| Literature DB >> 36258888 |
Keerththana Kumareswaran1, Guttila Yugantha Jayasinghe1.
Abstract
Covid-19, one of the most critical and widespread global pandemics, has resulted in extraordinary risk corollaries engulfing millions of people's lives and has caused an unprecedented economic downturn while amplifying food insecurity. A systematic review of 132 scientific communications was performed over a 15-year period, using articles from the ScienceDirect and Web of Science databases (2006-2021). In addition, 24 policy briefs, country papers, and publications from the UN, WHO, FAO, and OECD were cited. The aim of this paper is to provide a comprehensive review of existing literature on the adverse effects of the Covid-19 pandemic on agricultural food systems, as well as potential strategies for building robust, resilient, and sustainable food systems to ensure global food security, safety, and endeavors regarding future global emergencies, as well as new research policies while achieving SDG targets. This would fill a research gap while also having long-term implications for health, agricultural, and food resilience policy development in a rapidly changing world. Covid-19 demonstrates how human, animal, and environmental health are all interconnected, emphasizing the need for one health legislation and a paradigm shift in planetary health. Furthermore, it identifies potential mechanisms for rebuilding better systems by shifting priorities toward policy coherence, innovative food system governance, re-engineering market access, and nexus thinking in the food system approach. According to our findings, the COVID-19 posed unavoidable impediments to achieving SDG targets for food security and household poverty.Entities:
Keywords: Build back better systems; Covid-19 pandemic; Food system resilience; Global food security; Sustainable development goals; System thinking
Year: 2022 PMID: 36258888 PMCID: PMC9561052 DOI: 10.1007/s43621-022-00096-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Discov Sustain ISSN: 2662-9984
Global pandemics, their causes of breakout, and probable consequences
| Global pandemics | Year of outbreak | Root causes of outbreak | Potential impacts | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bubonic plague | Fourteenth century | Spread in Central Asia, Europe, and China | Brought radical changes in urban infrastructures Social, cultural, and political renaissances because of massive economic and social upheaval One third of Europe's population was killed in the east, and feudalism came to an end 25 million infected in China | [ |
| Spanish flu/influenza pandemic | 1918–1920 | Disastrous virus pandemic | Killed more than 50 million populations One third of the global population then was infected Questioned human health, dragged down global economies from progress for long term Messed up food supply chains | [ |
| Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS-CoV-1) | 2002–2004 | Due to rapid infrastructure development in Asia along with higher rates of demographic and geographic transitions Outbreak in China and spread to 20 countries | Affected food security Disrupted the lives of vulnerable population including poor households, women, children, smokers, and elderly people 10% lethality rate | [ |
| Avian influenza (H5N1)/ African swine fever | 1997 in Hong Kong 2004–2006 | Highly virulent pandemics originated from pigs and chicken Large scale unsustainable animal productions Relatively low lethality but strong infectivity | Fatality rate 60% Had direct strong impact on food production and greatly reduced animal-based product output Sharp decline in agri-food production and food insecurity emerged | [ |
| Middle East respiratory syndrome MERS-Cov | 2012 | Detected in Saudi Arabia Spread to 27 countries Short incubation period High lethal rates | Affected food security particularly disrupting the lives of vulnerable population HERA protocol stemmed out Lethality rate 35% Devastated agriculture production and allied labor sector | [ |
| Swine flu/ influenza (Influenza A H1N1) | 2009 outbreak in Mexico | Human-to-human transmission like seasonal flu Respiratory disease caused by viruses that infect the respiratory tract of pigs, resulting in nasal secretions, cough, and decreased appetite | Had killed over 50 lakhs people globally 18,449 deaths in 2010 Most serious complication of the flu was pneumonia People with chronic medical conditions, children less than 5 years, persons above 65, and pregnant women were at increased risk | [ |
| Ebola hemorrhagic fever | 1976 in West Africa 2014–2016 West Africa | Unsustainable agriculture practices Increased interaction between infected animals and human due to deforestation | Mortality rates up to 43% in West Africa Affected food security particularly disrupting the lives of vulnerable population including poor households, women, children, and elderly people Ebola in Europe and North Africa resulted in child labor, child abuse, gender violation, domestic violence, and teen pregnancies Increased the price for rice in countries like Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone by 30% and cassava by 150% in Liberia while lowering fertilizer use in West Africa In Africa killed about 10 000 people | [ |
| Marburg virus (MARV) | Since 1967 | Unsustainable agriculture practices Egyptian fruit bats are hosts | Responsible for several outbreaks of highly fatal hemorrhagic fever to human and primates 90% fatality rate Highly contagious and manifests symptoms of high fever, diarrhea, vomiting, and severe bleeding in the bod | [ |
| Yellow fever | Since seventeenth century 1948 1960–1962 1985–1995 2016–2018 | South America and Sub-Saharan Africa Mosquito-borne disease Outbreak when African slaves imported as human cargo | 200 000 active cases and 30 000 deaths annually 90% of cases reported in Africa | [ |
| Smallpox | Since third century in Europe 1977 last naturally occurred case reported in Somalia | Caused by two variants Variola major and Variola minor Hemorrhagic smallpox was severe | Cause potentially lethal interstitial pneumonitis as well as tubule interstitial nephritis Cytopathic effects cause death Extensive scarring of skin and left blind Fatality rates exceeded 30% Children below 10 years were more susceptive 500 million people killed in last century | [ |
| Lyme disease | Transmitted to humans through the bite of a tick infected with various B. burgdorferi sensu lato bacteria Outburst in North America due to decline of red fox Unplanned suburban development Forest clearing | 240,000 to 440,000 new cases diagnosed every year in US Post treatment Lyme disease syndrome for 10–20% individuals: fatigue, musculoskeletal pain, and neurocognitive complaints Erythema migrans/early-stage acute skin infection Manifestation of late Lyme disease such as arthritis, encephalomyelitis, or peripheral neuropathy Higher health care cost | [ |
Fig. 1Systematic article selection procedure
Fig. 2Dynamics of food security and nutrition.
Source: [16, 65]
Fig. 3Global Food Security Index Ranking 2021.
Data source [74]
Potential practices to enhance agro-ecosystem resilience to cater the diverse food demand and dietary requirement
| Strategies | References |
|---|---|
| Sustainable agriculture (environmental and nutrient conscious) | [ |
| Conserve and breed agrobiodiversity | [ |
| Development of local/ regional crop and livestock production system | [ |
| Develop agriculture-based cottage industries and entrepreneurship | [ |
| Empowering local community especially women, agriculture labor, and vulnerable population | [ |
| Promote natural mechanisms to regulate biogeochemical cycles and pest management | [ |
| Biological pest management | [ |
| Low carbon agriculture/economy | [ |
| Crop and land specific agronomic practices | [ |
| Improved plant genetics and crop varieties | [ |
| Renewable energy use (biofuel, solar, wind) | [ |
| Innovative soil management and enhanced soil biodiversity | [ |
| Good governance of natural and human systems | [ |
| Decentralized farm structures, improved working condition, anddecent wages | [ |
| Incorporate traditional knowledge to modern technology through promoting cultural diversity | [ |
| Avoid products/ ingredients of higher environmental footprint, over processed | [ |
| Improved cold chain storage and transport facilities | [ |
| Improved seed/grain storage to boost productivity | [ |
| Enhance product value addition | [ |
| National policies to prohibit land degradation and soil restoration | [ |
| Increased share to local market and alternative distribution channels | [ |
| Native plant (drought tolerant, nitrogen fixing) species and local farming practices | [ |
| Multi-stakeholder involvement | [ |
| Generate, update, and maintain data on on-farm agrobiodiversity to measure performance and resilience of the farm and identify room for development | [ |
| Socio-technological innovations, innovation and resilience policies, and investment on R&D | [ |
| Transferring the intrinsic value of farming through incorporating youngsters | [ |
| Develop productive, multifunctional, and diversified organic farming | [ |
| Management practices to enhance mineral availability | [ |
| Development of climate change, hydrological as well as crop models that assist in decision making and predicting pandemics | [ |
Fig. 4Impacts of Covid-19 food system dynamics on six dimensions of food security, and coping strategies to tackle the pandemic.
Source: [6, 8, 22, 51, 82, 84, 114]
Trading strategies implemented by world countries to limit pandemic outbreaks and guarantee local food security
Source: [55, 81]
| Countries | Measures |
|---|---|
| India | Suspension of new trade contracts for rice by traders, cancelling of license and permits for export |
| Cambodia | Prohibited the export of rice and fish |
| Thailand | Prohibition of chicken eggs export |
| Singapore | Elimination and reduction of tariffs and duties for essential goods/ agriculture products |
| Indonesia | Suspended import certification for onion and garlic |
| Turkey | Permit control/export control for lemon |
| Vietnam | Rice export control/stopped issuing new export certificates Control over the exports of flour, sugar, potatoes, and sunflower oil |
| Russia | Set limit on grain export to conserve food reserves |
| Kazakhstan, Serbia, | Control over the exports of flour, sugar, potatoes, and sunflower oil |
| European Union | Allowed imports of fruits and vegetables from India after assuring food safety and plant health standards via online certificates |
Fig. 5Potential mechanisms in addressing Covid-19 pandemic in accomplishing food system resilience.
Sources: [17, 50, 63, 77, 119]
Different potential response mechanisms employed across the world countries to tackle Covid-19 pandemic
| Potential Response Mechanisms | Country | Purpose | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Grace periods for loan repayment, dampen interest rates, additional lending capacity to Farm Credit Canada | Canada | To reduce the financial burden of framers to ensure production and support them to face challenges in Covid uncertainty context | [ |
| Corona virus food assistance program | USA | To ensure food access in times of pandemic | [ |
| Shopping basket program, Incentive/ insurance scheme for vegetables | China | Ensure farmer’s income and protect them, stabilize agriculture production and supply | [ |
| Multi-year joint resilient program | Somalia | [ | |
| Safety net program, purchase for progress program, food banks, emergency food pantries | Ethiopia | Chronically address insecurities | [ |
| Nutrition sensitive cash transfer program | Enable equal access to health and nutritious food; especially considering vulnerable population | [ | |
| One million kitchen garden plan | Kenya | To ensure healthy diet combat the food crisis caused by the pandemic Promote women empowerment | [ |
Digital agriculture/e-commerce platform: e-Soko, FarmCrowdy | Ghana, Nigeria China | Provide online farm management and technical and extension services | [ |
| Slow food gardens | Africa, Uganda, Malawi, Kenya Tanzania | To make communities resilient with diverse food (home, school, and community gardens) | [ |
Financial support, provision of subsidies, technology guidance,field management, and effective supply of critical inputs Cereal bag program Food basket program | China | To stabilize agriculture production and supply and compensate farmers for income loss | [ |
| Publications on Covid-19 and food safety guidelines for food companies, best practices for food shops, restaurants, delivery services, food safety, and hygiene advisory | Brazil, USA, China UK, Portugal, India | To incorporate food health, hygiene, and safety measures, as well as personal hygiene, to prevent future dangers | [ |
| One planet sustainable food system programme | UN member states (Argentina, Switzerland, Tunisia) | To transform to responsible production and sustainable consumption and promotes holistic and inclusive policy making food systems approach | [ |
| C40 cities food system network | Denmark, Barcelona Tokyo | To curb food related emissions through sustainable consumption, reduce food loss, support healthy plant-based diet in cities | [ |
Fig. 6Complex relationships in building transdiciplinary holistic food system resilience. a Interacting components, b Benefits enjoyed and c SDG accomplished.
Source [123]
SDG targets setting in progress during and post-pandemic stages. (the diagram should be stretched as the SDG goal positioned above corresponding targets and indicators)
Source: [21, 112, 137–141]
| Targets | Indicators | Targets | Indicators | Targets | Indicators |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1.1. Eradicate extreme poverty for all people everywhere | 1.1.1. Proportion of population below international poverty line | 2.1. Universal access to safe and nutritious food | 2.1.1. Prevalence of undernourishment | 12.1. Implement the 10-year framework of programmes | 12.1.1. Number of countries with sustainable consumption and production national action plans, mainstreamed into priority |
| 1.2. Reduce at least by half the proportion living in poverty in all its dimensions | 1.2.1. Proportion of population below national poverty line | 2.2. End all forms of malnutrition | 2.1.2. Prevalence of moderate/severe food insecurity in the population, based on the food insecurity experience scale | 12.2. Sustainable management and efficient use of natural resources | 12.2.1. Material footprint, (per capita and per GDP) |
| 1.3. Implement nationally appropriate social protection systems and measures accomplishing substantial coverage of the poor and the vulnerable | 1.2.2. Proportion of men, women, and children in poverty in all dimensions (national scale) | 2.3. Double the productivity and incomes of small-scale food producers | 2.2.1. Prevalence of stunting | 12.3. Reduce food waste, food losses, including post-harvest losses | 12.2.2. Domestic material consumption (per capita and per GDP) |
| 1.4. Ensure equal access to basic amenities, economic, natural, financial resources, and technology without gender and social disparity | 1.3.1. Proportion of population covered by social protection floor | 2.B. Prevent agricultural trade restrictions, market distortions, and export subsidies | 2.2.2. Prevalence of malnutrition | 12.4. Environmentally sound management of chemicals and wastes throughout their life cycle, reduce emissions, and adverse impacts on human health and the environment | 12.3.1. Global food loss index |
| 1.5. Build socio economic and climate resilience of poor and vulnerable population | 1.4.1 People access to basic amenities | 2.C. Ensure stable commodity markets and timely access to information | 2.2.3. Prevalence of anemia in women | 12.5. Reduce waste generation through prevention, reduction, recycling, and reuse | 12.4.1. Number of parties to international multilateral environmental agreements on hazardous waste, and other chemicals |
| 1. A. Ensure significant mobilization of resources to end poverty in all forms (for developing and least developed nations) | 1.A.1 Poverty eradication assistance programs | 2.3.1. Volume of production per labor unit | 12.6. Company adapt sustainable practices and to integrate sustainability information into their reporting cycle | 12.4.2. Hazardous waste generated per capita, and proportion of hazardous waste treated, by type of treatment | |
| 1. B. Develop sound policy frameworks at all levels to end poverty | 1.A.2 Government funding on basic amenities | 2.3.2. Average income of small-scale food producers | 12.7. Promote public procurement practices that are sustainable | 12.5.1. National recycling rate, tons of material recycled | |
| 12.8. Information dissemination and awareness for sustainable development and lifestyles in harmony with nature | 12.6.1. Number of companies publishing sustainability reports | ||||
| 12. A. Support developing countries to strengthen their scientific and technological capacity for sustainable consumption and production | 12.7.1. Number of countries implementing sustainable public procurement policies and action plans | ||||
| 12. B. Develop and implement tools to monitor sustainable development impacts for sustainable tourism | 12.8.1. Extent to which global citizenship education and sustainable development are mainstreamed in national education | ||||
| 12. C. Rationalize inefficient fossil-fuel subsidies | 12.A.1. Amount of support to developing countries on research and development | ||||
| 12.B.1. Number of sustainable tourism strategies/policies | |||||
| 12.C.1. Amount of fossil-fuel subsidies per unit of GDP and as proportion of total national expenditure on fossil fuels |
Fig. 7Conceptual Framework on ensuring global food security and building pandemic resilient food system: towards accomplishing SDG targets