Given the critical and unprecedented moment that Brazil is going through in its most serious, reckless and unprecedented political, social and economic crisis, it may seem, at first sight, a worse situation than the current one. But, yes, it could be much worse if it were not for the prevalence in this period, of good results from the only segment of the economy that keeps the pillars of support and maintenance of national wealth resistant: Agribusiness.
Studies by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) project a growth of the world population that reaches 9 billion people in the next four decades. This growth will be directly proportional to the demand for food, which is expected to rise from the current 2.15 billion to 3.5 billion tons. In this way, it will naturally be imposed on the nations of the world their particular contribution to increase agricultural production in a sustainable manner and thus achieve the necessary 70% increase by then.