Rice can feed the world — even with fewer farmers
This success highlights the potential of science to combat food shortages and manage the shift from agricultural to industrial economies.

When we think about technological advances, what comes to mind are the internet, smartphones and now the arrival of artificial intelligence. But farming has enjoyed a dramatic and often overlooked productivity revolution: Over the last century, crop yields have exploded.Rice is a great example. In 1975, farmers around the world harvested an average of 2.4 metric tons per hectare; the yield improved to 3.8 tons by 2000, and today it’s almost doubled to 4.7 tons. Other crops, from corn to soybean to wheat, have also experienced massive gains, allowing larger crops even in more difficult climate conditions. And those gains can be sustained.


The concern was that prices could revert to the record high of more than $1,000 a ton seen in 2007-2008, when food riots spread from Bangladesh to Senegal to Haiti. Some feared that this was the new normal, due to the impact of climate change on crops. Certainly, the weather was at play; but rather than the climate crisis, the main culprit was the on-and-off El Nino weather phenomenon, which disturbs rain patterns in Asia. Worries that carbon emissions would make rice perennially more expensive proved overblown.

The world — and Asia in particular — can do more to extend the productivity boom. The key is ensuring that farmers have plentiful access to credit, so they can invest in modern machinery, fertilizers and pesticides. Irrigation is also essential, and that demands public investment, which should also be channeled into research to improve seeds. Advances in agricultural genetics, which can create plants that tolerate both less rainfall and flooding, should be encouraged, not banned. Chinese scientists have completed trials of new genetically modified rice varieties that offer much hope; others in the region should do similar work.
There’s a final challenge: More productive farming ultimately means fewer farmers. And that’s a good thing — Asia and Africa need more food, not more people working the land. Governments need to manage migration from rural areas to cities, from tilling the soil to being employed in industry or the service economy — the path to riches in America and Europe over the last 100 years.
As the price of rice shows, science can help the world to cope with the changing climate without going hungry.
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