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Human-caused carbon dioxide emissions may put 53 million people in India at the risk of protein deficiency by 2050. This might happen due to a decline in the nutritional value of rice, wheat, and other staple crops, a study warned.
If carbon dioxide (CO2) levels continue to rise as projected, the populations of 18 countries may lose more than five per cent of their dietary protein by 2050, according to the findings by researchers at Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health in the US.
This is the first study to quantify this risk.
To estimate their current and future risk of protein deficiency, the researchers combined data from experiments in which crops were exposed to high concentrations of carbon dioxide with global dietary information from the United Nations and measures of income inequality and demographics.
The results suggested continuing challenges for Sub Saharan Africa, where millions already experience protein deficiency, and growing challenges for South Asian countries, including India, where rice and wheat supply a large portion of daily protein.
They also found that CO2-related reductions in iron content in staple food crops are likely to also exacerbate the already significant problem of iron deficiency worldwide.
Those most at risk include 354 million children under five and 1.06 billion women of childbearing age – predominantly in South Asia and North Africa – who live in countries already experiencing high rates of anaemia and who are expected to lose more than 3.8 per cent of dietary iron as a result of this CO2 effect.
The research, taken alongside a 2015 study co-authored by Myers, showing that elevated CO2 emissions are also likely to drive roughly 200 million people into zinc deficiency, quantify the significant nutritional toll expected to arise from human-caused CO2 emissions.
(With inputs from PTI)
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Published: 03 Aug 2017,06:06 PM IST