Wednesday, May 04, 2011

Global Food Wars

What's the Latest Development?
According the United Nation's Global Food Index, food prices have doubled since 2007. For countries that import staple foods like grain and rice, this is a major crisis. On the demand side, world population has doubled since 1970 and the rising global middle class wants grain-intensive products like beef on the dinner table. On the supply side, massive amounts of American grain are being used to make car fuel, removing millions of bushels from the global markets. While the farmer does not garner up images of geopolitical crises, food has, in many ways, become the new oil, says Lester Brown.


What's the Big Idea?
While the United States has a large domestic food market, kept insulated from rising prices, but most countries do not. So when wheat and rice prices skyrocket, the world's poor, who typically spend more than half their income on food, suffer dire consequences. And so do their political leaders. Massive inflation of food prices was an immediate cause of the revolutions across the Middle East and Africa, says Brown, particularly in Libya, which imports more than ninety percent of its grain. In fact, the silent mover of global politics has become food, he says, tipping the scales on unpopular leaders and inspiring land grabs for more crop space.
 
Food Crisis, For Real
Big Think Editors on January 14, 2011, 7:54 AM
It is no longer conflict between heavily armed superpowers, but rather spreading food shortages and rising food prices — and the political turmoil this would lead to — that threatens our global future. Unless governments quickly redefine security and shift expenditures from military uses to investing in climate change mitigation, water efficiency, soil conservation, and population stabilization, the world will in all likelihood be facing a future with both more climate instability and food price volatility. If business as usual continues, food prices will only trend upward.

 Someday we will be faced with world starvation. We  must concentrate on survival now and sharing.

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