Opinion

Food security: Our moral and economic imperative

We must wake up to the reality: we are too dependent on external supply chains for the most fundamental human need - food.

Updated 1 year ago · Published on 10 Apr 2025 4:48PM

Food security: Our moral and economic imperative
Malaysia can and must become a net food supplier. - April 10, 2025

by Vinod Sekhar

THERE was a time, not long ago, when the term “food security” felt like a distant academic phrase - something for policy papers and international conferences.

But today, it should be on the lips of every leader, policymaker, and citizen who believes in a future where our nation stands strong, sovereign, and self-sufficient.

Malaysia is blessed. We are a land of natural abundance, rich biodiversity, and agricultural heritage.

But blessings without boldness can become burdens.

We must wake up to the reality: we are too dependent on external supply chains for the most fundamental human need - food.

And as the world contends with climate disruption, geopolitical uncertainty, and inflationary pressures, we cannot afford to continue down this unsustainable path.

Food is not just sustenance - it is sovereignty.

If we cannot feed our people, we have no business talking about progress.

What good are infrastructure projects, digital revolutions, and megacity dreams if the average Malaysian cannot afford rice, eggs, or vegetables?

We must bring food security to the centre of our national agenda - not as a seasonal theme, but as a permanent pillar of policy and purpose.

This requires two things: innovation and intent.

Technology has transformed every industry on earth, and agriculture must be no exception. We must move beyond traditional models and embrace the future of food.

Precision farming, vertical agriculture, climate-resilient crops, cellular meat production, AI-powered logistics - these are not luxuries or experiments. They are necessities.

They are the tools that will ensure our children never know hunger or dependence.

Malaysia can and must become a net food supplier. We have the land, the minds, and the drive. But we need to create an ecosystem that allows aggrotech to flourish.

That means incentivising local innovators, investing in food science R&D, building partnerships with global pioneers, and most importantly, removing the bureaucratic red tape that strangles progress before it begins.

The goal is not just to feed ourselves - but to lead.

Imagine a Malaysia that not only grows enough to meet its needs, but exports sustainable food solutions to the world.

A nation known not just for palm oil, but for cutting-edge food technologies and nutritional innovations.

A hub of halal biotech, of climate-smart farming, of green protein. That future is not a fantasy - it is within reach. But only if we act with courage and clarity.

At its core, food security is not just about economics. It is a moral obligation. No child should go to bed hungry because of policy failures or lack of vision. No parent should have to choose between nutritious food and other necessities.

We must put the rakyat first. Not in slogans, but in practice. We owe it to ourselves, and to the generations that will follow.

Let Malaysia be the nation that showed the world how innovation can feed humanity - and how compassion, when matched with competence, can build a better tomorrow. – April 19, 2025

Datuk Dr Vinod Sekhar is the publisher of the Vibes and Chairman of the Petra Group

Related News

Opinion / 2d

Modernity beyond the West? What Saudi Arabia is really testing

Malaysia / 4d

Malaysia records 17.5 million international tourist arrivals from January - May

Events / 5d

Former Interpol chief Ahmed Naser Al-Raisi appointed chairman of UAE AI firm Neurovia

Malaysia / 6d

Malaysia must aim to return to budget surpluses again

Malaysia / 1w

New Malaysia-Thailand border crossing: Businesses will not be affected, says tourism authority

Health / 1w

Malaysia among top ten medical tourism destinations, with much credit to Penang

Spotlight

Malaysia

PRN Negeri Sembilan: The battlegrounds, big names and three-cornered fights to watch

By Alfian Z.M. Tahir

People

Woman ends up with RM500 over food bill after date with ‘doctor’

Malaysia

Love scam: Twelve China nationals arrested in Ipoh over suspected online call centres

Malaysia

ASLI to field female candidate in Jeram Padang DUN

Community

‘Furry officer’ laid to rest as Kuching traffic police mourn beloved stray cat (video)

By Alfian Z.M. Tahir

Malaysia

Father mauled by crocodile as son watches in horror in Sabah river (UPDATED)

Malaysia

Johor shuts down Forest City Network School premises

Malaysia

Singapore: Chief Justice Sundaresh Menon to retire in Feb 2027, succeeded by Justice Sushil Nair

You may be interested

Opinion

Malaysia’s nuclear power initiative rests on safety blueprint before any reactor decision