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Feeding Everyone if Industry is Disabled

  • D. D. Cole, D. Denkenberger, M. Griswold, M. Abdelkhaliq, J. Pearce
Pre-print available online from:
31 August 2016

Summary

Widespread global electrical failure could result from a number of different catastrophic risks. In these scenarios, the existing agricultural system would be seriously affected. Cole et al. (2016) models the loss of productivity in global agriculture as a result of such a crisis. It then analyzes non-industrial strategies which could compensate for that loss in productivity. It concludes that these strategies could feed everyone on earth several times over.

Global Catastrophic Infrastructure Loss (GCIL), High-altitude electromagnetic pulse (HEMP), Energy infrastructure, Cyber-attack, Food & supply chains

Abstract

A number of risks could cause widespread electrical failure, including a series of high-altitude electromagnetic pulses (HEMPs) caused by nuclear weapons, an extreme solar storm, and a coordinated cyber attack. Since modern industry depends on electricity, it is likely there would be a collapse of the functioning of industry and machines in these scenarios. As our current high agricultural productivity depends on industry (e.g. for fertilizers) it has been assumed that there would be mass starvation in these scenarios. We model the loss in current agricultural output due to losing industry. Then we analyze compensating strategies such as reducing edible food fed to animals and turned into biofuels, reducing food waste, burning wood in landfills for energy, phosphorus, and potassium, and planting a high fraction of legumes to fix nitrogen. We find that these techniques could feed everyone, and extracting calories from agricultural residues, fishing with wind-powered ships and expanding planted area could feed everyone several times over.

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