Malthusian fears that population growth will outstrip food supplies have been widely discounted as food production has kept well ahead of growing human numbers in the last half century. While population doubled, food supply tripled, and life expectancy increased from 46 in the 1950s to around 65 today. But more recently, some experts have once again been sounding the alarm about a possible food crisis.
The reason lies in the combined impact of many factors including climate change, forest denudation, land degradation, water shortage, declining oil supplies, species extinction, destruction of coastal ecosystems and the growing demands for a meat-rich diet from newly developed parts of the world.
At the root of all these problems has been the ruthless exploitation of the earth’s resources, fuelled by growing affluence in some parts of the world and desperate poverty in others. Between 1980 and 2000, global population rose from 4.4 billion to 6.1 billion, while food production increased 50 per cent. By 2050, the population is expected to reach 9 billion.
Data shows that while grain yields per acre have been increasing, the rate of increase has been slowing since the days of the Green Revolution in the 1970s. Most of the benefits of irrigation, machinery, fertilizer and plant breeding have already been realized. The production of grain per acre is close to the maximum obtainable through photosynthesis.
To keep up with the growth in human population, more food will have to be produced over the next 50 years than has been during the past 10,000 years combined, said the participants of the recent UN-backed forum in Iceland on sustainable development. It is, of course, possible that new technologies, smart environmental management and sensitive social policies will combine to good effect to usher in a new green revolution. But as grain reserves have fallen to their lowest level for many years, this cannot be guaranteed.
At the 1996 World Food Summit political leaders from 186 countries pledged to halve the number of hungry people in the world by the year 2015, or a reduction of 20 million each year. At that time, about 800 million people were reported to suffer from under- nourishment. In 2007 estimates from the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) suggest that there are 854 million people who do not get enough to eat every day. "Far from decreasing, the number of hungry people in the world is currently increasing," said FAO Director-General Jacques Diouf. (Of course, world population has increased by some 800 million in that time, so food supplies have kept up relatively well, but have failed to reach an increasing number, let alone reduce the total going hungry.)
The food crisis may come as a result of()
A. the population’s getting bigger than before
B. some experts’ exaggeration
C. the joint force of a variety of factors
D. people’s turning a blind eye to the situation
参考答案:C
解析:
[试题类型] 具体信息题。
[解题思路] 本题针对粮食危机产生的原因设问。第二段首句指出,粮食危机是多种因素综合作用的结果(The reason lies in the combined impact of the many factors),包括气候变化、土壤剥蚀、水资源短缺等。由此可见,选项[C]the joint forces of a variety of factors正是对该段句首the combined impact of many factors的同义改写,故正确。
[干扰排除] 文中第三段提到1980年到2000年,全球人口从4亿增加到6.1亿,但是粮食产量也增加了50%,并且作者强调人口增长速度快于粮食增长时才会引发粮食危机,故仅“人口数量比以前多”这一方面不一定会引发粮食危机,放排除选项[A]。选项[B]不符合常识,文中也没有提及专家夸大事实能导致粮食危机,故排除。义中也没有提及“人类忽视现状”是造成粮食危机的原因,故排除选项[D]。