In an "unforeseen and unprecedented" shift, the world food supply is dwindling rapidly and food prices are soaring to historic levels, the top food and agriculture official of the United Nations warned Monday. The changes created "a very serious risk that fewer people will be able to get food," particularly in the developing world, said Jacques Diouf, head of the UN Food and Agriculture Organization. The agency's food price index rose by more than 40 percent this year, compared with 9 percent the year before - a rate that was already unacceptable, he said. New figures show that the total cost of foodstuffs imported by the neediest countries rose 25 percent, to $107 million, in the last year. At the same time, reserves of cereals are severely depleted, FAO records show. World wheat stores declined 11 percent this year, to the lowest level since 1980. That corresponds to 12 weeks of the world's total consumption - much less than the average of 18 weeks consumption in storage during the period 2000-2005. There are only 8 weeks of corn left, down from 11 weeks in the earlier period. Prices of wheat and oilseeds are at record highs, Diouf said Monday. Wheat prices have risen by $130 per ton, or 52 percent, since a year ago. U.S. wheat futures broke $10 a bushel for the first time Monday, the agricultural equivalent of $100 a barrel oil. (Page 16) Diouf blamed a confluence of recent supply and demand factors for the crisis, and he predicted that those factors were here to stay. On the supply side, these include the early effects of global warming, which has decreased crop yields in some crucial places, and a shift away from farming for human consumption toward crops for biofuels and cattle feed. Demand for grain is increasing with the world population, and more is diverted to feed cattle as the population of upwardly mobile meat-eaters grows. "We're concerned that we are facing the perfect storm for the world's hungry," said Josette Sheeran, executive director of the World Food Program, in a telephone interview. She said that her agency's food procurement costs had gone up 50 percent in the past 5 years and that some poor people are being "priced out of the food market." To make matters worse, high oil prices have doubled shipping costs in the past year, putting enormous stress on poor nations that need to import food as well as the humanitarian agencies that provide it. "You can debate why this is all happening, but what's most important to us is that it's a long-term trend, reversing decades of decreasing food prices," Sheeran said. Climate specialists say that the vulnerability will only increase as further effects of climate change are felt. "If there's a significant change in climate in one of our high production areas, if there is a disease that effects a major crop, we are in a very risky situation," said Mark Howden of the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization in Canberra. Already "unusual weather events," linked to climate change - such as droughts, floods and storms - have decreased production in important exporting countries like Australia and Ukraine, Diouf said. In Southern Australia, a significant reduction in rainfall in the past few years led some farmers to sell their land and move to Tasmania, where water is more reliable, said Howden, one of the authors of a recent series of papers in the Procedings of the National Academy of Sciences on climate change and the world food supply. "In the U.S., Australia, and Europe, there's a very substantial capacity to adapt to the effects on food - with money, technology, research and development," Howden said. "In the developing world, there isn't." Sheeran said, that on a recent trip to Mali, she was told that food stocks were at an all time low. The World Food Program feeds millions of children in schools and people with HIV/AIDS. Poor nutrition in these groups increased the risk serious disease and death. Diouf suggested that all countries and international agencies would have to "revisit" agricultural and aid policies they had adopted "in a different economic environment." For example, with food and oil prices approaching record, it may not make sense to send food aid to poorer countries, but instead to focus on helping farmers grow food locally. FAO plans to start a new initiative that will offer farmers in poor countries vouchers that can be redeemed for seeds and fertilizer, and will try to help them adapt to climate change. The recent scientific papers concluded that farmers could adjust to 1 degree Celsius (1.8 degrees Fahrenheit) to 3 degrees Celsius (5.4 degrees) of warming by switching to more resilient species, changing planting times, or storing water for irrigation, for example. But that after that, "all bets are off," said Francesco Tubiello, of Columbia University Earth Institute. "Many people assume that we will never have a problem with food production on a global scale, but there is a strong potential for negative surprises." In Europe, officials said they were already adjusting policies to the reality of higher prices. The European Union recently suspended a "set-aside" of land for next year - a longstanding program that essentially paid farmers to leave 10 percent of their land untilled as a way to increase farm prices and reduce surpluses. Also, starting in January, import tariffs on all cereal will be eliminated for six months, to make it easier for European countries to buy grain from elsewhere. But that may make it even harder for poor countries to obtain the grain they need. In an effort to promote free markets, the European Union has been in the process of reducing farm subsidies and this has accelerated the process. "It's much easier to do with the new economics," said Michael Mann a spokesman for the EU agriculture commission. "We saw this coming to a certain extent, but we are surprised at how quickly it is happening." But he noted that farm prices the last few decades have been lower than at any time in history, so the change seems extremely dramatic. Diouf noted that there had been "tension and political unrest related to food markets" in a number of poor countries this year, including Morocco, Senegal and Mauritania. "We need to play a catalytic role to quickly boost crop production in the most affected countries," he said. Part of the current problem is an outgrowth of prosperity. More people in the world now eat meat, diverting grain from humans to livestock. A more complicated issue is the use of crops to make biofuels, which are often heavily subsidized. A major factor in rising corn prices globally is that many farmers in the United States are now selling their corn to make subsidized ethanol. Mann said the European Union had intentionally set low targets for biofuel use - 10 per cent by 2020 - to limit food price rises and that it plans to import some biofuel. "We don't want all our farmers switching from food to biofuel," he said.
To all who care: This is
a petition that has been
languishing too long in
the glut. Follow the link
to sign the petition for
preserving the elephant
and their proper
habitat...http://www.thep
etitionsite.com/takeactio
n/175448183
To my
friends,
Please take a few moments
to look this over. I know
we are exposed to a glut
of conservation messages
but take a moment to
make a difference here.
The Japanese whaling
industry has decided that
if the U.S imposes
quotas...
To all who treasure
community vs.
civilization:
The concept of
"intentional
community"is
becoming increasingly
attractive to us...some
who came from the land
and those who hate what
the so-called civilized
have done to the
family...
Thank you, Mr.
President With all
the nastiness from the
media and the
rightwingers, I thought
you might be interested
in what our President has
truly
accomplished.Luvya,Barbar
a
The author is Professor
Robert Watson of Lynn
Universit...
Gunter Filho November
21 at 9:56am Reply Dear
Friend, My wife Roberta
and I are founding a
revolutionary concept of
a VEGAN RESTAURANT as a
way of self-sustained
activism. Now we need all
support we can get,
including yours, to make
this happen. ...
The is a recipe my gramma
Marlatt would make when I
was child. It truly
is a different sauce, but
very good.2 large cans of
tomato juice2 small cans
tomato sauce2 small cans
tomato paste2 tsp basil4
tbsp parsley flakes4 tsp
salt ( I usually leav...
How Odin Became Santa
Claus: Symbolism and
Pagan Origins of a
Gift-Giving Saint
The story begins in the
northern regions of
Europe where the supreme
god Odin, also known as
Wodan among the German
tribes, reigned. (He
still lives among us in
Wednesday...
Have you ever wondered
what the real essence of
the saying "A Friend in
Need is a Friend Indeed"
is? People talk about the
true value of friendship
actually without knowing
what it stands for. True
friendship is the one, in
which the individuals do
no...
Blog: unusual chickens - 18 pictures by Mick C.
(0 comments
|
discussions
)
—
unusual chickens
bearded splash pullet
Silkie
This egg-straordinary
collection of fowl was
captured by photographer
Stephen Green-Armytage
and are a far cry from
the ones usually found on
British farms or in your
local supermarket.
... more
Blog: . . . wrath & i ain't talking fermented fruit of the vine by Jack S.
(0 comments
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discussions
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— 091125 05:00I do not know
Ignatius well but was
trained in his 19th
annotation; but we, you
& i have, so very
little time to play name
games especially with
names and definitions of
God.Who is for me and for
the Radical of Islam; the
“All&rd... more
Blog: Given by Mom L.
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discussions
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—
سَل
75;ماً
أَت
18;رُك&
#1615;
لَك
15;مْ.
سَل
75;َمِ&
#1610;
أُع
18;طِ... more
Blog: A Manifesto by Reverend Spong: the gay debate is over! by Laura R.
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discussions
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—
I am in traning to be a
minister and I find this
Manifesto by Reverend
Spong Absolutely True.
This is Beautiful!
I had to share:
A Manifesto! The Time Has
Come!
I have made a decision. I
will no longer debate
the... more
Blog: half/bro got all the cookies & i adore him more so . . . now?! by Jack S.
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0 discussions
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— 091125 02:01I have a
half/brother who got all
the estate and I now love
him more for that . . .
guesstimate 1m who cares
i got .5m split equally
between sister and eye or
me or I or i. I was
robbed blind by Wall
Street, specifically
Smith Barney domin... more
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