Human Wrongs Watch

Using nuclear sciences to feed the world. Credit: FAO
To start with, nuclear applications in agriculture rely on the use of isotopes and radiation techniques to combat pests and diseases, increase crop production, protect land and water resources, and ensure food safety and authenticity, as well as increase livestock production.
This is how the UN food and agriculture organisation and the UN atomic energy agency explain this technique, highlighting that some of the most innovative ways being used to improve agricultural practices involve nuclear technology.
Both the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) and the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) have been expanding knowledge and enhancing capacity in this area for over 50 years.
Climate Change
One reason is that the global climate is changing, altering the frequency and intensity of extreme weather events and seriously impacting food security.
Rising sea levels, ecosystem stress, glacier melt and altering river systems exacerbate the vulnerability of particular social groups and economic sectors, FAO reports, adding that it is also altering the distribution, incidence and intensity of terrestrial and aquatic animal and plant pests and diseases.
“Most developing countries are already subject to an enormous disease burden, and both developing and developed countries could be affected by newly emerging diseases. Making global agricultural systems resilient to these changes is critical for efforts to achieve global food security.”
The two UN agencies have been assisting countries to develop capacity to optimise their use of nuclear techniques to confront and mitigate impacts of climate change on agricultural systems and food security – nuclear techniques that can increase crop tolerance to drought, salinity or pests; reduce greenhouse gas emissions, and increase carbon sequestration from agricultural systems.
They can also track and control insect pests and animal diseases; adjust livestock feed to reduce emissions and improve breeding; optimise natural resource management through isotopic tracking of soil, water and crops; and provide information essential for assessing ecosystem changes and for forecast modelling.
The results of “using nuclear sciences to feed the world” have led to some major success stories, they say.
.
The agricultural sector uses nuclear and related technologies to adapt to climate change by increasing resource-use efficiency and productivity in a sustainable way. Credit: FAO
Seven Examples
FAO provides the following seven examples of how nuclear technology is improving food and agriculture:
1. Animal Productivity… and Health
Nuclear and related technologies have made a difference in improving livestock productivity, controlling and preventing trans-boundary animal diseases and protecting the environment.
For example, Cameroon uses nuclear technology effectively in its livestock reproduction, breeding, artificial insemination and disease control programmes. By crossing the Bos indicus and the Bos taurus (two local cattle breeds), farmers have tripled their milk yields – from 500 to 1 500 litres – and generated an additional 110 million dollars in farmer income per year.
Another programme has dramatically curbed the incidence of Brucellosis, a highly contagious zoonosis, or disease that can be transmitted from animals to humans who drink unpasteurised milk or eat undercooked meat from infected animals.
2. Soils and Water
Nuclear techniques are now used in many countries to help maintain healthy soil and water systems, which are paramount in ensuring food security for the growing global population.
For instance, in Benin, a scheme involving 5 000 rural farmers increased the maize yield by 50 per cent and lowered the amount of fertiliser used by 70 per cent with techniques that facilitate nitrogen fixation.
Similarly, nuclear techniques allow Maasai farmers in Kenya to schedule small-scale irrigation, doubling vegetable yields while applying only 55 per cent of the water that would normally be applied using traditional hand watering.
3. Pests
The nuclear-derived sterile insect technique (SIT) involves mass-rearing and sterilising male insects before releasing them over pest-infested areas.
The technique suppresses and gradually eliminates already established pests or prevents the introduction of invasive species – and is safer for the environment and human health than conventional pesticides.
The governments of Guatemala, Mexico and the United States have been using the SIT for decades to prevent the northward spread of the Mediterranean fruit fly (medfly) into Mexico and USA.
In addition, Guatemala sends hundreds of millions of sterile male medflies every week to the US states of California and Florida to protect valuable crops, such as citrus fruits. With the sterile male medflies unable to reproduce, it is really the perfect insect birth control.

.
The nuclear-derived sterile insect technique (SIT) involves mass-rearing and sterilizing male insects before releasing them over pest-infested areas. Credit: FAO
4. Food Safety
Food safety and quality control systems need to be robust at the national level to facilitate the trade of safe food and to combat food fraud, which costs the food industry up to 15 billion dollars annually.
Nuclear techniques help national authorities in over 50 countries to improve food safety by addressing the problem of harmful residues and contaminants in food products and to improve their traceability systems with stable isotope analysis.
For example, scientific programmes in Pakistan, Angola and Mozambique now enable the testing for veterinary drug residues and contaminants in animal products.
Already some 50 Pakistani food production and export institutions benefit from the new laboratory testing capabilities, which help ensure they meet international food standards and boost the country’s reputation in the international food trade.
5. Emergency Response
Radioactivity is present in everything that surrounds us – from the sun to soil. But should a nuclear incident or emergency happen, an understanding of the movement of radioactivity through the environment becomes crucial to prevent or alleviate the impact on agricultural products.
.
During the 2011 nuclear emergency in Japan, FAO and IAEA compiled an extensive and authoritative database on food contaminated with radioisotopes. This database supported the information exchange and facilitated appropriate follow-up actions to protect consumers, the agri-food sector and the world at large.
6. Climate Change
The agricultural sector uses nuclear and related technologies to adapt to climate change by increasing resource-use efficiency and productivity in a sustainable way.
The nuclear-derived crossbreeding programme in Burkina Faso is a great example of helping farmers to breed more productive and climate-resistant animals. It is underpinned by genetic evaluations in four national laboratories, with scientists also able to use associated technology to produce a lick feed that provides the bigger, more productive livestock with the nutrients they need.
7. Seasonal Famine
Crop-breeding programmes use nuclear technology to help vulnerable countries ensure food security, adapt to climate change and even to tackle seasonal famine. New mutant crop varieties shorten the growing process, thereby allowing farmers to plant additional crops during the growing season.
In recent years, farmers in northern Bangladesh have been using a fast-maturing mutant rice variety called Binadhan-7. This variety ripens 30 days quicker than normal rice, giving farmers time to harvest other crops and vegetables within the same season.
Now that you know that food has been “nuclearised”… enjoy your meal!
——-
*Baher Kamal, Egyptian-born, Spanish-national secular journalist. He is founder and publisher of Human Wrongs Watch. Recent articles by Baher Kamal in Human Wrongs Watch:
The Harsh Plight of 152 Million Child Labourers
Nations without Nationality – An ‘Unseen’ Stark Reality
Climate Change Summit a Step Further, Yes… But Where To?
The Roots of Exodus: Why Are People Compelled to Leave their Homes?
Pollution or How the ‘Take-Make-Dispose’ Economic Model Does Kill
What Do You Really Eat When You Order a Steak, Fish or Chicken Filet?
Not True that Hunger Doesn’t Discriminate — It Does
How to Eradicate Rural Poverty, End Urban Malnutrition – A New Approach
The World Is Running Out of Much Needed New Antibiotics
To Be an Egyptian Migrant in Rome (and by the Way Make Great Pizza)
Poor Orphan Crops… So Valuable, So Neglected
Conflicts, Climate Shocks Causing New Famines, Severe Food Crisis
Alert: Nature, on the Verge of Bankruptcy
Floods, Hurricanes, Droughts… When Climate Sets the Agenda
Europe, New Border of Africa’s ‘Great Desert’ – The Sahara
Climate-Smart Agriculture Urgently Needed in Africa
To Be a Nigerian Migrant in Italy
Forced Evictions, Rights Abuses of Maasai People in Tanzania Reported
Climate Migrants Might Reach One Billion by 2050
Yemen: African Migrants Beaten, Starved, Sexually Violated by Criminal Groups
Can the Gender Gap Be Measured in Dollars Only?
Millions of Women and Children for Sale for Sex, Slavery, Organs…
Migrants – The Increasingly Expensive Deadly Voyages
Not Just Numbers: Migrants Tell Their Stories
Climate Change-Poverty-Migration: The New, Inhuman ‘Bermuda Triangle’
Drought Pushes 1 in 3 Somalis to a Hunger Knife-Edge
Mideast: Drought to Turn People into Eternal Migrants, Prey to Extremism?
More Plastic than Fish or How Politicians Help Ocean Destruction
The Relentless March of Drought – That ‘Horseman of the Apocalypse
Re-Connect with Nature Now… Before It Is Too Late!
The ‘Water-Employment-Migration’ Explosive Nexus
Asia: 260 Million Indigenous Peoples Marginalised, Discriminated
Mideast: Growing Urbanisation Worsens Water Scarcity, Food Imports
A Grisly Tale of Children Falling Easy Prey to Ruthless Smugglers
Agony of Mother Earth (I) The Unstoppable Destruction of Forests
Agony of Mother Earth (II) World’s Forests Depleted for Fuel
Who Are the Best ‘Eaters’ and How to Use Eggplants as a Toothbrush
African Migrants Bought and Sold Openly in ‘Slave Markets’ in Libya
The Very Survival of Africa’s Indigenous Peoples ‘Seriously Threatened’
20 Million People Could ‘Starve to Death’ in Next Six Months
Indigenous Peoples – Best Allies or Worst Enemies?
Middle East, Engulfed by a ‘Perfect Storm’
Yemen, World’s Largest Humanitarian Crisis
ACP: One Billion People to Speak To Europe with One Voice
Did You Know that the Oceans Have It All?
The Unbearable Cost of Drought in Africa
‘Humanity and Social Justice, a Must for the Future of Work’
Work, What Future? Seven Big Questions Needing Urgent Response
Plastic No More… Also in Kenya
Climate Breaks All Records: Hottest Year, Lowest Ice, Highest Sea Level
New Evidence Confirms Risk That Mideast May Become Uninhabitable
The Indigenous ‘People of Wildlife’ Know How to Protect Nature
These Women Cannot Celebrate Their Day
Antarctic Ice Lowest Ever – Asia at High Risk – Africa Drying Up
UN Declares War on Ocean Plastic
Of Arabs and Muslims and the Big Ban
Every Year 700 Million People Fall Ill from Contaminated Food
A Dire Vacuum in a World in Crisis
Indigenous Peoples Lands Guard 80 Per Cent of World’s Biodiversity
World’s 40,000 MP’s Must Enjoy Their Rights – But Are They?
Want to Prevent Stroke, Diabetes, Cancer? Get Moving… Now!
Trump to Pull Out of the UN, Expel It from the US?
Inequality (III): Less Employment… and More ‘Junk’ Jobs
Inequality (II): “It Will Take 170 Years for Women to Be Paid as Men Are”
Inequality (I): Half of World’s Wealth, in the Pockets of Just Eight Men
Poor Darwin – Robots, Not Nature, Now Make the Selection
2017 Human Wrongs Watch
Discover more from HUMAN WRONGS WATCH
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
Leave a comment