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By Christine McGourty
Science correspondent, BBC News
Growing world population will cause a "perfect storm" of food, energy and water
shortages by 2030, the UK government chief scientist is warning.
By 2030 the demand for resources will create a crisis with dire consequences,
Prof John Beddington predicts.
Demand for food and energy will jump 50% by 2030 and for fresh water by 30%, as
the population tops 8.3 billion, he is due to tell a conference in London.
Climate change will exacerbate matters in unpredictable ways, he will add.
'Complacent'
"It's a perfect storm," Prof Beddington will tell the Sustainable Development
UK 09 conference.
"There's not going to be a complete collapse, but things will start getting
really worrying if we don't tackle these problems."
Prof Beddinton says the looming crisis will match the current one in the
banking sector.
"My main concern is what will happen internationally, there will be food and
water shortages," he predicts.
"We're relatively fortunate in the UK; there may not be shortages here, but we
can expect prices of food and energy to rise."
The United Nations Environment Programme predicts widespread water shortages
across Africa, Europe and Asia by 2025.
The amount of fresh water available per head of the population is expected to
decline sharply in that time.
The issue of food and energy security rose high on the political agenda last
year during a spike in oil and commodity prices.
Genetically-modified
Prof Beddington says the concern now - when prices have dropped once again - is
that the issues will slip down the domestic and international agenda again.
"We can't afford to be complacent. Just because the high prices have dropped
doesn't mean we can relax," he says.
Improving agricultural productivity globally is one way to tackle the problem,
he adds.
At present, 30-40% of all crops are lost due to pest and disease before they
are harvested.
Professor Beddington says: "We have to address that. We need more
disease-resistant and pest-resistant plants and better practices, better
harvesting procedures.
"Genetically-modified food could also be part of the solution. We need plants
that are resistant to drought and salinity - a mixture of genetic modification
and conventional plant breeding.
Better water storage and cleaner energy supplies are also essential, he says.
Prof Beddington is chairing a subgroup of a new Cabinet Office task force set
up to tackle food security.
But he says the problem cannot be tackled in isolation.
He wants policy-makers in the European Commission to receive the same high
level of scientific advice as the new US president, Barack Obama.
One solution would be to create a new post of chief science adviser to the
European Commission, he suggests.