST has commissioned reviews in the form of framework documents. This was first done in 2017, with the concept refreshed and reframed last year to make it more accessible for IFST members. Throughout this issue of Food Science and Technology you can read articles building on some of the themes contained in the updated framework document which will, hopefully, inspire you to learn more.</p><p>The SDGs have been described as a ‘blueprint for a better world’ and are a good place to start with trying to operationalise the concept of sustainability. Although framed very much in the language of governments—unsurprisingly, given their origin—and not always easy to apply to many businesses (perhaps a quarter of the 167 targets are clearly directly relevant across the private sector), they do, however, provide a very clear general framework for businesses and other organizations to identify priority engagement areas, even if the details don’t always exactly match up. This article will take some of the key points encapsulated in the SDGs, explore how they feature in supply chains and suggest some ways that food businesses can usefully engage.</p><p><b><i>Intenstive use of multi-cut fast-growing rye grass leading to green deserts in the peak district national park</i>.</b></p><p>We are in the midst of what is often referred to as the sixth mass extinction<sup>(</sup><span><sup>3</sup></span><sup>)</sup>, with biodiversity declining at an alarming rate. The previous five mass extinctions were driven by geological or astronomical events, whereas this one is driven by the consequences of human activity, principally in high levels of material consumption. Whilst this doesn’t only affect the agri-food sector, it is the most impactful in terms of the direct physical consequences for the natural environment. According to statistics quoted by the environmental charity WWF, 40% of all land has been converted for food production. Agriculture is also responsible for 90% of global deforestation and 70% of the planet's freshwater use.</p><p>WWF's 2022 Living Planet Report<sup>(</sup><span><sup>4</sup></span><sup>)</sup>, produced in association with ZSL (the Zoological Society of London) calculates that wildlife populations have fallen by a dramatic 69% since 1970. Some earlier editions of the report contained some statistical anomalies, but even allowing for that the decline is dramatic. Just pause a minute to think what that means; on average two out of every three wild animals have disappeared in the lifetime of you or your parents, while the human population and its need for food have more than doubled, as has average personal wealth (although the growth in both has been far from even around the world).</p><p>All of which begs the question ‘what can agri-food businesses do about it?’ One response which has become more mainstream over recent years is the concept of regenerative agriculture<sup>(</sup><span><sup>5</sup></span><sup>)</sup>, loosely defined (here by the World Economic Forum) as a focus on improving the health of soil, which has been degraded by the use of heavy machinery, fertilizers and pesticides in intensive farming. According to the Ellen MacArthur Foundation, regeneration is achieved by adopting practices ‘tailored to local contexts, such as using diverse crop varieties and cover crops, rotational grazing, and agroforestry (growing trees around or among crops or pasture) which results in agricultural land that more closely resembles natural ecosystems like forest and native grassland, providing habitat for a wide range of organisms’.</p><p>Regenerative agriculture features within the public positions of some large organisations under the aegis of the Sustainable Agriculture Initiative (SAI) Platform which last September published a new framework designed to create a ‘resilient and productive food system that will regenerate natural ecosystems and improve the quality of farmers’ livelihoods’. It is intended to ’mitigate and adapt to the impact of climate change, improve soil health, support biodiversity, retain water in the soil and reduce its consumption’. SAI Platform members include some of the world's largest food and consumer goods businesses such as Nestlé, Danone, Unilever and PepsiCo, so the impact has the scope to be significant.</p><p>Even if you don’t work for one of those companies, there are many other SAI Platform members, and the principles of regenerative agriculture are not limited to those organisations. If your supplier selection processes don’t already cover this, you can ask questions about practices relevant to the type of products you buy and work with the highest-risk suppliers on improving their practices over time. It is an issue which tends to play well with big brands, including retailers, and so may have some benefit towards joint business plans as well as helping to build resilience into your supply chain.</p><p><b><i>The rise in global mean temperatures since pre-industrial times</i>.</b></p><p>As the earth is a much lower temperature than the sun, the energy of re-emitted radiation is lower and is associated with longer-wavelength radiation, principally infra-red. Gases that are invisible to the incoming wavelengths can absorb the outgoing wavelengths re-emitting some back into the atmosphere rather than allowing them to escape out into space. This is the greenhouse effect, so-called because some of the same processes are at work as sunlight hits glass, and the trapped heat which cannot escape causes the earth's temperature to rise with consequent impacts on weather patterns. There are many gases involved, each with its own global warming potential (GWP), so their impact is routinely converted into a carbon dioxide equivalent (CO<sub>2</sub>e) and this is the basis of the general term ‘carbon’ when talking about emissions.</p><p>In agricultural systems the greenhouse effect is particularly associated with methane (principally from ruminants and their waste products) and nitrous oxide (from soil disturbance and inefficient use of nitrogen fertilisers). Combustion of fossil fuels to release carbon dioxide is part of the story in agriculture but is more relevant in general industrial processes including fertiliser and food manufacture. The other greenhouse gases include fluorinated species found in refrigerant gases, also common in the food sector, plus some others more associated with specialist activities such as power generation and electronics manufacturing, the products of both of which are enablers for the agri-food sector.</p><p>The contribution of agri-food activities to global heating and the climate crisis varies with geography, levels of industrialisation, education and many other factors and feeds into the biodiversity crisis noted in the previous section as flora and fauna are unable to survive in their established geographies or, conversely, become able to survive in areas where they previously could not. As well as contributing to the decline of natural ecosystems, this change also allows non-native species, pests and diseases to affect new areas. Some organisms previously killed off by cold northern European winters can now survive in the UK and elsewhere, increasing the vulnerability of agricultural crops and livestock, along with natural flora and fauna, to vectors against which they have no natural resistance.</p><p>So, again, the question arises as to what we can do about these threats. The overwhelming cause of global heating is carbon dioxide from the combustion of fossil fuels, and carbon dioxide persists in the atmosphere for millennia. In the absence of large-scale technologies to remove CO<sub>2</sub> from the atmosphere faster than geological or natural biological processes, attention is focused on other gases which, from the perspective of the agri-food system, primarily means methane and nitrous oxide. In fact, as nitrous oxide has an average atmospheric lifetime in excess of a century and methane is typically removed in a little over a decade, methane is receiving much of the policy attention, and this is at the root of the focus on red meat and dairy products. This is not intended to be a critique of the meat and dairy sector, merely an explanation of the circumstances.</p><p><b><i>Dairy cattle in a small-scale uk grass-fed farming system</i>.</b></p><p>None of that means that carbon dioxide is off the hook in any way. We need to reduce additional emissions of CO<sub>2</sub> as well, at the same time as the gases more directly associated with the agri-food sector. Some of these impacts are linked (the Haber-Bosch process used to manufacture ammonia from atmospheric nitrogen uses more than 1% of the world's electricity long before any fertiliser reaches fields) and some sit within specific processes such as baking. Even then, the scale of impacts is sometimes counter-intuitive. Research published by academics at the University of Sheffield found that more of the embodied carbon in a loaf of bread is attributable to fertiliser applied to the wheat than to the baking process<sup>(</sup><span><sup>7</sup></span><sup>)</sup>, so be sure to take action on the basis of studies such as Lifecycle Assessments (LCAs).</p><p><b><i>Imported fresh produce displayed in an icelandic retailer in mid-february</i>.</b></p><p>As mentioned in the introduction, the experiences and hence the expectations of regulators and individuals vary with the nature of their countries. Wealthy Western economies have become accustomed to enjoying the pick of the world's production leading to, amongst other things, year-round availability of a cornucopia of fresh produce that was unthinkable to our grandparents. Combined with the push for lower prices, this can place stresses on individuals in their workplaces as companies strive to improve productivity and reduce costs. Much of this is invisible even to supply chain professionals as communication along value chains is often incomplete, typically focusing on specifics relating to product and logistics.</p><p>SDG8 is, of course, core to the ability of people to rise above the issues encapsulated in the other goals. People in decent employment have the financial resources (SDG1 ’No Poverty’ to feed themselves and their families (SDG2), itself supporting health (SDG3), and afford quality healthcare. Either directly or through public education provided through general taxation (SDG4 ‘Quality Education’) they can give their children a better start in life<sup>(</sup><span><sup>8</sup></span><sup>)</sup> which might also contribute to SDG5 ‘Gender Equality’ and SDG10 ’Reduced Inequalities’ along with others of the Goals. In this regard the social and economic pillars of sustainability are inextricably linked.</p><p>So, then, how can we be sure that the economic impact of our consumption is felt positively in countries of origin, enabling the people in our supply chains and those in the communities around them to come to enjoy lifestyles closer to those that we mostly do in the West? One possible negative outcome is that as other parts of the world become wealthier, it adds more pressure on the environment, such as contributing to global warming or loss of biodiversity, which are problems already caused by richer economies. When we work with our supply chains, then, the social factors inevitably cross over with environmental as well as economic factors and we have to try to balance them all.</p><p><b><i>Seasonal smallholder agriculture in Malawi</i>.</b></p><p>Although the targets that sit below SDG17 are framed in the language of governments, together they make for a philosophy of supply chain management that addresses the issues which are the subjects of the other Goals. Cooperating on economic, environmental and social issues enables all actors along supply chains and beyond to share in the benefits of their collaboration, and cooperation between peer organisations sets the standards for them all to work to. Many readers will be familiar with the outputs of the International Standards Organisation which set agreed processes for management systems, carbon foot-printing<sup>(</sup><span><sup>10</sup></span><sup>)</sup> and other mechanisms for delivering on the approaches discussed above, which ensure rigour and consistency in the way that organisations address social and environmental issues.</p><p>The SDGs aren’t perfect, but they are a useful framework to guide organisations, and the people within them, to taking relevant actions which will improve the sustainability of the agri-food system, and by extension the lives of us all and the condition of the natural ecosystems within which we live. The day-to-day decisions we make in our working lives can have a positive impact on the stated or implicit issues in each of the Goals, impacting for the better on other people's lives and livelihoods and on the natural world of which we are all a part. It would be an impoverished world indeed without the song of the skylark high above a carpet of wildflowers and we can play a part in averting the impending ecological disaster through the way we engage with our supply chains.</p>","PeriodicalId":12404,"journal":{"name":"Food Science and Technology","volume":"38 3","pages":"16-19"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2024-09-04","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1002/fsat.3803_4.x","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Driving Change: Sustainable Food Systems and the Path Forward\",\"authors\":\"\",\"doi\":\"10.1002/fsat.3803_4.x\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><b><i>Gavin Milligan explores the multifaceted concept of sustainability within supply chain management, examining its intersection with the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), addressing environmental, social, and economic challenges, and advocating for collaborative efforts to foster a more sustainable future</i>.</b></p><p>When we mention the word ‘sustainability’, we are mostly aware that it can be rather a slippery thing as the term is used to cover many different concepts. As Humpty-Dumpty said to Alice, a word ‘means just what I choose it to mean — neither more nor less’<sup>(</sup><span><sup>1</sup></span><sup>)</sup>. People often cite the so-called Brundtland definition (which was initially coined to describe sustainable development rather than ‘sustainability’) which says that to be sustainable something must meet the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.</p><p>Leaving aside quite what constitutes a ‘need’ and the unknowability of the needs of future generations, social conditions today vary hugely and what is taken for granted in one location might be the stuff of fantasy somewhere else. As I write this introduction, there is widespread coverage in the UK media of contamination of the public water supply by <i>Cryptosporidium</i>, with 77 reported cases of cryptosporidiosis as of May 24<sup>th</sup>. That is undoubtedly very unpleasant for those individuals, but globally one in four people does not have access to safe drinking water every day of their lives and according to the charity WaterAid UK, 1,000 children die every day for lack of access to clean water.</p><p><b><i>The united nations’ sustainable development goals</i>.</b></p><p>So what, then, do we mean when we use the term ‘sustainability’ throughout this issue of the Food Science and Technology Journal? Firstly, sustainability is not a thing in its own right, it is rather a characteristic of other things. I have a straightforward non-technical definition of sustainability which is simply the capacity to prosper over the long term. What individuals, organisations and governments need to do to ensure prosperity will inevitably change over time, as will the definition of prosperity and the types of actions which are acceptable to deliver it. The concept of a Minimum Digital Living Standard<sup>(</sup><span><sup>2</sup></span><sup>)</sup> is now mainstream, for instance, but the internet didn’t even exist a generation ago.</p><p>The IFST takes very seriously its role as an independent expert body across the food system and recognises that members are highly likely to have a professional need to understand the key issues under the umbrella term of sustainability. Technical managers are very often the custodians of food waste reporting, for instance, and people working in product development are exposed to supply chain issues with every new ingredient. Both groups, and others where IFST members work, will have to consider issues relating to product quality, availability, consistency and more, and factors beyond the product itself, such as the working conditions of people in the supply chain, will be of interest to customers and other stakeholders.</p><p>As a consequence and recognising that expertise in sustainable food systems is increasingly important to the Institute and its individual members, IFST has commissioned reviews in the form of framework documents. This was first done in 2017, with the concept refreshed and reframed last year to make it more accessible for IFST members. Throughout this issue of Food Science and Technology you can read articles building on some of the themes contained in the updated framework document which will, hopefully, inspire you to learn more.</p><p>The SDGs have been described as a ‘blueprint for a better world’ and are a good place to start with trying to operationalise the concept of sustainability. Although framed very much in the language of governments—unsurprisingly, given their origin—and not always easy to apply to many businesses (perhaps a quarter of the 167 targets are clearly directly relevant across the private sector), they do, however, provide a very clear general framework for businesses and other organizations to identify priority engagement areas, even if the details don’t always exactly match up. This article will take some of the key points encapsulated in the SDGs, explore how they feature in supply chains and suggest some ways that food businesses can usefully engage.</p><p><b><i>Intenstive use of multi-cut fast-growing rye grass leading to green deserts in the peak district national park</i>.</b></p><p>We are in the midst of what is often referred to as the sixth mass extinction<sup>(</sup><span><sup>3</sup></span><sup>)</sup>, with biodiversity declining at an alarming rate. The previous five mass extinctions were driven by geological or astronomical events, whereas this one is driven by the consequences of human activity, principally in high levels of material consumption. Whilst this doesn’t only affect the agri-food sector, it is the most impactful in terms of the direct physical consequences for the natural environment. According to statistics quoted by the environmental charity WWF, 40% of all land has been converted for food production. Agriculture is also responsible for 90% of global deforestation and 70% of the planet's freshwater use.</p><p>WWF's 2022 Living Planet Report<sup>(</sup><span><sup>4</sup></span><sup>)</sup>, produced in association with ZSL (the Zoological Society of London) calculates that wildlife populations have fallen by a dramatic 69% since 1970. Some earlier editions of the report contained some statistical anomalies, but even allowing for that the decline is dramatic. Just pause a minute to think what that means; on average two out of every three wild animals have disappeared in the lifetime of you or your parents, while the human population and its need for food have more than doubled, as has average personal wealth (although the growth in both has been far from even around the world).</p><p>All of which begs the question ‘what can agri-food businesses do about it?’ One response which has become more mainstream over recent years is the concept of regenerative agriculture<sup>(</sup><span><sup>5</sup></span><sup>)</sup>, loosely defined (here by the World Economic Forum) as a focus on improving the health of soil, which has been degraded by the use of heavy machinery, fertilizers and pesticides in intensive farming. According to the Ellen MacArthur Foundation, regeneration is achieved by adopting practices ‘tailored to local contexts, such as using diverse crop varieties and cover crops, rotational grazing, and agroforestry (growing trees around or among crops or pasture) which results in agricultural land that more closely resembles natural ecosystems like forest and native grassland, providing habitat for a wide range of organisms’.</p><p>Regenerative agriculture features within the public positions of some large organisations under the aegis of the Sustainable Agriculture Initiative (SAI) Platform which last September published a new framework designed to create a ‘resilient and productive food system that will regenerate natural ecosystems and improve the quality of farmers’ livelihoods’. It is intended to ’mitigate and adapt to the impact of climate change, improve soil health, support biodiversity, retain water in the soil and reduce its consumption’. SAI Platform members include some of the world's largest food and consumer goods businesses such as Nestlé, Danone, Unilever and PepsiCo, so the impact has the scope to be significant.</p><p>Even if you don’t work for one of those companies, there are many other SAI Platform members, and the principles of regenerative agriculture are not limited to those organisations. If your supplier selection processes don’t already cover this, you can ask questions about practices relevant to the type of products you buy and work with the highest-risk suppliers on improving their practices over time. It is an issue which tends to play well with big brands, including retailers, and so may have some benefit towards joint business plans as well as helping to build resilience into your supply chain.</p><p><b><i>The rise in global mean temperatures since pre-industrial times</i>.</b></p><p>As the earth is a much lower temperature than the sun, the energy of re-emitted radiation is lower and is associated with longer-wavelength radiation, principally infra-red. Gases that are invisible to the incoming wavelengths can absorb the outgoing wavelengths re-emitting some back into the atmosphere rather than allowing them to escape out into space. This is the greenhouse effect, so-called because some of the same processes are at work as sunlight hits glass, and the trapped heat which cannot escape causes the earth's temperature to rise with consequent impacts on weather patterns. There are many gases involved, each with its own global warming potential (GWP), so their impact is routinely converted into a carbon dioxide equivalent (CO<sub>2</sub>e) and this is the basis of the general term ‘carbon’ when talking about emissions.</p><p>In agricultural systems the greenhouse effect is particularly associated with methane (principally from ruminants and their waste products) and nitrous oxide (from soil disturbance and inefficient use of nitrogen fertilisers). Combustion of fossil fuels to release carbon dioxide is part of the story in agriculture but is more relevant in general industrial processes including fertiliser and food manufacture. The other greenhouse gases include fluorinated species found in refrigerant gases, also common in the food sector, plus some others more associated with specialist activities such as power generation and electronics manufacturing, the products of both of which are enablers for the agri-food sector.</p><p>The contribution of agri-food activities to global heating and the climate crisis varies with geography, levels of industrialisation, education and many other factors and feeds into the biodiversity crisis noted in the previous section as flora and fauna are unable to survive in their established geographies or, conversely, become able to survive in areas where they previously could not. As well as contributing to the decline of natural ecosystems, this change also allows non-native species, pests and diseases to affect new areas. Some organisms previously killed off by cold northern European winters can now survive in the UK and elsewhere, increasing the vulnerability of agricultural crops and livestock, along with natural flora and fauna, to vectors against which they have no natural resistance.</p><p>So, again, the question arises as to what we can do about these threats. The overwhelming cause of global heating is carbon dioxide from the combustion of fossil fuels, and carbon dioxide persists in the atmosphere for millennia. In the absence of large-scale technologies to remove CO<sub>2</sub> from the atmosphere faster than geological or natural biological processes, attention is focused on other gases which, from the perspective of the agri-food system, primarily means methane and nitrous oxide. In fact, as nitrous oxide has an average atmospheric lifetime in excess of a century and methane is typically removed in a little over a decade, methane is receiving much of the policy attention, and this is at the root of the focus on red meat and dairy products. This is not intended to be a critique of the meat and dairy sector, merely an explanation of the circumstances.</p><p><b><i>Dairy cattle in a small-scale uk grass-fed farming system</i>.</b></p><p>None of that means that carbon dioxide is off the hook in any way. We need to reduce additional emissions of CO<sub>2</sub> as well, at the same time as the gases more directly associated with the agri-food sector. Some of these impacts are linked (the Haber-Bosch process used to manufacture ammonia from atmospheric nitrogen uses more than 1% of the world's electricity long before any fertiliser reaches fields) and some sit within specific processes such as baking. Even then, the scale of impacts is sometimes counter-intuitive. Research published by academics at the University of Sheffield found that more of the embodied carbon in a loaf of bread is attributable to fertiliser applied to the wheat than to the baking process<sup>(</sup><span><sup>7</sup></span><sup>)</sup>, so be sure to take action on the basis of studies such as Lifecycle Assessments (LCAs).</p><p><b><i>Imported fresh produce displayed in an icelandic retailer in mid-february</i>.</b></p><p>As mentioned in the introduction, the experiences and hence the expectations of regulators and individuals vary with the nature of their countries. Wealthy Western economies have become accustomed to enjoying the pick of the world's production leading to, amongst other things, year-round availability of a cornucopia of fresh produce that was unthinkable to our grandparents. Combined with the push for lower prices, this can place stresses on individuals in their workplaces as companies strive to improve productivity and reduce costs. Much of this is invisible even to supply chain professionals as communication along value chains is often incomplete, typically focusing on specifics relating to product and logistics.</p><p>SDG8 is, of course, core to the ability of people to rise above the issues encapsulated in the other goals. People in decent employment have the financial resources (SDG1 ’No Poverty’ to feed themselves and their families (SDG2), itself supporting health (SDG3), and afford quality healthcare. Either directly or through public education provided through general taxation (SDG4 ‘Quality Education’) they can give their children a better start in life<sup>(</sup><span><sup>8</sup></span><sup>)</sup> which might also contribute to SDG5 ‘Gender Equality’ and SDG10 ’Reduced Inequalities’ along with others of the Goals. In this regard the social and economic pillars of sustainability are inextricably linked.</p><p>So, then, how can we be sure that the economic impact of our consumption is felt positively in countries of origin, enabling the people in our supply chains and those in the communities around them to come to enjoy lifestyles closer to those that we mostly do in the West? One possible negative outcome is that as other parts of the world become wealthier, it adds more pressure on the environment, such as contributing to global warming or loss of biodiversity, which are problems already caused by richer economies. When we work with our supply chains, then, the social factors inevitably cross over with environmental as well as economic factors and we have to try to balance them all.</p><p><b><i>Seasonal smallholder agriculture in Malawi</i>.</b></p><p>Although the targets that sit below SDG17 are framed in the language of governments, together they make for a philosophy of supply chain management that addresses the issues which are the subjects of the other Goals. Cooperating on economic, environmental and social issues enables all actors along supply chains and beyond to share in the benefits of their collaboration, and cooperation between peer organisations sets the standards for them all to work to. Many readers will be familiar with the outputs of the International Standards Organisation which set agreed processes for management systems, carbon foot-printing<sup>(</sup><span><sup>10</sup></span><sup>)</sup> and other mechanisms for delivering on the approaches discussed above, which ensure rigour and consistency in the way that organisations address social and environmental issues.</p><p>The SDGs aren’t perfect, but they are a useful framework to guide organisations, and the people within them, to taking relevant actions which will improve the sustainability of the agri-food system, and by extension the lives of us all and the condition of the natural ecosystems within which we live. The day-to-day decisions we make in our working lives can have a positive impact on the stated or implicit issues in each of the Goals, impacting for the better on other people's lives and livelihoods and on the natural world of which we are all a part. It would be an impoverished world indeed without the song of the skylark high above a carpet of wildflowers and we can play a part in averting the impending ecological disaster through the way we engage with our supply chains.</p>\",\"PeriodicalId\":12404,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"Food Science and Technology\",\"volume\":\"38 3\",\"pages\":\"16-19\"},\"PeriodicalIF\":0.0000,\"publicationDate\":\"2024-09-04\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1002/fsat.3803_4.x\",\"citationCount\":\"0\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"Food Science and Technology\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"97\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/fsat.3803_4.x\",\"RegionNum\":0,\"RegionCategory\":null,\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"Q2\",\"JCRName\":\"Agricultural and Biological Sciences\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Food Science and Technology","FirstCategoryId":"97","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/fsat.3803_4.x","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"Agricultural and Biological Sciences","Score":null,"Total":0}
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摘要

加文-米利根(Gavin Milligan)探讨了供应链管理中的可持续发展这一多层面概念,研究了它与联合国可持续发展目标(SDGs)的交叉点,应对了环境、社会和经济方面的挑战,并倡导通过合作来促进更可持续的未来。正如胖墩儿对爱丽丝说的那样,"一个词的含义就是我选择它的含义--不多也不少"(1)。人们经常引用所谓的布伦特兰定义(该定义最初是用来描述可持续发展而非 "可持续性 "的),其中指出,要实现可持续发展,就必须在满足当代人需求的同时,不损害后代人满足自身需求的能力。就在我写这篇导言的时候,英国媒体广泛报道了公共供水受到隐孢子虫污染的事件,截至 5 月 24 日,已报告 77 例隐孢子虫病。这对这些人来说无疑是非常不愉快的,但在全球范围内,每四个人中就有一个人每天都无法获得安全的饮用水,根据英国水援助组织(WaterAid UK)的数据,每天有1000名儿童因无法获得清洁水而死亡。首先,可持续性本身并不是一个事物,而是其他事物的特征。我对 "可持续性 "有一个非技术性的直接定义,即 "长期繁荣的能力"。随着时间的推移,个人、组织和政府为确保繁荣而需要做的事情将不可避免地发生变化,繁荣的定义以及为实现繁荣而采取的可接受的行动类型也将发生变化。例如,"最低数字生活标准"(2) 的概念现在已成为主流,但互联网在一代人之前甚至还不存在。国际食品科技学会非常重视其作为整个食品系统的独立专家机构的作用,并认识到其成员极有可能在专业上需要了解可持续发展这一总括术语下的关键问题。例如,技术经理通常是食物浪费报告的监管者,而从事产品开发的人员则会接触到每一种新配料的供应链问题。这两个群体,以及 IFST 成员工作的其他群体,都必须考虑与产品质量、可用性、一致性等有关的问题,而产品本身之外的因素,如供应链中人员的工作条件,也会引起客户和其他利益相关者的兴趣。因此,认识到可持续食品系统方面的专业知识对研究所及其个体成员越来越重要,IFST 已委托以框架文件的形式进行审查。这项工作于 2017 年首次开展,去年对这一概念进行了更新和重构,以使 IFST 成员更容易理解。在本期《食品科学与技术》杂志中,您可以阅读到以更新后的框架文件中所包含的一些主题为基础的文章,希望这些文章能够激发您学习更多知识的兴趣。可持续发展目标被描述为 "更美好世界的蓝图",是尝试将可持续发展概念付诸实施的良好开端。虽然可持续发展目标在很大程度上是以政府语言为框架的--鉴于其起源,这一点不足为奇--而且并不总是很容易适用于许多企业(167 项目标中可能有四分之一与私营部门直接相关),但它们确实为企业和其他组织确定优先参与领域提供了一个非常清晰的总体框架,即使细节并不总是完全一致。本文将从可持续发展目标中囊括的一些关键点出发,探讨这些关键点在供应链中的作用,并提出一些食品企业可以有效参与的方法。我们正处于通常所说的第六次生物大灭绝(3)之中,生物多样性正在以惊人的速度减少。前五次生物大灭绝是由地质或天文事件造成的,而这一次则是由人类活动造成的,主要是高水平的物质消费。虽然这不仅影响到农业食品行业,但就对自然环境造成的直接物理后果而言,它的影响最大。 根据环保慈善机构世界自然基金会(WWF)引用的统计数据,40%的土地已被用于粮食生产。世界自然基金会(WWF)与伦敦动物学会(ZSL)联合发布的《2022 年地球生物报告》(4)显示,自 1970 年以来,野生动物数量急剧下降了 69%。该报告的一些早期版本包含一些统计异常,但即使考虑到这些异常,下降幅度也是巨大的。请静下心来想一想这意味着什么;在你或你父母的一生中,平均每三只野生动物中就有两只消失了,而人类的人口及其对食物的需求却增加了一倍多,平均个人财富也增加了一倍多(尽管这两方面的增长在全世界范围内并不均衡)。近年来,再生农业(5) 的概念逐渐成为主流,它的松散定义(此处由世界经济论坛定义)是:在集约化耕作中使用重型机械、化肥和杀虫剂,导致土壤退化,而再生农业的重点是改善土壤的健康状况。根据艾伦-麦克阿瑟基金会的说法,再生农业是通过采用 "因地制宜的做法 "来实现的,例如使用多样化的作物品种和覆盖作物、轮牧和农林业(在作物或牧草周围或中间种植树木),从而使农田更接近森林和原生草地等自然生态系统,为各种生物提供栖息地"。可持续农业倡议(SAI)平台于去年 9 月发布了一个新框架,旨在创建一个 "具有复原力和生产力的粮食系统,使自然生态系统得以再生,并提高农民的生活质量"。其目的是 "减轻和适应气候变化的影响,改善土壤健康,支持生物多样性,将水保留在土壤中并减少其消耗"。SAI 平台的成员包括雀巢、达能、联合利华和百事可乐等全球最大的食品和消费品企业,因此其影响范围是巨大的。即使你不在这些公司工作,还有许多其他 SAI 平台成员,而且再生农业的原则并不局限于这些组织。如果您的供应商选择流程尚未涵盖这一点,您可以询问与您购买的产品类型相关的实践问题,并与风险最高的供应商合作,逐步改善他们的实践。由于地球的温度比太阳低得多,再发射辐射的能量较低,并且与波长较长的辐射有关,主要是红外线。对进入的波长不可见的气体可以吸收流出的波长,将其中一些重新发射回大气层,而不是让它们逃逸到太空中。这就是温室效应,之所以称之为温室效应,是因为其中一些过程与太阳光照射玻璃的过程相同,被困住的热量无法散发,导致地球温度上升,从而对天气模式产生影响。在农业系统中,温室效应主要与甲烷(主要来自反刍动物及其排泄物)和一氧化二氮(来自土壤扰动和氮肥的低效使用)有关。化石燃料燃烧释放二氧化碳也是农业的一部分,但与包括化肥和食品制造在内的一般工业过程更为相关。其他温室气体包括制冷剂气体中的氟化气体,这在食品行业也很常见,另外还有一些与发电和电子制造等专业活动更为相关的气体,而这两个行业的产品都是农业食品行业的助推器。农业食品活动对全球供暖和气候危机的影响因地理位置、工业化水平、教育程度和许多其他因素而异,并与上一节中提到的生物多样性危机相辅相成,因为动植物无法在其既定的地理位置上生存,或者相反,它们能够在以前无法生存的地区生存。 可持续发展目标并非十全十美,但它们是一个有用的框架,可指导各组织及其员工采取相关行动,从而改善农业食品系统的可持续性,进而改善我们所有人的生活以及我们生活的自然生态系统的状况。我们在工作生活中做出的日常决定可以对每个目标中明确或隐含的问题产生积极影响,从而改善其他人的生活和生计以及我们共同生活的自然世界。如果没有云雀在野花地毯上的高歌,这个世界将是一个贫穷的世界。
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Driving Change: Sustainable Food Systems and the Path Forward

Gavin Milligan explores the multifaceted concept of sustainability within supply chain management, examining its intersection with the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), addressing environmental, social, and economic challenges, and advocating for collaborative efforts to foster a more sustainable future.

When we mention the word ‘sustainability’, we are mostly aware that it can be rather a slippery thing as the term is used to cover many different concepts. As Humpty-Dumpty said to Alice, a word ‘means just what I choose it to mean — neither more nor less’(1). People often cite the so-called Brundtland definition (which was initially coined to describe sustainable development rather than ‘sustainability’) which says that to be sustainable something must meet the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.

Leaving aside quite what constitutes a ‘need’ and the unknowability of the needs of future generations, social conditions today vary hugely and what is taken for granted in one location might be the stuff of fantasy somewhere else. As I write this introduction, there is widespread coverage in the UK media of contamination of the public water supply by Cryptosporidium, with 77 reported cases of cryptosporidiosis as of May 24th. That is undoubtedly very unpleasant for those individuals, but globally one in four people does not have access to safe drinking water every day of their lives and according to the charity WaterAid UK, 1,000 children die every day for lack of access to clean water.

The united nations’ sustainable development goals.

So what, then, do we mean when we use the term ‘sustainability’ throughout this issue of the Food Science and Technology Journal? Firstly, sustainability is not a thing in its own right, it is rather a characteristic of other things. I have a straightforward non-technical definition of sustainability which is simply the capacity to prosper over the long term. What individuals, organisations and governments need to do to ensure prosperity will inevitably change over time, as will the definition of prosperity and the types of actions which are acceptable to deliver it. The concept of a Minimum Digital Living Standard(2) is now mainstream, for instance, but the internet didn’t even exist a generation ago.

The IFST takes very seriously its role as an independent expert body across the food system and recognises that members are highly likely to have a professional need to understand the key issues under the umbrella term of sustainability. Technical managers are very often the custodians of food waste reporting, for instance, and people working in product development are exposed to supply chain issues with every new ingredient. Both groups, and others where IFST members work, will have to consider issues relating to product quality, availability, consistency and more, and factors beyond the product itself, such as the working conditions of people in the supply chain, will be of interest to customers and other stakeholders.

As a consequence and recognising that expertise in sustainable food systems is increasingly important to the Institute and its individual members, IFST has commissioned reviews in the form of framework documents. This was first done in 2017, with the concept refreshed and reframed last year to make it more accessible for IFST members. Throughout this issue of Food Science and Technology you can read articles building on some of the themes contained in the updated framework document which will, hopefully, inspire you to learn more.

The SDGs have been described as a ‘blueprint for a better world’ and are a good place to start with trying to operationalise the concept of sustainability. Although framed very much in the language of governments—unsurprisingly, given their origin—and not always easy to apply to many businesses (perhaps a quarter of the 167 targets are clearly directly relevant across the private sector), they do, however, provide a very clear general framework for businesses and other organizations to identify priority engagement areas, even if the details don’t always exactly match up. This article will take some of the key points encapsulated in the SDGs, explore how they feature in supply chains and suggest some ways that food businesses can usefully engage.

Intenstive use of multi-cut fast-growing rye grass leading to green deserts in the peak district national park.

We are in the midst of what is often referred to as the sixth mass extinction(3), with biodiversity declining at an alarming rate. The previous five mass extinctions were driven by geological or astronomical events, whereas this one is driven by the consequences of human activity, principally in high levels of material consumption. Whilst this doesn’t only affect the agri-food sector, it is the most impactful in terms of the direct physical consequences for the natural environment. According to statistics quoted by the environmental charity WWF, 40% of all land has been converted for food production. Agriculture is also responsible for 90% of global deforestation and 70% of the planet's freshwater use.

WWF's 2022 Living Planet Report(4), produced in association with ZSL (the Zoological Society of London) calculates that wildlife populations have fallen by a dramatic 69% since 1970. Some earlier editions of the report contained some statistical anomalies, but even allowing for that the decline is dramatic. Just pause a minute to think what that means; on average two out of every three wild animals have disappeared in the lifetime of you or your parents, while the human population and its need for food have more than doubled, as has average personal wealth (although the growth in both has been far from even around the world).

All of which begs the question ‘what can agri-food businesses do about it?’ One response which has become more mainstream over recent years is the concept of regenerative agriculture(5), loosely defined (here by the World Economic Forum) as a focus on improving the health of soil, which has been degraded by the use of heavy machinery, fertilizers and pesticides in intensive farming. According to the Ellen MacArthur Foundation, regeneration is achieved by adopting practices ‘tailored to local contexts, such as using diverse crop varieties and cover crops, rotational grazing, and agroforestry (growing trees around or among crops or pasture) which results in agricultural land that more closely resembles natural ecosystems like forest and native grassland, providing habitat for a wide range of organisms’.

Regenerative agriculture features within the public positions of some large organisations under the aegis of the Sustainable Agriculture Initiative (SAI) Platform which last September published a new framework designed to create a ‘resilient and productive food system that will regenerate natural ecosystems and improve the quality of farmers’ livelihoods’. It is intended to ’mitigate and adapt to the impact of climate change, improve soil health, support biodiversity, retain water in the soil and reduce its consumption’. SAI Platform members include some of the world's largest food and consumer goods businesses such as Nestlé, Danone, Unilever and PepsiCo, so the impact has the scope to be significant.

Even if you don’t work for one of those companies, there are many other SAI Platform members, and the principles of regenerative agriculture are not limited to those organisations. If your supplier selection processes don’t already cover this, you can ask questions about practices relevant to the type of products you buy and work with the highest-risk suppliers on improving their practices over time. It is an issue which tends to play well with big brands, including retailers, and so may have some benefit towards joint business plans as well as helping to build resilience into your supply chain.

The rise in global mean temperatures since pre-industrial times.

As the earth is a much lower temperature than the sun, the energy of re-emitted radiation is lower and is associated with longer-wavelength radiation, principally infra-red. Gases that are invisible to the incoming wavelengths can absorb the outgoing wavelengths re-emitting some back into the atmosphere rather than allowing them to escape out into space. This is the greenhouse effect, so-called because some of the same processes are at work as sunlight hits glass, and the trapped heat which cannot escape causes the earth's temperature to rise with consequent impacts on weather patterns. There are many gases involved, each with its own global warming potential (GWP), so their impact is routinely converted into a carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2e) and this is the basis of the general term ‘carbon’ when talking about emissions.

In agricultural systems the greenhouse effect is particularly associated with methane (principally from ruminants and their waste products) and nitrous oxide (from soil disturbance and inefficient use of nitrogen fertilisers). Combustion of fossil fuels to release carbon dioxide is part of the story in agriculture but is more relevant in general industrial processes including fertiliser and food manufacture. The other greenhouse gases include fluorinated species found in refrigerant gases, also common in the food sector, plus some others more associated with specialist activities such as power generation and electronics manufacturing, the products of both of which are enablers for the agri-food sector.

The contribution of agri-food activities to global heating and the climate crisis varies with geography, levels of industrialisation, education and many other factors and feeds into the biodiversity crisis noted in the previous section as flora and fauna are unable to survive in their established geographies or, conversely, become able to survive in areas where they previously could not. As well as contributing to the decline of natural ecosystems, this change also allows non-native species, pests and diseases to affect new areas. Some organisms previously killed off by cold northern European winters can now survive in the UK and elsewhere, increasing the vulnerability of agricultural crops and livestock, along with natural flora and fauna, to vectors against which they have no natural resistance.

So, again, the question arises as to what we can do about these threats. The overwhelming cause of global heating is carbon dioxide from the combustion of fossil fuels, and carbon dioxide persists in the atmosphere for millennia. In the absence of large-scale technologies to remove CO2 from the atmosphere faster than geological or natural biological processes, attention is focused on other gases which, from the perspective of the agri-food system, primarily means methane and nitrous oxide. In fact, as nitrous oxide has an average atmospheric lifetime in excess of a century and methane is typically removed in a little over a decade, methane is receiving much of the policy attention, and this is at the root of the focus on red meat and dairy products. This is not intended to be a critique of the meat and dairy sector, merely an explanation of the circumstances.

Dairy cattle in a small-scale uk grass-fed farming system.

None of that means that carbon dioxide is off the hook in any way. We need to reduce additional emissions of CO2 as well, at the same time as the gases more directly associated with the agri-food sector. Some of these impacts are linked (the Haber-Bosch process used to manufacture ammonia from atmospheric nitrogen uses more than 1% of the world's electricity long before any fertiliser reaches fields) and some sit within specific processes such as baking. Even then, the scale of impacts is sometimes counter-intuitive. Research published by academics at the University of Sheffield found that more of the embodied carbon in a loaf of bread is attributable to fertiliser applied to the wheat than to the baking process(7), so be sure to take action on the basis of studies such as Lifecycle Assessments (LCAs).

Imported fresh produce displayed in an icelandic retailer in mid-february.

As mentioned in the introduction, the experiences and hence the expectations of regulators and individuals vary with the nature of their countries. Wealthy Western economies have become accustomed to enjoying the pick of the world's production leading to, amongst other things, year-round availability of a cornucopia of fresh produce that was unthinkable to our grandparents. Combined with the push for lower prices, this can place stresses on individuals in their workplaces as companies strive to improve productivity and reduce costs. Much of this is invisible even to supply chain professionals as communication along value chains is often incomplete, typically focusing on specifics relating to product and logistics.

SDG8 is, of course, core to the ability of people to rise above the issues encapsulated in the other goals. People in decent employment have the financial resources (SDG1 ’No Poverty’ to feed themselves and their families (SDG2), itself supporting health (SDG3), and afford quality healthcare. Either directly or through public education provided through general taxation (SDG4 ‘Quality Education’) they can give their children a better start in life(8) which might also contribute to SDG5 ‘Gender Equality’ and SDG10 ’Reduced Inequalities’ along with others of the Goals. In this regard the social and economic pillars of sustainability are inextricably linked.

So, then, how can we be sure that the economic impact of our consumption is felt positively in countries of origin, enabling the people in our supply chains and those in the communities around them to come to enjoy lifestyles closer to those that we mostly do in the West? One possible negative outcome is that as other parts of the world become wealthier, it adds more pressure on the environment, such as contributing to global warming or loss of biodiversity, which are problems already caused by richer economies. When we work with our supply chains, then, the social factors inevitably cross over with environmental as well as economic factors and we have to try to balance them all.

Seasonal smallholder agriculture in Malawi.

Although the targets that sit below SDG17 are framed in the language of governments, together they make for a philosophy of supply chain management that addresses the issues which are the subjects of the other Goals. Cooperating on economic, environmental and social issues enables all actors along supply chains and beyond to share in the benefits of their collaboration, and cooperation between peer organisations sets the standards for them all to work to. Many readers will be familiar with the outputs of the International Standards Organisation which set agreed processes for management systems, carbon foot-printing(10) and other mechanisms for delivering on the approaches discussed above, which ensure rigour and consistency in the way that organisations address social and environmental issues.

The SDGs aren’t perfect, but they are a useful framework to guide organisations, and the people within them, to taking relevant actions which will improve the sustainability of the agri-food system, and by extension the lives of us all and the condition of the natural ecosystems within which we live. The day-to-day decisions we make in our working lives can have a positive impact on the stated or implicit issues in each of the Goals, impacting for the better on other people's lives and livelihoods and on the natural world of which we are all a part. It would be an impoverished world indeed without the song of the skylark high above a carpet of wildflowers and we can play a part in averting the impending ecological disaster through the way we engage with our supply chains.

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来源期刊
Food Science and Technology
Food Science and Technology 农林科学-食品科技
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From Ocean to Table: Ensuring Seafood Traceability The Clever Guts Diet: How to revolutionise your body from the inside out Cover and contents Editorial and News From the President and IFST News
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