Sustainable and Scalable Food Solutions for Feeding the Future: A Review of Food Systems Innovation, Environmental Footprints, and Global Nutrition
1. Min-Jae Kim, Seoul National University – College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, Student, Korea South
2. Muhammad Owais, Seoul National University – College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, Professor, Korea South
The global food system is under unprecedented pressure due to rapid population growth, climate change, environmental degradation, and persistent nutrition insecurity. Ensuring that future food systems are both sustainable and scalable has become a central challenge for food science, agriculture, and policy communities. This review synthesizes contemporary research on sustainable and scalable food solutions, focusing on innovations across the farm-to-table continuum, environmental footprint reduction, food system resilience, and nutrition outcomes. The paper integrates insights on food systems innovation, climate-smart agriculture, food loss and waste reduction, and equity-oriented approaches to sustainability. By critically examining recent scholarly contributions, this review highlights pathways through which food systems can be transformed to meet global demand while safeguarding planetary boundaries and human health. The analysis aims to provide a comprehensive conceptual framework to guide researchers, practitioners, and policymakers toward resilient, inclusive, and scalable food system transformations.
Sustainable food systems Scalable food solutions Food loss and waste reduction Climate-resilient agriculture Agro-food system resilience
Sustainable and scalable food solutions are essential for addressing the interconnected challenges of population growth, environmental degradation, climate change, and global nutrition insecurity. This review highlights that meaningful transformation of food systems requires integrated approaches that simultaneously enhance productivity, reduce environmental impacts, improve nutrition outcomes, and promote social equity.
Reducing food loss and waste, strengthening climate resilience, and embedding equity within governance and innovation processes emerge as particularly powerful strategies for achieving sustainability at scale. These approaches improve system efficiency, enhance adaptive capacity, and ensure that food system benefits are shared inclusively across societies.
Looking ahead, the transition toward sustainable and scalable food systems will depend on coordinated action among researchers, policymakers, industry stakeholders, and communities. Continued investment in evidence-based innovation, inclusive governance, and long-term monitoring will be critical to ensuring that future food systems can meet human needs while remaining resilient, equitable, and within planetary boundaries.
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The author handled all aspects of the study, including its design, data collection, analysis, and manuscript preparation.
No specific financial support from public, commercial, or non-profit funding agencies was received for this research.
Not applicable.
There are no conflicts of interest to report from any of the authors.
I am grateful for the expertise and help provided by all who contributed to this study and manuscript, and for the comments from anonymous reviewers.
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