Agri Kultuur July / Julie 2016 | Page 26

P eople tend to get hot under the collar at talk of overpopulation and food production. By 2050, they say, we’ll have over 9 billion people on the planet. And how will we feed them given that arable lands are diminishing and water supplies are growing ever scarce? While these facts are disturbing, there are quite a number of advancements that are improving food production in a variety of ingenious ways. Hypothetically, we have enough food to feed the world’s current population – we just have problems in getting it to them. Distribution is bedevilled with difficulty in countries without democracy or free markets, or those countries perpetually engaged in war or facing extreme poverty. However, as these situations continue and populations grow – the only way we are going to overcome the numbers problem, is ultimately through technology. Precision agriculture Farmers have been improving crops and livestock since the beginning of agriculture. But soon something called “precision agriculture” is set to be one of the ten key breakthroughs – possibly within the next ten years. With the development of greater use of satellites coupled with sophisticated ground instruments and farm machinery – calculations can be made of the Article provided by Netafim exact and appropriate amounts of seed, water, fertilizer needed to be applied meter by meter to every crop, so that maximum efficiency in food production can be achieved. All activities such as sowing, watering, fertilising and harvesting can all be computer-controlled, including testing and monitoring the standard of the soil – leading to greater and healthier yields with improved time factors. And all this will be made possible through pinpoint assessments from satellites hung like lanterns above the Earth. (The George Washington University Forecast of Technology and Strategy). Genome editing Farms, already likened to factories by those opposed to large commercial operations, are gearing to turn out even more reliable products, immune from the vagaries of nature. The mapping of every DNA strand of all living things has given us the ability to control both plants and animals in a way that we can expect better health and faster turnaround of all produce. Precise genetic manipulation, known as “genome editing”, makes it possible to change a crop or stock animal’s genome in fine detail, perhaps even to just a single genetic “letter” in its DNA strand. This technology means that it is no longer necessary to shift whole genes around, but just gently adjust, in http://blogs-images.forbes.com/daviddisalvo/files/2011/11/DNA.jpg