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  • Writer's pictureBy The Financial District

Shunning Critics, Bill Gates Says Tech Innovation Can Ease Hunger Worldwide

Bill Gates says the global hunger crisis is so immense that food aid cannot fully address the problem.


Photo Insert: In assigning technology a pre-eminent role in addressing the food crisis, Gates puts himself at odds with critics who say his ideas conflict with worldwide efforts to protect the environment.



What's also needed, Gates argues, are the kinds of innovations in farming technology that he has long funded to try to reverse the crisis documented in a report released by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, the Associated Press (AP) reported.


Gates points, in particular, to a breakthrough he calls "magic seeds," crops engineered to adapt to climate change and resist agricultural pests. The Gates Foundation on Tuesday also released a map that models how climate change will likely affect growing conditions for crops in various countries.



In assigning technology a pre-eminent role in addressing the food crisis, Gates puts himself at odds with critics who say his ideas conflict with worldwide efforts to protect the environment. They note that such seeds generally need pesticides and fossil fuel-based fertilizers to grow.


Critics also contend that Gates' approach doesn't address the urgency of the crisis.


All the news: Business man in suit and tie smiling and reading a newspaper near the financial district.

Developing "magic seeds" takes years and won't immediately deliver relief to countries currently enduring widespread suffering because they rely on food imports or are experiencing historic droughts.


It's a debate that could intensify international pressure to meet the shared goals for global prosperity and peace, known as the UN Sustainable Development Goals, ahead of a 2030 deadline.


Market & economy: Market economist in suit and tie reading reports and analysing charts in the office located in the financial district.

The 17 goals include ending poverty and hunger, battling climate change, providing access to clean water, working toward gender equality, and reducing economic inequality, Mainichi Japan also reported.


"It's pretty bleak relative to our hopes for 2030," Gates, 66, told AP.


Science & technology: Scientist using a microscope in laboratory in the financial district.

He added, though, "I'm optimistic that we can get back on track." Gates pointed to the war in Ukraine and the pandemic as the main causes for the hunger crisis. But his message to donors and world leaders at the UN General Assembly this September is that food aid won't be enough.


"It's good that people want to prevent their fellow human beings from starving when conflicts like Ukraine interrupt the food supply," Gates writes in the new report.


Health & lifestyle: Woman running and exercising over a bridge near the financial district.

But the real problem, he says, is that many food insecure countries don't produce enough of their own food -- a problem sure to be exacerbated by the consequences of climate change.





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