Sprouting Sustainable, Nutrition-Sensitive Food Systems

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May 10, 2025

Sprouting Sustainable, Nutrition-Sensitive Food Systems

The global food system is strained by climate change and resource limits. Despite being a top food producer, India faces a triple burden of malnutritionundernutrition, overnutrition, and micronutrient deficiencies—threatening its economic and demographic future. Ranked 105/127 in the 2024 Global Hunger Index, urgent reform is critical.

Key Nutrition and Food System Challenges in India

  • As per NFHS-5 Data (2019–21):
    • Undernourishment in India: 194 million Indians are undernourished.
    • Child Malnutrition: 35.5% of children under five are stunted, 32.1% are underweight, and 19.3% are wasted.
    • Rising Overnutrition: 24% of women and 22.9% of men are overweight or obese.
    • Hidden Hunger: 57% of women of reproductive age are anaemic, reflecting widespread micronutrient deficiency.
  • Global Cost of Food System Failures: Food system failures cost $12 trillion annually in health and environmental damage.
  • India’s Sustainability Challenge: For climate-vulnerable India, current food system trends are unsustainable.
  • Affordability Crisis: 55.6% of Indians cannot afford a healthy diet; cost rose from $2.86 to $3.36 PPP/day (2017–2022) — FAO.
  • Systemic and Climate Pressures: Structural flaws and climate change reduce crop yields and harm smallholder farmers, deepening nutritional vulnerability.
  • Consequences of Inaction: If unaddressed, malnutrition will undermine human capital, increase health-care costs, and reduce economic productivity.

Strategies for Transforming Food Systems

A multi-sectoral approach is needed to build sustainable, nutrition-sensitive food systems:

  • Broadening Definition of Malnutrition: Malnutrition now includes hunger, obesity, and diet-related non-communicable diseases (NCDs).
  • Nutrition-sensitive Agriculture: Promote biofortified, climate-resilient crops, enhance crop diversity, and improve storage systems.
  • Community-led Interventions: Models like Nutrition-Sensitive Community Planning (NSCP) address determinants like WASH, soil, water conservation, and healthcare access.
  • School Programmes: Initiatives like Nutri-Pathshala include biofortified grains in meals and support local farmers.
  • Social Safety Nets: Enhance PDS and mid-day meals with nutrient-rich, indigenous foods and embed behavioural change campaigns.
  • Private Sector Role: Focus on nutrition-first innovation, with better labelling, QR-code education, plant-based alternatives, and fortification.
  • Climate and Economic Resilience: Implement climate-smart agriculture, support rural jobs, and apply gender-sensitive policies.
  • Awareness Campaigns: Use tools like ‘MyPlate Blast Off’ and radio to spread nutritional literacy, especially in low-connectivity areas.
  • Opportunity for Transformation: Reforming food systems around nutrition, sustainability, and equity can drive progress toward the SDGs. To meet SDGs 2, 3, and 12 (‘Zero Hunger’, ‘Good Health and Well-Being’ and ‘Responsible Consumption and Production’):
    • Adopt place-based innovations, as shown in the Himalayas by TERI and Food and Land Use Coalition (FOLU).
    • Promote micronutrient-rich crops, decentralised processing, and local food networks.
  • Role of Health and Nutrition Communities: Nutritionists, public health experts, and policymakers must integrate nutrition into agriculture and economic planning. Models like NSCP and Nutri-Pathshala highlight the power of cross-sectoral collaboration.

Conclusion

A bold shift to nutrition-led, climate-resilient, and equity-driven food systems is vital. Governments must align policies with nutrition, businesses must adopt sustainability, and civil society must promote inclusive solutions. A nourished population is the foundation of a resilient, equitable society. The time to act is now.

Mains Practice

Q. “Malnutrition in India is no longer a problem of food scarcity, but a crisis of food systems.” Critically examine this statement in light of emerging trends of undernutrition, overnutrition, and hidden hunger. (15 Marks, 250 Words)

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UDAAN PRELIMS WALLAH
Comprehensive coverage with a concise format
Integration of PYQ within the booklet
Designed as per recent trends of Prelims questions
हिंदी में भी उपलब्ध

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