Food and nutritional security require adequate protein as well as energy, delivered from whole-year crop production

Bio-Protection Reseach Centre, Lincoln University, Lincoln, New Zealand
Department of Plant and Environmental Sciences, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark
Natural Resources Institute, University of Greenwich, London, United Kingdom
DOI
10.7287/peerj.preprints.1841v1
Subject Areas
Agricultural Science, Food Science and Technology, Science Policy
Keywords
agroecology, forage utilisation, food costs, nutrition, whole-year production, New Zealand, food access, food security
Copyright
© 2016 Coles et al.
Licence
This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, reproduction and adaptation in any medium and for any purpose provided that it is properly attributed. For attribution, the original author(s), title, publication source (PeerJ Preprints) and either DOI or URL of the article must be cited.
Cite this article
Coles GD, Wratten SD, Porter JR. 2016. Food and nutritional security require adequate protein as well as energy, delivered from whole-year crop production. PeerJ Preprints 4:e1841v1

Abstract

Human food security requires the production of sufficient quantities of both high-quality protein and dietary energy. In a series of case-studies from New Zealand, we show that while production of food ingredients from crops on arable land can meet human dietary energy requirements effectively, requirements for high-quality protein are met more efficiently by animal production from such land. We present a model that can be used to assess dietary energy and quality-corrected protein production from various crop and crop/animal production systems, and demonstrate its utility. We extend our analysis with an accompanying economic analysis of commercially-available, pre-prepared or simply-cooked foods that can be produced from our case-study crop and animal products. We calculate the per-person, per-day cost of both quality-corrected protein and dietary energy as provided in the processed foods. We conclude that mixed dairy/cropping systems provide the greatest quantity of high-quality protein per unit price to the consumer, have the highest food energy production and can support the dietary requirements of the highest number of people, when assessed as all-year-round production systems. Global food and nutritional security will largely be an outcome of national or regional agro-economies addressing their own food needs. We hope that our model will be used for similar analyses of food production systems in other countries, agro-ecological zones and economies.

Author Comment

This is a submission to PeerJ for review.