March 7, 2008

 

High grain prices an urgent issue for aid agencies

 

 

Food and oil prices, which have been rising since last year and may continue for the next several years, the head of the world's largest humanitarian agency said Thursday ( March 6).

 

Josette Sheeran, executive director of the Rome-based World Food Programme, said a 40-percent rise in the cost of fuel and commodities such as grain since mid-2007 have raised the cost of food and transport, causing a US$500 million shortfall in her U.N. agency's 2008 budget.

 

Sheeran said it had been put at US$2.9 billion last year, but due to skyrocketing food and fuel costs the WFP needs an extra US$375 million for food and US$125 million to transport it.

 

After briefing the European Parliament on her agency's dire financial situation, Sheeran told a news conference she saw no quick fix to high fuel and food costs. "The assessment is that we are facing high food prices at least for the next couple of years," said Sheeran.

 

The WFP relief agency feeds almost 89 million people in 78 nations, including 58.8 million children. It buys 90 percent of the food it distributes on the open market and only 2 percent from surplus food stocks.

 

Sheeran blamed increases in oil and food commodity prices, the booming economies of China and India, bad harvests and droughts, and a shift to biofuels that leads to price increases of foodstuffs such as palm oil.

 

The net result of this, she said, "is that we are seeing 'newly hungry' people," in Latin America, Asia and Africa.

 

"There are 2.5 million people in Afghanistan who cannot afford the price of wheat," Sheeran said. According to a recent Afghan government and WFP analysis, wheat prices rose more than 60 percent on average in 2007, and as much as 80 percent in some locations.

 

Sheeran said global food reserves were at their lowest level in 30 years and today cover the need for emergency deliveries of 53 days, down from 169 days in 2007.

 

She said the issue of rising food costs needs to be addressed by governments as a matter of urgency before it leads to social unrest and malnutrition.

 

Food riots are already happening in Burkino Faso, Cameroon, Senegal and Morocco, she noted.

 

However, she did not outline any steps that governments should take to fix the problem in the world's markets.

 

A significant factor is that corn, soy, sugar cane and other crops are seen as sources of clean and cheap biofuels. This means less grain is available for human consumption, driving up prices for basic foodstuffs.

 

The U.N.'s Food and Agriculture Organization estimates that 100 million tonnes of cereals are diverted to the production of biofuels each year.

 

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