http://www.theglobeandmail.com/repo...-spark-fears-of-social-unrest/article1859417/
http://blogs.forbes.com/greatspeculations/2010/10/27/the-food-crisis-of-2011/So far in 2010:
Corn: Up 63%
Wheat: Up 84%
Soybeans: Up 24%
Sugar: Up 55%
Global food chain stretched to the limit
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/41062817/ns/business-consumer_news/
'One poor harvest away from chaos'
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/earth/ea...8247029/One-poor-harvest-away-from-chaos.html
Global food prices hit record high
http://edition.cnn.com/2011/BUSINESS/01/05/food.prices.ft/index.html
Fox News: Food Shortages Coming in 2011
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ob-ubrC2RnU
Yeah, it's Fox News, but facts are facts!
Queensland floods to increase food prices
http://www.ausfoodnews.com.au/2010/12/29/queensland-floods-to-increase-food-prices.html
Philippines May Lose 600,000 Tons of Rice as Supertyphoon Megi Hits Land
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010-...-of-rice-from-typhoon-megi-official-says.htmlThe Philippines, the worlds biggest rice buyer, may lose 600,000 metric tons of the crop as Supertyphoon Megi, the strongest to hit the nation this year, strikes some of the nations biggest producing areas, a government official said. Rice futures advanced.
Once the typhoon hits those areas, the crop will be affected, Agriculture Undersecretary Antonio Fleta said in a phone interview from Manila. Even if farmers harvest the damaged rice, theyd have a hard time drying the grain. There may not be much left to sell.
About 157,000 hectares of land planted to rice in Cagayan and Isabela provinces may be in the path of the typhoon, Fleta said. Megi has sustained winds of 270 kilometers (168 miles) per hour, the U.S. Navy Joint Typhoon Warning Center said, making it a Category 5 storm capable of catastrophic damage.
Half of the planted areas in the two provinces are ready for harvest and the rest are in the reproductive stage, leaving them susceptible to damage, Fleta said.
Damage to Philippine crops would come amid production losses in other countries, further curbing the global harvest and potentially sustaining a rally in prices.
Rough-rice futures have surged 43 percent from this years low of $9.55 per 100 pounds on June 30 as flooding in Pakistan and dry weather in the U.S. cut harvests. The contract for November delivery advanced for a fifth consecutive day today, gaining 0.3 percent to $13.655 on the Chicago Board of Trade at 12:10 p.m. Singapore time.
Yields Cut
Potential losses may boost the Philippines import needs by 500,000 tons, pushing prices higher in Chicago and Thailand, Chookiat Ophaswongse, former president of the Thai Rice Exporters Association, said by phone from Bangkok today.
I think it may have some effect, even on U.S. rice prices, said Chookiat, who advises the export group. Thai rice prices may rise by as much as $20 a ton, he said.
The price of 100 percent Grade-B Thai white rice, the Asian benchmark, dropped 0.2 percent from a week earlier to $510 a ton in the week ended Oct. 6, according to the Thai Rice Exporters Association.
The Food & Agriculture Organization of the United Nations pared its estimate for global rice production on Sept. 1 for the second time since April as lower water levels in the Mekong River cut yields in Thailand and Vietnam, the worlds two biggest exporters, and after the floods in Pakistan.
The FAO cut its milled rice production forecast for this year to 467 million tons on Sept. 1, compared with 474 million tons in April, and 472 million tons in a June report.
Missed Forecast
The rice harvest in the U.S., the worlds fourth-largest exporter last year, may be at least 10 percent smaller than estimated, missing a forecast for record output and pushing prices to as high as $17 per 100 pounds, Dwight A. Roberts, president of the U.S. Rice Producers Association, said last week. Roberts correctly predicted the grain would peak at $16 last year.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture lowered its estimate for for this years U.S. rice paddy production by 5 percent to 11 million tons and forecast that average yield per acre would drop to the lowest since the 2005-2006 season.
The Philippines issued its highest alert for Megi as the storm headed for landfall in Luzon island. The storm made landfall at Divilacan, Isabela province, at about 11:30 a.m., Benito Ramos, administrator at the Office of Civil Defense, said by phone.
The nations rough rice production was forecast to be little changed from a year earlier at 16.266 million tons this year, after El Nino, which causes drier-than-normal weather, parched crops, according to the July estimate by the Bureau of Agricultural Statistics.
The countrys milled-rice demand was estimated by the USDA at 13.7 million tons this year. Thats about 21 million tons of rough rice, according to Bloomberg calculations, based on the nations milling recovery rate of 65 percent.
The outlook from 2008 doesn't look good
When all goes well, thunderheads tower above India's southwestern state of Kerala in early June, drenching the region's vital rice fields and ensuring a bountiful harvest. From there the summer monsoon plods northward to soak the baking plains and irrigate vital breadbasket regions that feed 1.1 billion people before arriving at the foot of the Himalayas in August. Forecasting this complex meteorological process has always been an obsession within India, but this year the world will be watching. Changes in the monsoon cycle can shrink India's total grain harvest by up to 20 percent, creating a shortfall of 30 million metric tons. During India's last crop failure, in 2002, the country had a massive reserve to fall back on. "Now," says Usha Tuteja, an agricultural economist at Delhi University, "we don't have enough buffer stocks to make up for one bad year."
India isn't the only danger zone today. A major storm battering the Philippines or Bangladesh at the wrong moment, a pest or plant-disease outbreak in Vietnam, or floods along China's Yangtze River like those that occurred in the mid-1990s would put serious strains on global grain reserves already depleted to levels not seen since the 1970s. Global markets are behaving as if a food shock is imminent.
In recent months the commodity prices of rice, wheat and corn has jumped 50 percent or more, pushing retail prices to levels unseen in a generation and prompting grain-exporting countries to curtail trade to suppress domestic inflation. On March 20, the World Food Program issued an emergency appeal for more funding to keep aid moving to the world's poorest countries. Last week World Bank president Robert Zoellick called for urgent global action on the part of rich nations "or many more people will suffer or starve."
Experts blame a variety of factors for today's food crunch. Poor harvests in Europe since 2005 and Australia's ongoing drought have crimped the pipeline of staple grains to world markets. Soaring demand for bio-fuels in response to $100-per-barrel oil is diverting crops. And the rise of Asia's twin giantsChina and Indiais turning them both into market-moving grain hogs. Add to that climate change and a decline in agricultural investment as a percentage of GDP worldwide, and there's little mystery to why food security is a pressing issue from Tokyo to Abidjan. "We're paying the price of complacency," says biologist Robert Zeigler, head of the Philippines-based International Rice Research Institute.
http://www.newsweek.com/2008/04/05/storm-warning.html
2010 Food Crisis for Dummies and the Food Crisis Is Here!
http://www.marketskeptics.com/2010/08/2010-food-crisis-is-here.html
Normalcy Bias theory is about to be tested globally
https://secure.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/wiki/Normalcy_bias