World Facing Huge New Challenge on Food Front
* Business-as-Usual Not a Viable Option
By Lester R. Brown
Earth Policy Institute, April 16, 2008
A fast-unfolding food shortage is engulfing the entire world, driving food
prices to record highs. Over the past half-century grain prices have spiked
from time to time because of weather-related events, such as the 1972 Soviet
crop failure that led to a doubling of world wheat, rice, and corn prices.
The situation today is entirely different, however. The current doubling of
grain prices is trend-driven, the cumulative effect of some trends that are
accelerating growth in demand and other trends that are slowing the growth
in supply.
The world has not experienced anything quite like this before. In the face
of rising food prices and spreading hunger, the social order is beginning to
break down in some countries. In several provinces in Thailand, for
instance, rustlers steal rice by harvesting fields during the night. In
response, Thai villagers with distant fields have taken to guarding ripe
rice fields at night with loaded shotguns. In Sudan, the U.N. World Food
Programme (WFP), which is responsible for supplying grain to 2 million
people in Darfur refugee camps, is facing a difficult mission to say the
least. During the first three months of this year, 56 grain-laden trucks
were hijacked. Thus far, only 20 of the trucks have been recovered and some
24 drivers are still unaccounted for. This threat to U.N.-supplied food to
the Darfur camps has reduced the flow of food into the region by half,
raising the specter of starvation if supply lines cannot be secured.
In Pakistan, where flour prices have doubled, food insecurity is a national
concern. Thousands of armed Pakistani troops have been assigned to guard
grain elevators and to accompany the trucks that transport grain.
Food riots are now becoming commonplace. In Egypt, the bread lines at
bakeries that distribute state-subsidized bread are often the scene of
fights. In Morocco, 34 food rioters were jailed. In Yemen, food riots turned
deadly, taking at least a dozen lives. In Cameroon, dozens of people have
died in food riots and hundreds have been arrested. Other countries with
food riots include Ethiopia, Haiti, Indonesia, Mexico, the Philippines, and
Senegal. (See additional examples of food price unrest.)
The doubling of world wheat, rice, and corn prices has sharply reduced the
availability of food aid, putting the 37 countries that depend on the WFP's
emergency food assistance at risk. In March, the WFP issued an urgent appeal
for $500 million of additional funds.
Around the world, a politics of food scarcity is emerging. Most
fundamentally, it involves the restriction of grain exports by countries
that want to check the rise in their domestic food prices. Russia, the
Ukraine, and Argentina are among the governments that are currently
restricting wheat exports. Countries restricting rice exports include Viet
Nam, Cambodia, and Egypt. These export restrictions simply drive prices
higher in the world market.
The chronically tight food supply the world is now facing is driven by the
cumulative effect of several well established trends that are affecting both
global demand and supply. On the demand side, the trends include the
continuing addition of 70 million people per year to the earth's population,
the desire of some 4 billion people to move up the food chain and consume
more grain-intensive livestock products, and the recent sharp acceleration
in the U.S. use of grain to produce ethanol for cars. Since 2005, this last
source of demand has raised the annual growth in world grain consumption
from roughly 20 million tons to 50 million tons.
Meanwhile, on the supply side, there is little new land to be brought under
the plow unless it comes from clearing tropical rainforests in the Amazon
and Congo basins and in Indonesia, or from clearing land in the Brazilian
cerrado, a savannah-like region south of the Amazon rainforest.
Unfortunately, this has heavy environmental costs: the release of
sequestered carbon, the loss of plant and animal species, and increased
rainfall runoff and soil erosion. And in scores of countries prime cropland
is being lost to both industrial and residential construction and to the
paving of land for roads, highways, and parking lots for fast-growing
automobile fleets.
New sources of irrigation water are even more scarce than new land to plow.
During the last half of the twentieth century, world irrigated area nearly
tripled, expanding from 94 million hectares in 1950 to 276 million hectares
in 2000. In the years since then there has been little, if any, growth. As a
result, irrigated area per person is shrinking by 1 percent a year.
Meanwhile, the backlog of agricultural technology that can be used to raise
cropland productivity is dwindling. Between 1950 and 1990 the world's
farmers raised grainland productivity by 2.1 percent a year, but from 1990
until 2007 this growth rate slowed to 1.2 percent a year. And the rising
price of oil is boosting the costs of both food production and transport
while at the same time making it more profitable to convert grain into fuel
for cars.
Beyond this, climate change presents new risks. Crop-withering heat waves,
more-destructive storms, and the melting of the Asian mountain glaciers that
sustain the dry-season flow of that region's major rivers, are combining to
make harvest expansion more difficult. In the past the negative effect of
unusual weather events was always temporary; within a year or two things
would return to normal. But with climate in flux, there is no norm to return
to.
The collective effect of these trends makes it more and more difficult for
farmers to keep pace with the growth in demand. During seven of the last
eight years, grain consumption exceeded production. After seven years of
drawing down stocks, world grain carryover stocks in 2008 have fallen to 55
days of world consumption, the lowest on record. The result is a new era of
tightening food supplies, rising food prices, and political instability.
With grain stocks at an all-time low, the world is only one poor harvest
away from total chaos in world grain markets.
Business-as-usual is no longer a viable option. Food security will
deteriorate further unless leading countries can collectively mobilize to
stabilize population, restrict the use of grain to produce automotive fuel,
stabilize climate, stabilize water tables and aquifers, protect cropland,
and conserve soils. Stabilizing population is not simply a matter of
providing reproductive health care and family planning services. It requires
a worldwide effort to eradicate poverty. Eliminating water shortages depends
on a global attempt to raise water productivity similar to the effort
launched a half-century ago to raise land productivity, an initiative that
has nearly tripled the world grain yield per hectare. None of these goals
can be achieved quickly, but progress toward all is essential to restoring a
semblance of food security.
This troubling situation is unlike any the world has faced before. The
challenge is not simply to deal with a temporary rise in grain prices, as in
the past, but rather to quickly alter those trends whose cumulative effects
collectively threaten the food security that is a hallmark of civilization.
If food security cannot be restored quickly, social unrest and political
instability will spread and the number of failing states will likely
increase dramatically, threatening the very stability of civilization
itself.
© 2008 Earth Policy Institute
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