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sedan
06-23-2007, 03:03 AM
23 June 2007 03:02
The fight for the world's food
Population is growing. Supply is falling. Prices are rising. What will be the cost to the planet's poorest?
By Daniel Howden
Published: 23 June 2007

Most people in Britain won't have noticed. On the supermarket shelves the signs are still subtle. But the onset of a major change will be sitting in front of many people this morning in their breakfast bowl. The price of cereals in this country has jumped by 12 per cent in the past year. And the cost of milk on the global market has leapt by nearly 60 per cent. In short we may be reaching the end of cheap food.

For those of us who have grown up in post-war Britain food prices have gone only one way, and that is down. Sixty years ago an average British family spent more than one-third of its income on food. Today, that figure has dropped to one-tenth. But for the first time in generations agricultural commodity prices are surging with what analysts warn will be unpredictable consequences.

Like any other self-respecting trend this one now has its own name: agflation. Beneath this harmless-sounding piece of jargon - the conflation of agriculture and inflation - lie two main drivers that suggest that cheap food is about to become a thing of the past. Agflation, to those that believe that it is really happening, is an increase in the price of food that occurs as a result of increased demand from human consumption and the diversion of crops into usage as an alternative energy resource.

On the one hand the growing affluence of millions of people in China and India is creating a surge in demand for food - the rising populations are not content with their parents' diet and demand more meat. On the other, is the use of food crops as a source of energy in place of oil, the so-called bio-fuels boom.

As these two forces combine they are setting off warning bells around the world.

Rice prices are climbing worldwide. Butter prices in Europe have spiked by 40 per cent in the past year. Wheat futures are trading at their highest level for a decade. Global soybean prices have risen by a half. Pork prices in China are up 20 per cent on last year and the food price index in India was up by 11 per cent year on year. In Mexico there have been riots in response to a 60 per cent rise in the cost of tortillas.

It has even revived discussion of the work of the 18th-century British thinker Robert Malthus. He predicted that the growth of the world's population would outstrip its ability to produce food, leading to mass starvation.

So far in Britain we have been insulated from the early effects of these price rises by the competitive nature of our retail system. But the supermarkets cannot shield us for long. The European Commission no longer has reserves to help cushion its citizens. Its mountains of unsold butter and meat and its lake of powdered milk have disappeared after reforms to the Common Agricultural Policy.

Then there is corn. While relatively little corn is eaten directly it is of pivotal importance to the food economy as so much of it is consumed indirectly. The milk, eggs, cheese, butter, chicken, beef, ice cream and yoghurt in the average fridge is all produced using corn and the price of every one of these is influenced by the price of corn. In effect, our fridges are full of corn.

In the past 12 months the global corn price has doubled. The constant aim of agriculture is to produce enough food to carry us over to the next harvest. In six of the past seven years, we have used more grain worldwide than we have produced. As a result world grain reserves - or carryover stocks - have dwindled to 57 days. This is the lowest level of grain reserves in 34 years.

The reason for the price surge is the wholesale diversion of grain crops into the production of ethanol. Thirty per cent of next year's grain harvest in the US will go straight to an ethanol distillery. As the US supplies more than two-thirds of the world's grain imports this unprecedented move will affect food prices everywhere. In Europe farmers are switching en masse to fuel crops to meet the EU requirement that bio-fuels account for 20 per cent of the energy mix.

Ethanol is almost universally popular with politicians as it allows them to tell voters to keep on motoring, while bio-fuels will fix the problem of harmful greenhouse gas emissions. But bio-fuels are not a green panacea, as the influential economist Lester Brown from the Earth Policy Institute explained in a briefing to the US Senate last week. He said: "The stage is now set for direct competition for grain between the 800 million people who own automobiles, and the world's 2 billion poorest people."

Already there are signs that the food economy is merging with the fuel economy. The ethanol boom has seen sugar prices track oil prices and now the same is set to happen with grain, Mr Brown argues. "As the price of oil climbs so will the price of food," he says. "If oil jumps from $60 a barrel to $80, you can bet that your supermarket bills will also go up."

In the developed world this could mean a change of lifestyle. Elsewhere it could cost lives. Soaring food prices have already sparked riots in poor countries that depend on grain imports. More will follow. After decades of decline in the number of starving people worldwide the numbers are starting to rise. The UN lists 34 countries as needing food aid. Since feeding programmes tend to have fixed budgets, a doubling in the price of grain halves food aid.

Anger boiled over this week as Jean Ziegler, the UN special rapporteur on the right to food, accused the US and EU of "total hypocrisy" for promoting ethanol production in order to reduce their dependence on imported oil. He said producing ethanol instead of food would condemn hundreds of thousands of people to death from hunger.

Population and starvation

* Robert Thomas Malthus was a political economist who shot to prominence in late 18th century Britain. His Essay on the Principle of Population influenced generations of thinkers with its prediction that the world's population would outgrow its food supply, prompting starvation on an epic scale. "The power of population is so superior to the power of the earth to produce subsistence for man, that premature death must in some shape or other visit the human race," he wrote. "Gigantic inevitable famine stalks in the rear." But Malthus predicted disaster to strike in the mid-19th century.

http://www.independent.co.uk/incoming/article2697804.ece

sedan
06-23-2007, 07:00 PM
As an aside, I didn't post this because I'm a Malthusian. Malthus believed that population would grow in a geometric progression while food production would increase arithmetically. What he overlooked, of course, is that technological advances would dramatically increase yield per acre. But theorizing, as he did, at the outset of the Industrial Revolution this is perhaps understandable.

waldo
06-25-2007, 09:47 AM
Just more evidence that inflation, at least in a modest way is returning.

Evakian
06-25-2007, 10:04 AM
As an aside, I didn't post this because I'm a Malthusian. Malthus believed that population would grow in a geometric progression while food production would increase arithmetically. What he overlooked, of course, is that technological advances would dramatically increase yield per acre. But theorizing, as he did, at the outset of the Industrial Revolution this is perhaps understandable.
I'm a Walrusian. I believe that the geometric progression of the waistline of people as food production increases exponentially will turn people into walruses.

Arithmetically? More like:
http://www.cybercandy.co.uk/acatalog/1720.jpg

~Sal~
06-25-2007, 04:35 PM
I'm a Walrusian. I believe that the geometric progression of the waistline of people as food production increases exponentially will turn people into walruses.

Arithmetically? More like:
http://www.cybercandy.co.uk/acatalog/1720.jpg
Well, while you were being humorous I think you are actually accurate. I think we will glut ourselves to death while the rest of the world starves, just as it has been for the last 30 years.

Foolsworth
06-25-2007, 10:02 PM
As an aside, I didn't post this because I'm a Malthusian. Malthus believed that population would grow in a geometric progression while food production would increase arithmetically. What he overlooked, of course, is that technological advances would dramatically increase yield per acre. But theorizing, as he did, at the outset of the Industrial Revolution this is perhaps understandable.

Much ado about nothing.Just because a slight spike in certain
food commodities,does not mean,a Food Shortage.
We had for years a glut market on Wheat & Corn.
We still have that with Cheese.We probably throw out more cheese than we consume.
And with the development of many different kinds of fun and
convenient food,that will easily store and provide the vital
necessities for life,Like Nutrition and energy bars,there should be
absolutely NO worry over food.
Those who underwent the Dust Bowl years,RELIED on basic
raw items like Apples,Potatoes,corn and wheat.
One has got to have a few screws loose to tink we're in any
kind of food trouble.
When was the last time you read of someone actually starving
in America.?
The sad fact IS,we have an OBESITY problem.And that's mainly
in the poor community.
Granted,may poor don't consume Good quality whole food,but rather
Junk stuff like Dorritos,Twinkees and candy bars.And hot dogs are
considered a real meal.
When this Country ceases to worry about stuff,thats when I'll
start to WoRrY.

Freethinker
06-25-2007, 10:36 PM
Much ado about nothing.Just because a slight spike in certain
food commodities,does not mean,a Food Shortage.
We had for years a glut market on Wheat & Corn.
We still have that with Cheese.We probably throw out more cheese than we consume.
And with the development of many different kinds of fun and
convenient food,that will easily store and provide the vital
necessities for life,Like Nutrition and energy bars,there should be
absolutely NO worry over food.
Those who underwent the Dust Bowl years,RELIED on basic
raw items like Apples,Potatoes,corn and wheat.
One has got to have a few screws loose to tink we're in any
kind of food trouble.
When was the last time you read of someone actually starving
in America.?
The sad fact IS,we have an OBESITY problem.And that's mainly
in the poor community.
Granted,may poor don't consume Good quality whole food,but rather
Junk stuff like Dorritos,Twinkees and candy bars.And hot dogs are
considered a real meal.
When this Country ceases to worry about stuff,thats when I'll
start to WoRrY.


Your appellation "Kiddie Member" is evidently truth in advertising.

You must be a child, because an adult could NOT be that uncomprehending.

""One has got to have a few screws loose to tink we're in any
kind of food trouble.
When was the last time you read of someone actually starving
in America.?
The sad fact IS,we have an OBESITY problem.""

The worry that the article expresses over greater numbers of people possibly starving is not in THIS country, but in other, poorer countries around the world.

Frogger
06-25-2007, 11:17 PM
People like Robert Malthus and more recently, Paul Ehrlich have always predicted doom and destruction as population exceeded food production. Like Sedan said, Malthus failed to see the increase in food production per acre. As Sedan also said, he may be forgiven because he wrote, An Essay on the Principle of Population in the late 1700's. Ehrlich cannot be so easily forgive because his book, The Population Bomb, was written in the 1960's.

The cost of food may rise because of increased population but if food scarcity ever becomes problematical for developed nations there will be an increase in technology to correct the problem. Desalinization of seawater will become more prevelant so that arid lands can be farmed, ways will be found to destroy destructive insects, new seeds will be developed that will produce plants that can be grown on more marginal land.

The worldl may end in fire or ice but it will not end in starvation.

koutaka
06-26-2007, 07:45 AM
Let's develop farm in desart by a desalination plant and water from sea, maybe in Australia. Toray has a good filter for a desalination plant. http://www.toray.com/index.html

Frogger
06-26-2007, 07:53 AM
As the need arises technology will be developed to meet it. There is still lots of land that is unused. As we need it ways will be found to utilize that land. Also, new crops will be developed and people will change their habits to eat foods that are not popular at the present time. People tend to eat the foods they are used to and ignore all the available foods that they are not used to.

Leper
06-26-2007, 10:48 AM
Good topic. This is a topic that will become more and more of a headliner as rich countries try to look to ethanol/biofuel as the answer to environmental problems.

The reality is that ethanol and biolfuels come with a host of new environmental issues when their use becomes widespread. The amount of farmland necessary to fuel large populations is enormous. Once that reality sets in, ethanol will cease to be the answer to which people keep looking.

In the meantime, farmers love it, America loves farmers, and America doesn't want to give up it's fuel guzzlers, so it's politically popular. The sad reality is that the world's poor will suffer as people choose to feed automobiles rather than feed people.

Besides that, agriculture is also generally more polluting than Industry, so ethanol is a false choice for people interested in protecting the environment.

On a side note, dependency on technological advances will bite you in the ass sooner or later. Technological improvement always has limits. Farming, for example, will peak in terms of how much crop you can get out of an acre of land, if it hasn't already ("Organic farming" for example tends to result in less crop per acre of land). In the end, you will run into the 1st Law of Thermodynamics, which says that energy can neither be created nor destroyed, merely transformed.

primitive man
06-26-2007, 10:49 AM
Fresh food and most meat will remain higher priced than junk food. So, I believe the waist line of America will continue to expand.

waldo
06-26-2007, 04:03 PM
NOt if the price of corn keeps rising.

The Praetorian
06-26-2007, 04:34 PM
The worry that the article expresses over greater numbers of people possibly starving is not in THIS country, but in other, poorer countries around the world.
Who cares about "other" countries? Especially poor ones....

The Praetorian
06-26-2007, 04:39 PM
In the meantime, farmers love it, America loves farmers, and America doesn't want to give up it's fuel guzzlers, so it's politically popular. The sad reality is that the world's poor will suffer as people choose to feed automobiles rather than feed people.
Good points, Leper, but you are aware that good corn (the corn used to feed people) isn't the corn they use to produce ethanol.

Leper
06-26-2007, 04:56 PM
Good points, Leper, but you are aware that good corn (the corn used to feed people) isn't the corn they use to produce ethanol.

Indirectly, "bad" corn is used to feed people too, because that's what we use to fatten cows and chickens. However, I don't know if there is corn that SO bad that it can't even be used for livestock. Either way, you still have to use viable cropland to grow the most inedible corn on the planet.

Freethinker
06-26-2007, 06:49 PM
Originally Posted by Freethinker
The worry that the article expresses over greater numbers of people possibly starving is not in THIS country, but in other, poorer countries around the world.

Who cares about "other" countries? Especially poor ones....

Nothing could better illustrate the conservative worldview.

Congratulations, Archie.

The Praetorian
06-27-2007, 09:38 AM
Nothing could better illustrate the conservative worldview.

Congratulations, Archie.
Well, don't get me wrong - if they have viable resources and a compliant government, then I'm all for helping 'em out.

I mean, after all, I'm not a monster....

waldo
06-27-2007, 09:39 AM
Nothing could better illustrate the conservative worldview.

Congratulations, Archie.


Says the guy who opposes globalization because it would give them the money to buy the food.
Your intellectual dishonesty is neck and neck with your moral turpitude.

Evakian
06-27-2007, 10:04 AM
Well, don't get me wrong - if they have viable resources and a compliant government, then I'm all for helping 'em out.

I mean, after all, I'm not a monster....
While you were being humorous, if there was truth to this you'd be the scum of humankind.

Welcome to the club, we have tacos!

The Praetorian
06-27-2007, 10:14 AM
Welcome to the club, we have tacos!
:D

~Sal~
07-01-2007, 08:07 AM
not for long boys, tacos are corn-based

Evakian
07-01-2007, 09:03 AM
not for long boys, tacos are corn-based
Only freaks eat corn tortillas. The vast majority of mexican food relies on flour tortillas.

~Sal~
07-01-2007, 09:12 AM
Only freaks eat corn tortillas. The vast majority of mexican food relies on flour tortillas.

::smack:: WRONG....A taco is a traditional Mexican dish comprised of a rolled, folded, pliable maize tortilla filled with an edible substance.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taco

Now I'm hungry. :(

Evakian
07-01-2007, 09:14 AM
::smack:: WRONG....A taco is a traditional Mexican dish comprised of a rolled, folded, pliable maize tortilla filled with an edible substance.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taco

Now I'm hungry. :(
Only freaks eat corn tortillas. The vast majority of mexican food relies on flour tortillas.

~Sal~
07-01-2007, 09:21 AM
Fine then you eat your wheat taco, and I shall have my freakfest on maize tacos...

Evakian
07-01-2007, 09:24 AM
Those fried maize tacos taste nasty. Even the Mexicans think so, you Canucks just are too high off marijuana smoke to care.

sedan
07-01-2007, 09:48 AM
Bennie Hinn rocks.

Foolsworth
07-01-2007, 10:15 AM
Bennie Hinn rocks.

Is there a BiGgEr Charlatan Alive.?
I mean,even his Fat Pompadour Hairdo,makes Freethinkers
look kinda ordinary.I wonder where the Vitalis Went.
Prolly in his act,as well.

Evakian
07-01-2007, 10:20 AM
Bennie Hinn rocks.
I want to grow up to push old people over in a church and yell. I could make millions.

moderate
07-01-2007, 12:09 PM
Is there a BiGgEr Charlatan Alive.?

Yes. Sun Myung Moon.

LionelHutz
07-01-2007, 10:07 PM
I want to grow up to push old people over in a church and yell. I could make millions.

I want to stand on stage and push him back, but I imagine he has a process to weed out the non-believers.

~Sal~
07-01-2007, 10:12 PM
I want to stand on stage and push him back, but I imagine he has a process to weed out the non-believers.

Tch.... a small dab of makeup to obtain that radiant "I've been saved" facial glow, a small bit of coaching on how to properly raise your hands in adulation AND a big wad of cash to donate, and a limp he can heal you of...

simple...

let us know how it goes...

Travh20
07-02-2007, 04:21 PM
perhaps if the left wingers let third world countires use pesticides and altered seeds that can grow in worse places there wouldnt be a food shortage. Sadly, the euroweenies in high places with 2,000 dollar suits are telling the people living in mud holes they cant have food unless they themselves would eat it. I tell you this, a starving african doesnt give a rats ass if the food is genetically altered or if pesticides were used to keep the plants from getting eaten by bugs.

DarkFantasy96
07-02-2007, 06:02 PM
Nice avatar Trav! :D

primitive man
07-05-2007, 12:07 PM
he'll give a shit when his land is poisoned on top of being in a constant state of drought.

DarkFantasy96
07-05-2007, 12:11 PM
Good point primitive man. We should be careful with the arable land we have.

Leper
07-05-2007, 12:56 PM
I tell you this, a starving african doesnt give a rats ass if the food is genetically altered or if pesticides were used to keep the plants from getting eaten by bugs.


You know, being careful with the genetics of staple crops is more important than the short-term needs of man. Believe me, there are going to be starving people whether we use genetically-altered foods or not.

You make the same argument as people who think FDA approval is secondary to their personal medical emergencies.

~Sal~
07-07-2007, 10:04 AM
You know, being careful with the genetics of staple crops is more important than the short-term needs of man. Believe me, there are going to be starving people whether we use genetically-altered foods or not.



hm, thanks for the think prompt....I was kind of agreeing with the idea of heavy pesticide etc. for the third world...

Travh20
07-07-2007, 08:11 PM
It is just to bad the people who claim to care the most only seem to care about what they want.