Food Chain Reaction

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Event.png Food Chain Reaction(Civil_unrest/Preparation,  Climate change/Preparation,  planning exercise) Rdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
Food Chain Reaction.jpg
DateNovember 2015
LocationWashington D.C.
PlannersCenter for American Progress, World Wildlife Fund, Cargill, Mars Incorporated, CNA
ParticipantsCassia M. Carvalho, Paula Caballero, Geraldo Bueno Martha, Dino P. Djalal, Luiz Augusto de Castro Neves, Aitor Ezcurra, Francisco G. Neto, Marcos Fava Neves, Alexandre Meira da Rosa, Joel Velasco, Jin Zhonghao, Sun Ru, Tang Xinhua, Wang Jinxia, Wang Zhanlu, Zhang Junhua, Cary Fowler, Keokam Kraisoraphong, Dan Mullins, Fulai Sheng, Craig Steffensen, Juergen Voegele, Alan Barkema, Kris Carlson, Dave Crean, Guy Hogge, Nigel Mamalis, Zheng Yan, Joel Vanderkooi, Debisi Araba, Martin Bwalya, Robin Buruchara, Adam Gerstenmier, George Osure, Ishmael Sunga, Mphumuzi Sukati, Viola von Cramon, Alexander Carius, Christine Chemnitz, Gérard Fuchs, Tim Benton, Charles Godfray, Lars Hoelgaard, Joe Stone, Reuben Brigety, Bruce Cameron, Dan Glickman, Sherri Goodman, Carter Ham, Andrew Light, Kathleen Merrigan, Daniel Pearso, Bob Perciasepe, Tiffani Williams, Alan Bjerga, Ondřej Liška, Tom Daschle, Joao Pacheco, John Podesta, Yee San Su, Mukesh Aghi, Yoginder K. Alagh, Ridhika Batra, Tim Bodin, Nutan Kaushik, Corey Cherr, Partha Mukhopadhyay, Molly Jahn, Waheguru Pal Singh Sidhu, Christine Parthemore, Marc Sadler, Tom Slayton, Ashley Zung
Websitehttp://web.archive.org/web/20160630123421/http://foodchainreaction.org/index.php/game
Interests • food security
• food shortages
• social control
DescriptionSet in the 2020 to 2030 period, the exercise focused on problems in the food supply due to population growth and severe weather, triggering social unrest. Held November 2015
Food Chain Reaction: A Global Food Security Game was a tabletop planning exercise with 65 thought leaders and policy makers held in November 2015 in Washington D.C.[1][2][3]

“The 'New Normal' is volatility"[4]

The players

The players were important business leaders, academics, officers and bureaucrats from an interlocking directorate in the end representing a number of intertwined deep state/corporate interests.

Players came from deep state entities such as the Albright Stonebridge Group; corporate media Thomson Reuters, Bloomberg News; Carter Ham the Former Commander of U.S. Africa Command; think tanks such as the Cato Institute, The Aspen Institute and several European think tanks and universities. Players from places such as the Brazil-U.S. Business Council, the U.S.-India Business Council, the World Bank and the Asian Development Bank were also participating[5].

The food trading cartels were present with Louis Dreyfus Commodities and Cargill. The Bill Gates network was represented through the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa and presumably by other entities.

Exercise

The simulation focused on the 2020 to 2030 period during a global food crisis. Teams of participants represented governments, institutions, and businesses which had to respond to a global food crisis caused by population growth, rapid urbanization, extreme weather (like floods), and political crises.[6][7][8] Trade, climate, and security were found to be big issues in global food security and the exercise ended with the implementation of a global carbon tax.[9]

As the game advanced, teams confronted a “new normal” characterized to a large degree by volatility and uncertainty, with food prices soaring 300-400%.[10]

As the game progressed, "a surprising convergence of ideas allowed teams to agree on common goals and engage in complementary activities." Recognizing their influence over global conditions, players took action—and "in the process, shaped the world", where solutions were "more innovative collaboration among governments, business, civil society and multilateral institutions.

They envisaged establishing a new coordinating entity under the United Nations/G20 to create the capacity to respond.[10] One player suggested the establishment of the Organization for Response to Disaster and Emergency Relief (ORDER). ORDER was characterized as a nonmilitary, humanitarian disaster relief organization that would serve as a coordinating mechanism to address climate change–induced disasters. In the end conclusions, the players broadly agreed on creating a new Strategic Headquarters under the United Nations to better coordinate member states’ use of military and nonmilitary assets, and to pre-position materials in areas of anticipated need.

They also agreed to strengthen existing institutions and authorities under the United Nations (e.g., the World Food Programme, the World Health Organization, the Food and Agriculture Organization, the Department of Peacekeeping Operations, the Office of the High Commissioner for Refugees, and the International Fund for Agricultural Development) and developing better coordination among them. [10]


Weblinks

A news broadcast set up for dramatization, named "The World in 2020"

References