Why China’s food security is being threatened by nutrient loss
- The loss of nutrient-rich foods through processing, packaging, handling and transport poses a threat to China’s food security, says government think tank
- New study adds authorities should promote a more healthy and low-carbon diet, including coarse grains, aquatic products and white meat like poultry
China must do more to prevent nutrient loss and waste beyond the farm gate if it wants to ensure food security for its 1.4 billion citizens, the country’s top agricultural research body says.
Chinese authorities have in recent years ramped up rhetoric around safeguarding food supply, with President Xi Jinping declaring a war on food waste in August 2020.
But a new study from the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences (CAAS) has also highlighted the food security threat posed by the loss of nutrient-rich foods through processing, packaging, handling and transport.
China’s annual nutrient leakage across its food system could meet the nutritional needs of roughly 190 million people, or 13.6 per cent the population, said report released by CAAS at the weekend, without providing a metric for nutrient loss.