UN: Milk, dairy products could help Asia against new dietary challenges

December 7, 2016

A United Nations (UN) Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) report that was recently released says that milk and other dairy products may have the potential to aid Asia in its fight against new dietary challenges, including obesity, and vitamin and mineral deficiencies.

Kundhavi Kadiresan, FAO’s assistant director general, calls the report an “eye-opener and a wake-up call”. She said that the region still has nearly half-a-billion hungry people. But “increased consumption of milk and dairy holds out excellent promise to improve nutrition,” she said.

Asia has made great progress in putting famine and hunger under control with greater political stability and mechanized farming. Undernourishment rates in the region went down by almost 50% in the past 25 years, from 24.3% to 12.3%, satisfying one of the UN’s Millennium Development Goals.

As people move from the countryside to the big city by the millions, diets are changing from more traditional ones dominated by rice to a more varied, Westernized version incorporating more fruits, vegetables, and meats: Calories from starches declined by 50 calories per person a day while calories from fruits, vegetables, and meat increased by over 300 calories per person a day.

But people in Asia, like citizens in the West, are exercising less and consuming more heavily processed foods filled with sugar and fat. This means many still aren’t getting enough nutrients like zinc, iron, or vitamin A; and obesity levels are skyrocketing, rising more than 4% a year.

On top of still-persistent undernourishment in South Asian countries such as Afghanistan, Nepal, and Bangladesh, only seven out of 19 developing Asian countries are now on track to reach the UN FAO’s bold goal of “zero hunger”.

However, Asians are drinking more milk, which was traditionally absent from many Asian kitchens. Production has almost tripled, from about 110 million tons in 1990 to nearly 300 million tons in 2013 — accounting for more than 80% of the world’s increase in milk supplies during that time.

Nutritious and cheap, the dairy boom has encouraged governments to bring cartons to classrooms. Studies have found Thailand’s National Milk Program, which brings milk to schools, causes students to grow taller and take in more protein and calcium. Similar programs were rolled out from India to China to the Philippines.

The main beneficiaries have been small farmers, who produce nearly 80% of the milk in Asia, because of low costs and a more equal distribution of cows and goats — in contrast to farmland, which can be dominated by big landowners. In Thailand, the top 1% owns nearly a quarter of Thai land, and the top 10% nearly two thirds.

The result is that the dairy industry is a potential “engine of poverty-alleviating growth”, as the report puts it. “Policy-makers need to ensure that the region’s small-holder dairy farmers – the largest segment of dairy producers – can have fair access to, and compete in, the marketplace,” Kadiresan said.

More dairy cattle also means more manure, a potential threat to water supplies — meaning good policy is needed in the decades ahead, says FAO officials.”We will, collectively, need to put our money where our mouths are to ensure we can meet these twin challenges,” Kadiresan said.

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