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Agricultural losses

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Credit: James Bowe, Apples by the road, Flickr, Creative Commons licence 2.0
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Reducing agricultural loss and food waste: how will nature fare?
This editorial article focuses on an aspect of agricultural food loss and waste, not often considered: the effects that a reduction in food loss and waste at the production stage, might have on the species that have become reliant on food waste.
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(Photo credit: Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, Australian Government, Flickr creative commons licence 2.0)(Photo credit: Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, Australian Government, Flickr creative commons licence 2.0)
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Current warming will reduce yields unless maize breeding and seed systems adapt immediately
As the climate changes, and food demand increases, crop varieties suited to these conditions need to be developed. The authors of this paper warn that crops yields around the world could fall within a decade unless action is taken to speed up the introduction of new varieties. They propose three ways to improve matching of maize varieties in Africa to a warmed climate: reduce the BDA (the process of breeding, delivery and adoption), breed under elevated temperatures and act to mitigate climate change.
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Cutting carbon emissions could have indirect effects on hunger
A new paper published in Environmental Science and Technology finds that measures to mitigate agricultural GHG emissions potentially risk increasing global hunger more than the impacts of climate change on crop yields itself.  The study draws upon global models to quantify:  a. the impact of climate change on yields in the absence of mitigation, b. the impact of bionergy production (as one mitigation measure) on competition for land and associated food prices and c. finally, the costs associated with mitigating the impacts of climate change by introducing a carbon tax.  Introduction of this tax is assumed to lead to increase in use of renewable fuels (wind, power, geothermal, bionenergy) and ‘abatement from non energy sources’ – which presumably includes agriculture although they do not specify what sort of abatement this would be.
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Food and fuel: model for bioenergy feedstock/vegetable double-cropping systems
One of the main concerns about bioenergy is that its production potentially competes with land needed to produce food.  In this paper researchers discuss the potential of a bioenergy feedstock/vegetable double-cropping system, in which both biofuel and pumpkin are produced.  
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National Geographic’s Future of Food series: The Next Green Revolution
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Reports from FAO regional conference Europe
Two reports by the UN's Food and Agricultural Organisation on malnutrition and on food waste. 
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Imbalances in nitrogen and phosphorous fertilizer – implications for future yields for African agriculture
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Reducing waste from post-harvest losses; Gratitude project mid-term review reveals unexpected findings
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Global Food Security Programme Food Waste report
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