FREAK weather in some of the world`s vital food-producing regions is
ravaging crops and threatening another global food crisis like the price
shocks that unleashed social and political unrest in 2008 and 2010,
food experts are warning.
As the US suffers the worst drought in
more than 50 years, analysts say rising food prices could hit the
world`s poorest countries, leading to shortages and social upheaval.
The
situation has led to comparisons to 2008, when high food prices sparked
a wave of riots in 30 countries across the world from Haiti to
Bangladesh. Researchers say rising food prices also helped trigger the
Arab spring in 2011.
Nick Higgins, commodity analyst at Rabobank,
said: `Food riots are a real risk at this point. Wheat prices aren`t up
at the level they got to in 2008 but they are still very high and that
will have an effect on those who are least able to pay higher prices for
food.
In the US`s agricultural heartland, searing heat and
sparse rainfall have left farm-ers helpless as their maize and soya bean
crops wither in dry fields. Earlier this month, the US department of
agriculture (USDA) slashed forecasts for the maize crop by 12 per cent.
US agriculture secretary Tom Vilsack said: `If I had a rain prayer or a
rain dance I could do, I would do it.
As it is, weather forecasts
suggest the drought will continue and experts fear the USDA may have to
cut its targets again next month. Dan Basse, president of research firm
AgResources in Chicago, said: `We`ve been traipsing through the fields
of southern Illinois and it is worse than the government says.
The
US is crucial to global food markets as the world`s largest exporter of
maize, soya beans and wheat. Maize prices have already shot up 40 per
cent since June to hit all-time highs, soya bean prices have jumped 30
per cent to record levels, and wheat has surged 50 per cent.
`What
happens to the US supply has an immense impact around the world, said
Robert Thompson, a food security expert at the ChicagoCouncil on Global
Affairs. `If the price of corn rises high enough, it also pulls up the
price of wheat. I think we are in for a very serious situation
worldwide.
Thompson also warned that countries could make matters
worse by stockpiling. That was the pattern during the 2008 food crisis,
when Russia, Ukraine, India and Argentina all cut off grain exports.
Unseasonal weather, thought to be caused by climate change, is affecting farmers across the world.
South America has been hit by a drought, which could damage the soya bean harvest, while UK wheat has been damaged by the rain.
Flash flooding in Russia could also affect the wheat harvest, which could see the country limit exports.
Shortages
have been compounded by huge orders for maize and soya beans to make
biofuels in order to meet quotas in the US and Europe.
Consumers will soon feel the effects of these spikes.
Wheat is the main ingredient for bread and other staples.
Maize
and soya beans are used to feed livestock, sohigher prices will
ultimately cause the price of meat to rise. In the short term, however,
they will have the reverse effect as farmers kill cattle at lighter
weights to avoid having to feed them.
Rising food prices have a disproportionate effect on the poorest people in the world.
According
to Ruth Kelly, Oxfam`s food policy adviser, people in the West spend
about 15 per cent of their income on food, but that rises to around 75
per cent in developing countries.
`People are already in debt
from previous spikes and suffering the consequences, Kelly said. `When
the first food crisis hit, people were forced to sell off their assets,
their cattle and jewellery, and take on debt to make ends meet. After
multiple crises, people run out of savings and that can be quite
disastrous.
Countries that are net importers of maize will be hit
the hardest, including South Korea, Japan, Peru, Guatemala, El Salvador
and Colombia, while much of east Africa will also be badly affected.
The Guardian, London
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