Food Crisis is ‘a
Silent Tsunami’
May 15, 2008
Rising food prices are creating what the United Nations’ World Food Program Executive Director Josette Sheeran calls
“a silent tsunami” threatening to push “more than 100 million people” into hunger. Riots have been
reported in Egypt, Cameroon, Burkina Faso, Senegal and Cote d’Ivoire.
The US Department of Labor says that in the past 12 months,
the price of white bread has gone up by 16.3 percent, milk by 13.3 percent and eggs by 34.8
percent.
Here in Savannah, local food banks are feeling the pinch.
Mary Jane Crouch, executive director of the Second Harvest food bank, says she is seeing more working class families needing
assistance. “One of every six people in a soup kitchen line is a child,” says Crouch. She worries that the children
in Chatham County who qualify for free or reduced-price meals at school will go hungry this summer.
According to the World Food Program, the rising food
prices are due to “rising oil and energy costs, growing competition between biofuels and food, growing demand from burgeoning
economies in the developing world and increased climate and weather-related events destroying crops and reducing food supplies.”
Soaring oil and energy prices have increased the cost
of production, transportation and packaging of food. To combat high oil prices, governments invested in biofuels—an
alternative to polluting fossil fuels. Biofuel programs convert corn, soybeans and sugar into ethanol and biodiesel fuels.
In December 2007, President Bush signed legislation requiring wider use of ethanol, calling it “a major step”
toward energy independence. But the UN’s new top advisor on the Right to Food, Olivier de Schutter, says, “The
ambitious goals for biofuel production set by the United States and the European Union are irresponsible.” His predecessor
in the UN post, Jean Ziegler, described them as a “crime against humanity” and called for an outright moratorium
on biofuels. Merrill Lynch analysts, however, say that without biofuel programs the price of oil would increase by about $13
per barrel. But steep oil and energy costs aren’t the only
things driving food prices up.
In recent years, people in developing countries are starting
to eat more meat and dairy products. That in turn drives up demand for grains, which are at record lows. Bob Lee, manager
of Fidelity Select Consumer Staples, says planting more grain isn’t as easy as it sounds. “There’s only
so much arable land in the world,” he says.
With the many contributing factors to high food prices, the UN says it’s tougher to meet global commitments in reducing
hunger. “We see mounting hunger and increasing evidence of malnutrition, which has severely strained the capacities
of humanitarian agencies to meet humanitarian needs,” says UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon.
While the UN reports that the majority of countries adversely
affected are in Africa, Americans are struggling too. The Congressional Budget Office projects
that a record 28 million
Americans will require food stamps this year. These benefits are adjusted every October based on the federal food inflation
rate for
the previous June. Because prices have swelled so dramatically since last June, many are turning to food banks
and other charities. Mary Jane Crouch of Second Harvest food bank is hopeful that the May 10th ‘Stamp Out Hunger’
food drive will fill both shelves and bellies here in Savannah.