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Copyright Hank Roark, 2013, All Rights Reserved MIT SDM Systems Thinking Webinar Series Applying Systems Thinking to World Hunger: Seeking Solutions in Agriculture, Food Production, and Sustainability By Hank Roark, SDM ‘10
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Apply Systems Thinking to World Hunger

Apr 21, 2017

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Page 1: Apply Systems Thinking to World Hunger

Copyright Hank Roark, 2013, All Rights Reserved

MIT SDM Systems Thinking Webinar Series

Applying Systems Thinking to World Hunger: Seeking Solutions in Agriculture, Food Production, and Sustainability By Hank Roark, SDM ‘10

Page 2: Apply Systems Thinking to World Hunger

Copyright Hank Roark, 2013, All Rights Reserved

Disclaimer

These views are my own and do not represent the views of any other individual or organization.

Page 3: Apply Systems Thinking to World Hunger

Copyright Hank Roark, 2013, All Rights Reserved

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Page 4: Apply Systems Thinking to World Hunger

Copyright Hank Roark, 2013, All Rights Reserved

National Academy of Engineering Grand Challenges related to agriculture

4

Manage the nitrogen cycle

Provide access to clean water

Develop carbon sequestration methods

Page 5: Apply Systems Thinking to World Hunger

Copyright Hank Roark, 2013, All Rights Reserved

The agriculture engineering systems are connected to nearly every other engineering system type

In world where systems are becoming increasing connected, the interactions with the agricultural system will become more numerous and boundaries less well defined. In this world, for example, agricultural becomes more reliant on communication, is a major contributor to energy, is driven by preventative health care, and is shipped globally and locally.

de Weck, O., Roos, D., & Magee, C. L. (2011). Engineering Systems : Meeting Human Needs in a Complex Technological World. MIT Press.

Transportation Systems

Energy Systems Industrial

Production Systems

Educational Systems

Financial Systems

Water Management

Systems

Agricultural Systems

Communication Systems

Health Care System

NATURE

HUMANITY

Agr

T i

de Weck et al

TransportationSystems

CommunicationSystems

n

onn

System

municati

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Health CareSystem

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ms Syy

alth C

ystem

AA

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EnergSystem

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ystem

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gyms Industrial

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EducatioSystem

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ManagementSystems

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Additional interactions with agricultural systems

Page 6: Apply Systems Thinking to World Hunger

Copyright Hank Roark, 2013, All Rights Reserved

Presentation Overview

1.  Trends 2.  History and current situation 3.  Future systems 4.  Value from systems thinking

Strong focus on crop production Not covered: fisheries, forests, consumer availability, agri-biotechnolgy

Page 7: Apply Systems Thinking to World Hunger

Copyright Hank Roark, 2013, All Rights Reserved

Trends

•  Population growth and calories per capita •  Land available for crops •  Water usage •  Climate impacts

Page 8: Apply Systems Thinking to World Hunger

Copyright Hank Roark, 2013, All Rights Reserved

Population and wealth increases means at least 60% increase in crop production needed by 2050

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Alexandratos and Bruinsma 2012

Population 6.6B (2007) � 9.1B (2050)

Calories / Person / Day 2772 (2007) � 3070 (2050)

Cereals 2 billion tonnes (2007)

� 3 billon tonnes (2050)

Meat production 260 million tonnes (2007)

� 455 million tonnes (2050)

These are the most conservative estimates; some report needing to increase production by up to 110% over today.

Page 9: Apply Systems Thinking to World Hunger

Copyright Hank Roark, 2013, All Rights Reserved

Arable land will increase by 10% by 2050

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Alexandratos and Bruinsma 2012

Page 10: Apply Systems Thinking to World Hunger

Copyright Hank Roark, 2013, All Rights Reserved

Arable land per capita will decrease by 10% by 2050

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Alexandratos and Bruinsma 2012

Page 11: Apply Systems Thinking to World Hunger

Copyright Hank Roark, 2013, All Rights Reserved

Agriculture will increasingly put pressure on fresh water resources

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Alexandratos and Bruinsma 2012

Page 12: Apply Systems Thinking to World Hunger

Copyright Hank Roark, 2013, All Rights Reserved

Temperature and rainfall variability increase will likely increase yield variability

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Team, National Assessment Synthesis. Climate Change impacts on the United States: The Potential Consequences of Climate Variability and Change. Cambridge, UK and New York, NY, 2001.

Maize

Page 13: Apply Systems Thinking to World Hunger

Copyright Hank Roark, 2013, All Rights Reserved

History and Current Situation

•  Historical Technology Impacts •  Yield gaps •  Post harvest loss

Page 14: Apply Systems Thinking to World Hunger

Copyright Hank Roark, 2013, All Rights Reserved

Adoption of technology leads has previously improved yields

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http://www.agry.purdue.edu/ext/corn/news/timeless/YieldTrends.html

Hybrid corn

Improve genetics Nitrogen fertilizer Pesticides Mechanization

Transgenic hybrids?

Page 15: Apply Systems Thinking to World Hunger

Copyright Hank Roark, 2013, All Rights Reserved

Current yield trends are insufficient to double production by 2050

Ray DK, Mueller ND, West PC, Foley JA (2013)

Solid line – current trend line Dashed – needed to double global crop production by 2050

Page 16: Apply Systems Thinking to World Hunger

Copyright Hank Roark, 2013, All Rights Reserved

Global Yield Gaps Exist Across the Globe

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Page 17: Apply Systems Thinking to World Hunger

Copyright Hank Roark, 2013, All Rights Reserved

Precision agriculture technology helps us understand variability exists at all geospatial extents

<80 80-120 120-160 160- 200 200-240 >240

Fields Rows Individual Plants

Variability means loss yield

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Hendrickson

Page 18: Apply Systems Thinking to World Hunger

Copyright Hank Roark, 2013, All Rights Reserved

Another approach to delivering food and protecting water is to improve the proportion of produced calories which make it to the consumer

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Lundqvist, J., De Fraiture, C., & Molden, D. (2008). Saving Water : From Field to Fork Curbing Losses and Wastage in the Food Chain. Policy.

Global summary of post harvest losses

Page 19: Apply Systems Thinking to World Hunger

Copyright Hank Roark, 2013, All Rights Reserved

Future systems examples

•  Sustainable intensification •  Improved water utilization •  Data intensive and precision agriculture

Page 20: Apply Systems Thinking to World Hunger

Copyright Hank Roark, 2013, All Rights Reserved

Sustainable intensification through integrated crop-pest management is one path to yield improvement

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The Royal Society. (2009). Reaping the benefits : Science and the sustainable intensification of global agriculture. Design (p. 86).

Page 21: Apply Systems Thinking to World Hunger

Copyright Hank Roark, 2013, All Rights Reserved

Adoption of technologies can improve crop production water use efficiency

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http://www.engineeringchallenges.org/cms/8996/9142.aspx https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/1/17/PivotIrrigationOnCotton.jpg http://serc.carleton.edu/eslabs/drought/8d.html

Page 22: Apply Systems Thinking to World Hunger

Copyright Hank Roark, 2013, All Rights Reserved

Increasingly data and decisions on data will be needed for ecologically improved production

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Page 23: Apply Systems Thinking to World Hunger

Copyright Hank Roark, 2013, All Rights Reserved

Examples of applying systems thinking to agricultural production

•  Sugar cane, India •  Biofuels, United States •  Cotton

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Page 24: Apply Systems Thinking to World Hunger

Copyright Hank Roark, 2013, All Rights Reserved

Value network analysis provides an improved understanding of sugar cane production system

Sugar cane value starts to degrade as soon as it is harvested Sugar cane mills have limited production capacity Coordination is required among multiple harvest operations and multiple mills in a region

Joshi and Jayant (2012)

Page 25: Apply Systems Thinking to World Hunger

Copyright Hank Roark, 2013, All Rights Reserved

Value network, manual harvesting

Diesel & maintenance

Driver + cleaner

Can go upto INR 700

Money flow Value flow

Farmer

Labour contractor

1MT Sugarcane

Man

agin

g th

e se

rvic

e INR

227

=

INR

192

+ 18

% c

omm

issi

on

~ INR 1900

Transport contractor

Harvesting Labourers

INR

192

Cut

ting

&

load

ing:

1M

T ca

ne

transport: 1MT cane

transport: Field to field

Food, drinks, fodder

Tips ~ INR 25 (~ INR1000/acre)

Society 100 kg Sugar

INR 2500

Mill

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Page 26: Apply Systems Thinking to World Hunger

Copyright Hank Roark, 2013, All Rights Reserved

Diesel & maintenance

Driver + cleaner Maintenance

Interest

Depreciation

~ INR 220

~ INR 200

~ INR 18

Mill Farmer 1MT Sugarcane

~ INR 1900

Transport contractor

transport: 1MT cane

Society 100 kg Sugar

INR 2500

Harvester /infielder drivers

diesel

Support labourers

~ I

NR

10.

5

serv

ice

~ I

NR

125

~ I

NR

23

Edg

e cu

tting

, co

llect

ing

bille

ts

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Value network, mechanized harvesting

Page 27: Apply Systems Thinking to World Hunger

Copyright Hank Roark, 2013, All Rights Reserved

Tradespace exploration gives insights into how biofuel industry structure might benefit from technology

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Pareto Front

Bernstrom, Johnson, Roark, Schlichtmann (2010)

Page 28: Apply Systems Thinking to World Hunger

Copyright Hank Roark, 2013, All Rights Reserved

Ethanol

Gen1

Gen2

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Page 29: Apply Systems Thinking to World Hunger

Copyright Hank Roark, 2013, All Rights Reserved

Ethanol Dedicated Pipeline

Gen 2

Gen1

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Page 30: Apply Systems Thinking to World Hunger

Copyright Hank Roark, 2013, All Rights Reserved

Butanol

Gen1

Gen2

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Page 31: Apply Systems Thinking to World Hunger

Copyright Hank Roark, 2013, All Rights Reserved

Butanol Using Existing Pipelines

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Gen 2

Gen1

Page 32: Apply Systems Thinking to World Hunger

Copyright Hank Roark, 2013, All Rights Reserved

Cotton harvesting improvements came from application of lean thinking

Optimizing the cotton harvest required a new form of cotton harvester� �a new interface, the cotton module� �new machines at the gin to process the module. Module traceability is provided via RFID tag in module wrap and wireless information from the harvester.

http://www.stoverequipment.com/docs/2009%20Unwrapper%20Ad.pdf

Page 33: Apply Systems Thinking to World Hunger

Copyright Hank Roark, 2013, All Rights Reserved

Summary

Efficient agriculture production is needed to feed the growing global population Technology and its adoption by society has historically led to increased agricultural productivity Agriculture is a set of socio-technical systems that can benefit from systems thinking tools and processes

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Page 34: Apply Systems Thinking to World Hunger

Copyright Hank Roark, 2013, All Rights Reserved

Thank you

Hank Roark [email protected] http://www.linkedin.com/in/hankroark

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