Global Food Crisis Emerging
Lowest Food Supplies In 50-100 Years
6-15-07
NATIONAL FARMERS UNION National Office
2717 Wentz Ave. Saskatoon, Sask., S7K 4B6
306 652-9465 Fax 306 664-6226
SASKATOON, Sask -- Today, the United States Department of Agriculture
(USDA) released its first projections of world grain supply and demand
for the coming crop year: 2007/08. USDA predicts supplies will
plunge to a 53-day equivalent- their lowest level in the 47-year
period for which data exists. "The USDA projects global grain supplies
will drop to their lowest levels on record. Further, it is likely
that, outside of wartime, global grain supplies have not been this low
in a century, perhaps longer," said NFU Director of Research Darrin
Qualman.
Most important, 2007/08 will mark the seventh year out of the past
eight in which global grain production has fallen short of demand.
This consistent shortfall has cut supplies in half-down from a 115-day
supply in 1999/00 to the current level of 53 days. "The world is
consistently failing to produce as much grain as it uses," said Qualman. He continued: "The current low supply levels are not the
result of a transient weather event or an isolated production problem:
low supplies are the result of a persistent drawdown trend."
In
addition to falling grain supplies, global fisheries are faltering.
Reports in respected journals Science and Nature state that 1/3 of
ocean fisheries are in collapse, 2/3 will be in collapse by 2025, and
our ocean fisheries may be virtually gone by 2048. "Aquatic food
systems are collapsing, and terrestrial food systems are under
tremendous stress," said Qualman.
Demand for food is rising rapidly. There is a worldwide push to
proliferate a North American- style meat-based diet based on intensive
livestock production - turning feedgrains into meat in this way means
exchanging 3 to 7 kilos of grain protein for one kilo of meat protein.
Population is rising-2.5 billion people will join the global
population in the coming decades. "Every six years, we 're adding to
the world the equivalent of a North American population. We' re trying
to feed those extra people, feed a growing livestock herd, and now,
feed our cars, all from a static farmland base. No one should be
surprised that food production can't keep up," said Qualman.
Qualman said that the converging problems of natural gas and
fertilizer constraints, intensifying water shortages, climate change,
farmland loss and degradation, population increases, the proliferation
of livestock feeding, and an increasing push to divert food supplies
into biofuels means that we are in the opening phase of an
intensifying food shortage.
Qualman cautioned, however, that there are no easy fixes. "If we try
to do more of the same, if we try to produce, consume, and export more
food while using more fertilizer, water, and chemicals, we will only
intensify our problems. Instead, we need to rethink our relation to
food, farmers, production, processing, and distribution. We need to
create a system focused on feeding people and creating health. We need
to strengthen the food production systems around the world. Diversity,
resilience, and sustainability are key," concluded Qualman. - 30 - For
More Information:
Darrin Qualman, Director of Research
Stewart Wells, NFU President
Backgrounder to the NFU's May 11, 2007 news release
The United States Department of Agriculture reports recent grain
supply and demand numbers on its World Agriculture Supply and Demand
Estimates (WASDE) website at
http://usda.mannlib.cornell.edu/Mann...ocumentID=1194
The longer-term data on world grains supply and demand is at
Production, Supply, and Demand Online (PSD) at
http://www.fas.usda.gov/psdonline/psdhome.aspx