Thursday, May 29, 2008

Week of food crisis talks begins

Envoys from 26 Latin American and Caribbean countries meet on Friday to discuss the rising cost of food and draw up a united policy for the region.

The talks in Caracas, Venezuela, mark the beginning of a week of meetings on the issue, leading up to a three-day UN food crisis summit in Rome on Tuesday.

According to the World Bank, global food prices have risen by 83% over the past three years.

The lender has announced a package of food grants totalling $1.2bn (£608m).

An influential report on Thursday warned that higher food prices might be here to stay as demand from developing countries and production costs rose.

Prices would fall, but only gradually, the report by the UN's Food and Agriculture Organisation and the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) said.

Food grants

The week of talks begins in Caracas. The BBC's James Ingham in the Venezuelan capital says that like much of the rest of the developing world, Latin America's poor have not escaped from the increased food prices.

Tajiks receive UN food aid in the  Khotlan region, March 2008
Tajikistan is one of the countries identified by the UN as a priority

While some countries are working together to tackle the crisis, there has been no united response and the meeting will aim to correct that, he says.

At a recent summit held with European leaders, heads of state pledged to strengthen trade relations.

However, an alternative "people's summit" held by social movements said liberalisation and deregulation were the principal causes of poverty.

Some of the region's socialist countries share that view and are focusing on reducing their reliance on imports, creating an agricultural development fund to help achieve this.

In preparation for the UN-sponsored food crisis summit in Rome next week, the World Bank said there was "the need for a clear action plan".

As part of its package it is setting aside grants worth a total of $200m for "high-priority" countries most at risk from acute hunger.

The World Bank says 100 million people could be impoverished by the rising cost and scarcer availability of food.

Fuel protests

Thursday's joint report by the UN and OECD believes the current price spike is higher than previous records, partly due to bad weather ruining crops.

Striking fishermen at a meeting in Quimper, western France, on 23 May
Fishermen in France and other EU states are angry at their fuel costs

But factors such as rising biofuel demand and speculation will keep future costs high, it adds.

Fuel prices have also been rising dramatically and the European Union braced for fresh strikes by fishermen on Friday.

Trade unions say the cost of diesel oil has become prohibitively high and that many fishermen are being forced to give up a lifelong profession.

The EU's biggest producer of fish is Spain, where a demonstration will be staged in the capital Madrid.

Fishermen nationwide are being asked to take part in an indefinite strike.

The price of diesel oil has risen by more than 300% over the past five years while, according to the unions, the wholesale price of fish has remained static for 20 years.

The industrial action in Spain is expected to be mirrored by strikes in Portugal, Italy and Belgium.

In France, fishermen have been protesting for weeks - although some have now returned to work.

The European Commission has promised immediate help to restructure Europe's fishing industry but says subsidies to offset rising fuel costs would be illegal.


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Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Some programs are ending because of the spike in global food prices

Some programs are ending because of the spike in global food prices




KAMPONG SPEU, Cambodia - At dawn in a ramshackle elementary school in rural Cambodia, the children think of only one thing: their stomachs. They anxiously await the steaming buckets of free rice delivered to their desks.

But by the end of the month, they will no longer get free breakfast from the U.N. World Food Program. About 450,000 Cambodian students will become the latest victims of soaring global food prices.

Five local suppliers have defaulted on contracts to provide rice because they can get a higher price elsewhere, program officials say. Prices of rice have tripled on the global market since December.

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Sunday, May 11, 2008

Why have rice prices surged to record highs?

Asian rice prices have almost trebled this year and prices on the Chicago Board of Trade have risen more than 80 percent to hit successive record highs as export restrictions by leading suppliers fuel insecurity over food supplies.

With only 30 million tonnes traded annually, government supply curbs, such as those from New Delhi and Hanoi, have spooked importers, such as the Philippines and Bangladesh, at a time when global stocks have halved since hitting a record high in 2001.

Export curbs:

October 2007 - India, which was the world's second-largest rice exporter last year but is set to lag behind Thailand and the United States this year, bans exports of non-basmati rice to rein in prices and control inflation, but later in the month eased the ban on some superior varieties of the grain.

March 2008 - India bans exports of non-basmati rice again as inflation hits a 14-month high, alarming policymakers. March 2008 - Egypt bans rice exports from April 1 to October to hold down local prices. The country normally produces about 4.6 million tonnes a year of white rice, leaving a domestic surplus of about 1.4 million tonnes for export.

April 2008 - Vietnam, due to regain its position as the No. 3 exporter this year, extends a ban on rice sales until June to help stabilise domestic food prices as it tries to tame double-digit inflation. Prior to that, it had curtailed exports for March and April.

April 2008 - Brazil temporarily suspends rice exports to safeguard domestic supply and keep prices of the basic foodstuff stable. Brazil, which is not a major global rice supplier, exported 313,000 tonnes of rice last year. April 2008 - Indonesia, Southeast Asia's largest rice consumer, says it would curb medium-grade rice exports to combat inflation.

Under Indonesia's new rice export rules, state procurement agency Bulog is allowed to sell medium-grade rice overseas only when national stocks are above 3 million tonnes and domestic prices are below a government's target price. April 2008 - India slaps export taxes on basmati rice, on top of an existing ban on non-basmati rice exports.

Monday, April 14, 2008

Food Crisis & Biofuels

Food Crisis & Biofuels
Posted March 7th, 2008 by johttp://www.guardian.co.uk/science/2008/mar/07/scienceofclimatechange.foo...


Food crisis will take hold before climate change, warns chief scientist

· Pressures from population growth and affluence
· 'Profoundly stupid' to cut down forests for biofuels

* James Randerson, science correspondent
* The Guardian,
* Friday March 7 2008

Food security and the rapid rise in food prices make up the "elephant in the room" that politicians must face up to quickly, according to the government's new chief scientific adviser.

In his first major speech since taking over, Professor John Beddington said the global rush to grow biofuels was compounding the problem, and cutting down rainforest to produce biofuel crops was "profoundly stupid".

He told the Govnet Sustainable Development UK Conference in Westminster: "There is progress on climate change. But out there is another major problem. It is very hard to imagine how we can see a world growing enough crops to produce renewable energy and at the same time meet the enormous increase in the demand for food which is quite properly going to happen as we alleviate poverty."

He predicted that price rises in staples such as rice, maize and wheat would continue because of increased demand caused by population growth and increasing wealth in developing nations. He also said that climate change would lead to pressure on food supplies because of decreased rainfall in many areas and crop failures related to climate. "The agriculture industry needs to double its food production, using less water than today," he said. The food crisis would bite more quickly than climate change, he added.

But he reserved some of his most scathing comments for the biofuel industry, which he said had delivered a "major shock" to world food prices. "In terms of biofuels there has been, quite properly, a reaction against it," he said. "There are real problems with unsustainability."

Biofuel production is due to increase hugely in the next 15 years. The US plans to produce 30bn gallons of biofuels by 2022 - which will mean trebling maize production. The EU has a target for biofuels to make up 5.75% of transport fuels by 2010.

But Beddington said it was vital that biofuels were grown sustainably. "Some of the biofuels are hopeless. The idea that you cut down rainforest to actually grow biofuels seems profoundly stupid."

Before taking over the chief scientist post from Sir David King nine weeks ago, Beddington was professor of applied population biology at Imperial College London. He is an expert on the sustainable use of renewable resources.

Hilary Benn, the environment secretary, said at the conference that the world's population was expected to grow from 6.2bn today to 9.5bn in less than 50 years' time. "How are we going to feed everybody?" he asked.

Beddington said that in the short term, development and increasing wealth would add to the food crisis. "Once you move to [an income of] between £1 a day and £5 a day you get an increase in demand for meat and dairy products ... and that generates a demand for additional grain." Above £5 a day, people begin to demand processed and packaged food, which entails greater energy use. About 2.7bn people in the world live on less than £1 a day.

There would also be increases at the higher end of the wage scale, he said. At present there are 350m households on £8,000 a year. That is projected to increase to 2.1bn by 2030. "It's tremendous good news. You are seeing a genuine prediction from the World Bank that poverty alleviation is actually working."

But he cautioned that the increased purchasing power would lead to greater pressure on food supplies. Global grain stores are currently at the lowest levels ever, just 40 days from running out. "I am only nine weeks into the job, so don't yet have all the answers, but it is clear that science and research to increase the efficiency of agricultural production per unit of land is critical."

Beddington's in-tray

Animal diseases
Surveillance for bird flu, foot and mouth disease, bovine TB, bluetongue and others will need to be maintained.

Nuclear power
The chief scientist will have a key role in implementing the policy to plug the energy gap when existing power stations reach the end of their lives.

Severn barrage
The government is reviewing the feasibility of a tidal barrage in the Severn estuary which could provide 5% of the country's energy needs.

GM crops
Senior government sources hinted last year that they wanted to expand the planting of GM crops.

UK astronauts
The government has all but closed the door on the prospect of a UK astronaut corps in the near future. But there is still a strong lobby for it from some scientists as a way to enthuse the public about science.

Saturday, April 12, 2008

Food Crisi Flickr



  Uploaded on September 5, 2007
by andy_atsaka

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The crisis in Flickr




People pushing and yelling after hours of waiting in line for subsidized bread loafs. Bread crisis exploded in Egypt recently after prices of all food commodities crazily increased. Bread, remained the only thing to fill a hungry poor stomach for PT5. Today $1 = LE 5.5 while LE1 = PT 100 or 20 bread loafs.
Photo by Nora Younis taken on March 24, 2008.

Uploaded on March 26, 2008
by Nora Younis



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German minister calls for biofuel rethink over rising food prices

Washington - German Development Minister Heidemarie Wieczorek-Zeul said Saturday in Washington ahead of a World Bank meeting that the world needed to reconsider the use of biofuels amid skyrocketing food prices. "The targets for (fuel) blends must be put to the test," she said ahead of the spring meeting of the World Bank and International Monetary Fund (IMF) in the US capital. Increasing production of biofuels was 30 to 70 per cent responsible for the rapid rise in food prices, she said. Dearer food was "a danger for growth, combatting poverty, stability and peace in the world," she said. High prices for food had led to riots, looting and violence in many mainly poor countries. 
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