GC32B-01
Globalization of water and food through international trade: impacts on food security, resilience and justice

Wednesday, 16 December 2015: 10:20
3001 (Moscone West)
Paolo D'Odorico1,2, Joel A Carr1, David A Seekell3 and Samir S Suweis4, (1)Univ Virginia, Charlottesville, VA, United States, (2)National Social-Environmental Synthesis Center, Annapolis, MD, United States, (3)University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA, United States, (4)University of Padova, Department of Physics, Padova, Italy
Abstract:
The global distribution of water resources in general depends on geographic conditions but can be (virtually) modified by humans through mechanisms of globalization, such as trade, that make food commodities available to populations living far from the production regions. While trade is expected to improve access to food and (virtual) water, its impact on the global food system and its vulnerability to shocks remains poorly understood. It is also unclear who benefits from trade and whether it contributes to inequality and justice in resource redistribution. We reconstruct the global patterns of food trade and show with a simple model how the ongoing intensification of imports and exports has eroded the resilience of the global food system. Drawing on human rights theory, we investigate the relationship between inequality and injustice in access to water and food. We assess the fulfillment of positive and negative water and food rights and evaluate the obligations arising from the need to ensure that these rights are met throughout the world. We find that trade enhances the vulnerability to shocks but overall increase the number of people whose water and food rights are met.