"Scientists map the genetic makeup of the platypus"
"Global Food Crisis: Nations, farmers need our help"
The 21st century has provided widely contrasting headlines celebrating advances in science, whilst at the same time offering stark warnings about where it may lead us.
Science and globalization have given us comfort, convenience and interconnection.
We can go to sleep in Delhi and wake up in Frankfurt.
Work from a cafe in Paris for a company in Dubai.
Invest in China from an office in São Paulo.
All very fine if you are among the lucky few who have the money to be connected. In other words, one of the richest 10% of adults who account for 85% of global household wealth
(1).
So, at the tail-end of this century's first decade, we again face an old and common threat to the lives and livelihoods of millions people around the world.
Hunger is back in the spotlight.
Like all comebacks, this time it's slightly different.
Our global interconnectedness means food security and its economical consequences have quickly become a critical issue for all of us, to varied degrees.
Recently, UN Secretary General, Ban Ki-moon, warned that the growing global food crisis has already reached emergency proportions.