Showing posts with label wheat. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wheat. Show all posts

April 15, 2008

Worried about the credit crunch? HUNGER IS FAR WORSE

Eating mud, the picture Time magazine does not want middle class you to see
I have previously posted on this disaster

http://ladybroadoak.blogspot.com/2008/01/canada-out-of-haiti-now.html

and now the Haitian government has fallen
http://ladybroadoak.blogspot.com/search?q=haiti

and although I post the second article,
I don't believe in global warming NOR overpopulation
There is a whole klusterfuck of issues that seem beyond
human resolution:
I have to trust Mother Nature has some answers of her own.
Good ones, as the ones made by MAN seem overwhelming.

What the World Eats, Part I

Food Nutrition Eating Health Diet [BOLD

Italy: The Manzo family of Sicily

Food expenditure for one week: 214.36 Euros or $260.11
Favorite foods: fish, pasta with ragu, hot dogs, frozen fish stick

From the Book, "Hungry Planet"


Commentary: Credit Crunch? The Real Crisis Is Global Hunger

This commentary was written by Prof. George Monbiot and appeared in the Guardian edition for Tuesday, April 15, 2008. Prof. Monbiot is visiting professor of Planning at Oxford Brookes University. An author of several books and has held fellowships or professorships at the universities of Oxford (environmental policy), Bristol (philosophy), Keele (politics) and East London (environmental science). His commentary follows:

Never mind the economic crisis. Focus for a moment on a more urgent threat: the great food recession that is sweeping the world faster than the credit crunch. You have probably seen the figures by now: the price of rice has risen by three-quarters over the past year, that of wheat by 130%. There are food crises in 37 countries. One hundred million people, according to the World Bank, could be pushed into deeper poverty by the high prices.

But I bet that you have missed the most telling statistic. At 2.1 billion tons, the global grain harvest broke all records last year - it beat the previous year's by almost 5%. The crisis, in other words, has begun before world food supplies are hit by climate change. If hunger can strike now, what will happen if harvests decline?

There is plenty of food. It is just not reaching human stomachs. Of the 2.13 billion tons likely to be consumed this year, only 1.01 billion, according to the United Nation's Food and Agriculture Organization, will feed people.

I am sorely tempted to write another column about biofuels. Beginning Tuesday morning all sellers of transport fuel in the United Kingdom will be obliged to mix it with ethanol or biodiesel made from crops. The World Bank points out that "the grain required to fill the tank of a sports utility vehicle with ethanol ... could feed one person for a year". This year global stockpiles of cereals will decline by around 53 million tons; this gives you a rough idea of the size of the hunger gap. The production of biofuels will consume almost 100 million tons, which suggests that they are directly responsible for the current crisis.

On these pages Monday Ruth Kelly, the (British) secretary of state for transport, promised that

"if we need to adjust policy in the light of new evidence, we will".
What new evidence does she require? In the midst of a global humanitarian crisis, we have just become legally obliged to use food as fuel. It is a crime against humanity, in which every driver in this country has been forced to participate.

But I have been saying this for four years, and I am boring myself. Of course we must demand that our governments scrap the rules that turn grain into the fastest food of all. But there is a bigger reason for global hunger, which is attracting less attention only because it has been there for longer. While 100 million tons of food will be diverted this year to feed cars, 760 million tons will be snatched from the mouths of humans to feed animals - which could cover the global food deficit 14 times. If you care about hunger, eat less meat.

While meat consumption is booming in Asia and Latin America, in the U.K. it has scarcely changed since the government started gathering data in 1974. At just over 1 kilogram per person per week, it's still about 40% above the global average, though less than half the amount consumed in the United States. We eat less beef and more chicken than we did 30 years ago, which means a smaller total impact. Beef cattle eat about 8 kilograms of grain or meal for every kilogram of flesh they produce; a kilogram of chicken needs just 2 kilogram of feed. Even so, our consumption rate is plainly unsustainable.

In his magazine The Land, Simon Fairlie has updated the figures produced 30 years ago in Kenneth Mellanby's book "Can Britain Feed Itself?" Fairlie found that a vegan diet produced by means of conventional agriculture would require only 3 million hectares of arable land (around half Britain's current total). Even if we reduced our consumption of meat by half, a mixed farming system would need 4.4 million hectares of arable fields and 6.4 million hectares of pasture. A vegan Britain could make a massive contribution to global food stocks.

But I cannot advocate a diet that I am incapable of following. I tried it for about 18 months, lost two stone (28 lbs.), went as white as bone and felt that I was losing my mind. I know a few healthy-looking vegans, and I admire them immensely. But after almost every talk that I give, I am pestered by swarms of vegans demanding that I adopt their lifestyle. I cannot help noticing that in most cases their skin has turned a fascinating pearl grey.

What level of meat-eating would be sustainable? One approach is to work out how great a cut would be needed to accommodate the growth in human numbers. The United Nations expects the population to rise to 9 billion by 2050. These extra people will require another 325 million tons of grain. Let us assume, perhaps generously, that politicians such as Ruth Kelly are able to "adjust policy in the light of new evidence" and stop turning food into fuel. Let us pretend that improvements in plant breeding can keep pace with the deficits caused by climate change. We would need to find an extra 225 million tons of grain. This leaves 531 million tons for livestock production, which suggests a sustainable consumption level for meat and milk some 30% below the current world rate. This means 420 grams of meat per person per week, or about 40% of the U.K.'s average consumption.

This estimate is complicated by several factors. If we eat less meat we must eat more plant protein, which means taking more land away from animals. On the other hand, some livestock is raised on pasture, so it doesn't contribute to the grain deficit. Simon Fairlie estimates that if animals were kept only on land that is unsuitable for arable farming, and given scraps and waste from food processing, the world could produce between a third and two-thirds of its current milk and meat supply. But this system then runs into a different problem. The Food and Agriculture Organization calculates that animal keeping is responsible for 18% of greenhouse gas emissions. The environmental impacts are especially grave in places where livestock graze freely. The only reasonable answer to the question of how much meat we should eat is as little as possible. Let's reserve it - as most societies have done until recently - for special occasions.

For both environmental and humanitarian reasons, beef is out. Pigs and chickens feed more efficiently, but unless they are free range you encounter another ethical issue: the monstrous conditions in which they are kept. I would like to encourage people to start eating tilapia instead of meat. This is a freshwater fish that can be raised entirely on vegetable matter and has the best conversion efficiency - about 1.6 kilograms of feed for 1 kiloggram of meat - of any farmed animal. Until meat can be grown in flasks, this is about as close as we are likely to come to sustainable flesh-eating.

Re-reading this article, I see that there is something surreal about it. While half the world wonders whether it will eat at all, I am pondering which of our endless choices we should take. Here the price of food barely registers. Our shops are better stocked than ever before. We perceive the global food crisis dimly, if at all. It is hard to understand how two such different food economies could occupy the same planet, until you realize that they feed off each other.

Global food crisis - Do we blame Al Gore or George W Bush?

The United States television "news" media seems worse than useless.

The range of topics reported on by the media, on TV and newspapers, here in the states is very narrow, and seems to be a mix of about 40% entertainment news, 30% "feel good stories" ("Awww, look - kittens!" type "news"), 20% of what is happening in America ("Golly gosh gee, that gasoline for my car shuuure is expensive! Back to you, Bob!") and about 10% spent on the rest of the world.

To find out actual news, and not the latest trend in fashion or a celebrity cameo, one must use the internet...

That means that many of us, Americans, who do not use the internet to connect to Reuters and Associated Press, as well as blogs run by unpaid volunteers whose mission it is to inform their readership of political and other news, are screwed - because TV "news" is worse than useless - it is a total waste of time.

The important stories are lost in the Entertainment Tonight updates and the weather...


The one story that is universally missed by everybody is the global food crisis. This is a worldwide phenomenon of rising food prices, affecting all the countries around the globe, from America to Egypt to Pakistan.

So here is the roundup of the news stories in the English speaking world concerning this crisis.

Lets start with American mainstream media on the web:
Egypt moves to appease angry workers
The article talks about a 2 day riot in Egypt, in MAHALLA EL-KOBRA, and the first part of the article does not talk about the causes of the riot, other than vaguely calling it "economic unrest". Then it proceeds to talk about the Muslim Brotherhood (an illegal in Egypt, fanatical jihadist/terrorist organization [most of the members of al Kaida in positions of power were from that organization]), even though the riots have nothing to do with the brotherhood.

Only in the 2nd part of the article, the reader will see "The worldwide rise in prices has struck particularly hard in Egypt" and "Unrest over food prices is not unique to Egypt.".

This was a riot specifically caused over food prices.

Next article:
Expect food prices to keep rising, industry says

Americans who dug deeper into their pockets for groceries last year will face sticker shock again this year when shopping for food, experts said Thursday.

Consumer food prices are expected to rise 3.0% to 4.0% this year after a 4.0% gain in 2007, said USDA Chief Economist Joseph Glauber at the U.S. Agriculture Department's annual outlook conference.

He added that "overall retail food prices for 2008 to 2010 are expected to rise faster than the general inflation rate."


Lets click the link in that article:
Global demand lifts grain prices, gobbles supplies
Soaring energy costs may be roiling the financial markets, but world governments are also being rattled by a more basic form of inflation: sky-high food prices.

Pakistan is stockpiling wheat and using its military to guard flour mills. Indonesian consumers have taken to the streets to protest rising soy prices. Malaysia no longer lets people take sugar, flour or cooking oil out of the country. North Dakota, the top U.S. wheat-producing state, may import from Canada due to tight supplies.

The world is facing the most destabilizing bout of food inflation since the "Great Grain Robbery" of the early 1970s when the former Soviet Union bought massive quantities of U.S. grain, sending prices soaring. That episode helped fuel a Farm Belt boom — and later bust — as soaring exports soured and record agricultural land prices fell.


Lets reread this beginning paragraph and let it sink in; lets take it step by step as that one paragraph contains more information than a 24 hour CNN "news" cycle:

Pakistan is stockpiling wheat and using its military to guard flour mills.

Indonesian consumers have taken to the streets to protest rising soy prices.

Malaysia no longer lets people take sugar, flour or cooking oil out of the country.

North Dakota, the top U.S. wheat-producing state, may import from Canada due to tight supplies.

Countries are stockpiling basic foodstuffs around the world, and using their military to guard their wheat, flour... sugar.

Do you think that the title of this article is alarmist now? GLOBAL food crisis - seems apt

What I find interesting is that North Dakota - is now the number one wheat producing state in the USA, when Kansas used to consistently DOUBLE North Dakota's wheat production (see here for the reports from years 1997, 1998 and 1999):

Wheat production in millions of bushels:
Kansas produced 432.4 in 1999, 494.9 in 1998 and 501.4 in 1997.
North Dakota by contrast produced 242.1 in 1999, 307.7 in 1998 and 269.3 in 1997.

What happened in 2008?
Article N.D. Bests Kansas in Wheat Production states the reason.
First, the reader has to go through the inane, stupifying blabber of a human interest story:
""There's always been that kind of back-and-forth rivalry that goes on between the two of us," said Harlan Klein, an Elgin farmer and chairman of the North Dakota Wheat Commission."

Yeah - thanks Mr. Elgin farmer man, that is fascinating!

Lets dig into the meat of the article:
"We are the wheat state. Nine out of 10 years ... we do produce the most wheat in the United States," said Marsha Boswell, a spokeswoman for the Kansas Wheat Commission and the Kansas Association of Wheat Growers. "We give ourselves that slogan."

OK, so what happened?

Last year's crop in Kansas was decimated by disease and weather, particularly a late-spring freeze and flooding later in the season. Total production was pegged at just under 284 million bushels, a drop of more than 16 percent from the state's long-term average, Boswell said.

And there you have it. That is why North Dakota beat Kansas in wheat production - disease and weather disasters.

Is it possible that floods and wheat diseases in Kansas caused a worldwide food crisis?

Not necessarily, because other staple foodstuffs - like rice - are also affected. It is a BIG contributing factor, but not the main one.

So lets do that intelligence analyst thing and dig into the articles available on the web dealing with the global food crisis and see what is really causing it:

Crop switch worsens global food price crisis
Since the FAO's report in April 2006 tens of thousands of farmers have switched from food to fuel production to reduce US dependence on foreign oil. Spurred by generous subsidies and an EU commitment to increase the use of biofuels to counter climate change, at least 8m hectares (20m acres) of maize, wheat, soya and other crops which once provided animal feed and food have been taken out of production in the US.

In addition, large areas of Brazil, Argentina, Canada and Eastern Europe are diverting sugar cane, palm oil and soybean crops to biofuels. The result, exacerbated by energy price rises, speculation and shortages because of severe weather, has been big increases of all global food commodity prices.

To counter global climate change, countries are putting more and more crop lands and harvests into manufacturing biofuels - because the price of oil, and consequently gasoline is on a record high (no link needed - that is ONE story the US media stays on top of).

Lester Brown, director of the Earth Policy Institute in Washington, said yesterday that land turned to biofuels in the US alone in the last two years would have fed nearly 250 million people with average grain needs. "This year 18% of all US grain production will go to biofuels. In the last two years the US has diverted 60m tonnes of food to fuel. On the heels of seven years of consumption of world grains exceeding supply, this has put a great strain on the world's grain supplies," he said.

"Land turned to biofuels in the US alone in the last two years would have fed nearly 250 million people with average grain needs"

Thank You, Al Gore?

Robert Zoellick, president of the World Bank, said this week that prices of all staple food had risen 80% in three years, and that 33 countries faced unrest because of the price rises. Zoellick urged rich countries to give the UN's World Food programme $500m for emergency aid. The bank plans to increase lending for agricultural production in Africa from $420m to $850m a year in 2009.

"33 countries faced unrest because of the price rises."

33 countries face unrest - riots - because people are starving.

As the bank predicted rice price rises of 55% in 2008, violent protests against the cost of living hit Ivory Coast this week. On Thursday President Laurent Gbagbo cancelled custom duties on imported staple foods and cut taxes on rice, sugar, milk, fish, flour and oils.

I realize we Americans are bad at math, but a price rise of 55% for your food is pretty substantial. Now, we Americans spend only about 10-15% of our wages on food, but countries with much poorer populations spent substantially more - imagine if you spend 60% of your wage on food, say in Ghana, and then in 2008 thanks to the biofuel craze, floods and disease in Kansas wheat fields and other factors (which I will talk about later in the article) to feed your family, your 60% chunk of salary spent on food will be increased... 90%.

And how will you pay for your housing needs, clothes for your children, school?

And this affects ALL countries now, but especially the poorest.

Lets see what happens in other countries - we already know Ivory Coast is hard hit.

In Bangladesh, where families spend up to 70% of income on food, more than 50,000 households are getting emergency food after rice price rises. A government source said: "One reason is that the overall drop in food production because of biofuels has prevented food being exported."

Many countries that switched from traditional crops to rice diets as urbanisation increased face serious shortages and have defied the IMF by increasing wages, lowering prices and banning exports. China has put price controls on cooking oil, grain, meat, milk and eggs.

There have been protests in Guinea, Egypt, Morocco, Uzbekistan, Yemen, Burkina Faso, Mauritania, Niger, Uzbekistan, Senegal, Haiti, Bolivia and Indonesia. In the last two months Vietnam, Cambodia, Egypt, India, the Philippines and Thailand have stopped crop exports or raised prices to more than $1,200 a tonne to discourage exports.

Yesterday Philippine leaders warned that people hoarding rice could face economic sabotage charges. A moratorium is being considered on converting agricultural land for building housing or golf courses. Fast-food outlets are being pressed to offer half-portions of rice.

Wealth of info there. Lets take it slow and pick a few intelligence gems from this part of the article.

In Bangladesh, 50,000 households are getting emergency food after rice price rises, because the people cannot afford basic, cheapest food for their families. Government and voluntary organizatoins and UN is on the case.

China has put price controls on cooking oil, grain, meat, milk and eggs.

There have been protests in Guinea, Egypt, Morocco, Uzbekistan, Yemen, Burkina Faso, Mauritania, Niger, Uzbekistan, Senegal, Haiti, Bolivia and Indonesia.

In the last two months Vietnam, Cambodia, Egypt, India, the Philippines and Thailand have stopped crop exports or raised prices to more than $1,200 a tonne to discourage exports.

Yesterday Philippine leaders warned that people hoarding rice could face economic sabotage charges - meaning you could be put in jail for storing rice and not selling it.

Which leads us to the next paragraph - the next part of the article is key; pay attention:
Robert Zeigler, director-general of the International Rice Research Institute, said it could be months before the market got a clear sense of how high prices could go. "The whole market could become paralysed. Who's going to sell rice at $750 a tonne when they think it's going to hit $1,000?"

My god. Businessmen and farmers are holding on to their production of wheat, rice and other basic foodstuffs, because the price of their produce WILL rise - and by holding on to them, make it a self fulfilling prophecy.

Buying low and selling high, at least as regards food, is now illegal in the Phillipines.

He wrote vividly his advice to Westerners which you can read at:
http://www.monbiot.com/archives/2008/04/15/the-pleasures-of-the-flesh/

Next article:

'Perfect storm' nearly doubles price in three months
The 37-year-old, who leases a small plot of land in Samblong, central Thailand, knows the price of rice has rocketed - in some cases nearly doubling in three months - and that she is about to reap the benefit when she sells what her family does not eat.


But the price rises have a downside and spawned a new phenomenon: rice rustling. One night, one of Samniang's neighbour's fields was stripped as it was about to be harvested. Local police have now banned harvesting machines from the roads at night while on the northern plains farmers are camping in their fields, shotguns at the ready.

"I've never heard of it happening before, that people have stolen rice," said Lung Choop, 68, who grows rice on his smallholding. "But it's happening now because rice is so expensive. I guess I'll have to guard my own distant fields when they're ready."

My god!
This has NEVER happened before - people STEALING rice in Thailand, straight from the rice field, at night.

While prices of wheat, corn and other agricultural commodities have surged since the end of 2006, partly because of extra demand for biofuels to offset rising oil prices, rice held fairly steady.

Wheat and corn increased in price because of the biofuel craze, where (corn chiefly) is taken not to feed animals and humans but to produce fuel. It was inevitable that, even though rice is not used to produce much biofuel, it will rise in price because there is less overall foodstuff to go around - globally.

However, prices for the staple food of about 2.5 billion Asian people rocketed two months ago. Thai rice, the global benchmark, which was quoted at just below $400 (£200) a tonne in January rose to $760 (£380) last week.

Inevitable price hike. This article is from March 31, 2008, by the way.

Severe weather across Asia has also damaged production. Record icy temperatures were recorded in China and Vietnam, the latter of which also suffered a pest outbreak. Bangladesh endured a devastating cyclone while Australia suffered a prolonged drought.

It is not 'global warming', it is 'global climate change'. The whole global warming meme is too simplistic and designed for stupified Americans with limited to no science education.

There definitely IS a global climate crisis, however - so on that score Al Gore was right. The whole biofuels craze however - it is now causing a catastophe around the world, as you can see from reading the news articles linked to this blog post.

Analysis:
What we have here is the perfect storm, as one article called it, in food prices.

Because of the insane American policy in the Middle East, the whole Middle East region (and beyond) is destabilized - politically. The people in the region - Arabs - see America invading a country and occupying it, for oil access, presence in the region (ability to strike at others from bases in Iraq if necessary; in effect an ability to be a big bully and scare other Arab nations into pro-America policies) and last but not least, as I wrote about in my blog before, to keep Israel more secure.

The Arabs in the Middle East are ANGRY.

The invasion and occupation of Iraq is driving oil prices to world record levels, which is good to Saudi Arabia and the Bush family both (Bush is at heart a Texas oil family first, and political family second). It is not just them of course - the oil interests are too entrenched in USA, UK, Netherlands etc. to be ignored and they want their pound of flesh (almost to be taken literally off the world's poor...)

Rising oil prices make people around the world look for substitutes to run their cars - anything to make that car go other than gasoline or diesel. This leads to biofuels, a terribly WASTEFUL process of converting crops into fuel for the cars.

This biofuel craze leads to prices rising first for crops from which biofuels are produced (elementary market 101, less production with same demand = higher price), and then the price rises for foodstuffs which can be substituted for those crops used to make biofuels.

Which leads to worldwide hunger.


To answer the question posed by the title - neither Al Gore nor George W Bush and partially, both are responsible. Both have blood on their hands - both are partially responsible for millions around the world suffering economic hardship and hunger.

Al Gore is correct in his alarm that there IS a global climate change, whether man made or because of natural causes is not important (for my money, it is both - certainly humanity is a contributing factor).

But biofuels is the WRONG way to try to solve this problem. This takes food away from humans and puts the crops into cars - it is a wasteful and inefficient way to use food (for the record, meat production is perhaps an even more inefficient way to produce food, as "Animals raised for food in the U.S. consume 90% of the soy crop, 80% of the corn crop, and 70% of its grain" - source Wiki).

Add to that overpopulation.

We are, in short, a very stupid and inefficient species.
Our decisions now are coming back to haunt us.

What will happen now
What will happen is that the rich, first world countries of USA, Western Europe etc. will continue to produce meat for their citizens, and continue to produce biofuels for their cars. Food will become more expensive, and while Americans and Western Europeans will pay more out of pocket for their food (an increase for Americans and Western Europeans from, say 10% of their salaries that they pay for food to, say, 15%), the poorer countries, where people pay over half of their salary to feed themselves and their families, will suffer. Suffer a lot. Many will go hungry.

Many will die - from hunger, malnutrition, rioting, wars.

This will destabilize the Middle East even more, making America even MORE hated (if that is possible) by Arabs; more, it will lead to more riots and more hardship around the world, in Africa and Asia specifically.


A perfect breeding ground for radical movements and terrorists.

A perfect spawning swamp for jihadi terrorists.


What should happen:
The following rosy scenario will never happen. Too many in power are making their family fortunes off the record price of oil, including the top tier of United States government officials, up to and including the current president.

What should happen is this:
The American government - Congress - makes a new grant to the majority of American universities (and perhaps foreign ones also) to research practical ways of taking oil out of the world economy in as many areas as possible. The intelligent president, having the interest of the nation and the world in his heart, immediately signs it - it is only a few billion dollars, the price of a few old F-16s...


Of course, that is a highly unrealistic scenario, starting with the fact that Congress will never make such a law (or at least an effective version of it) because the oil lobby money would guarantee the senators necessity to look for other jobs after next elections...

And the American president having the interest of this country, and even the rest of the world at heart - that is almost science fiction territory...

But let us hope...

Let us proceed with this scenario...

One must remember that oil is used not just for fuel in cars, airplanes, tanks etc. but also in many industrial and chemical processes - for example, plastics are made from oil.

What must happen is that we must wean ourselves from oil, as quickly as possible, and as efficiently as possible, as a nation and later on as the human race.

The United States could be a world wide leader in this enterprise, and it would benefit this country immensely:

First, by taking us off the oil "crack cocaine", we would save billions each month.

Second, it would make us less dependent on other nations, and perhaps we, America, would not need to prop up evil, tyrannical, anti-democratic regimes around the world in oil producing countries (I am looking at you, Saudi Arabia).

Third, it would catapult America into (again, for second time) a global technology leader, with American companies reaping a windfall off the new technologies (not just for cars but plastics production, etc).


A grant towards this nation's universities (and other nations' schools also, perhaps) would be a good first step on a way to (economic and political) sanity.

I am speaking here not as an American, but a human being - Terran, if you will.
A human being concerned about the whole human race.

...

But this will never happen, and people in the 3rd world will starve and die, and both biofuels and meat will be produced; we in America and Western Europe will pay a bit more for food and grumble a bit more.

Meanwhile the venal, criminally negligent ruling elites will make more and more money off this situation, granting them more and more power.

Bonus material:
And the hits just keep on coming.

A good webpage to see regarding this topic is http://www.climatechangenews.org/nFood.html.

Despite the partisan sounding title, all it does is link articles from mainstream newspapers from around the world (but mostly UK and USA) dealing with this topic.

Particularly interesting are these:
Australia's food bowl lies empty:
After America, Australia is normally the second largest exporter of grain, and in a good year it would hope to harvest about 25 million tonnes.

But the country remains in the grip of the worst drought in a century, which is why the 2006 crop yielded only 9.8m tonnes.

Global wheat stocks are at their lowest levels since 1979, and the ongoing Australian drought is one of the reasons why.

This is slightly bigger than Kansas, Dorothy...
This is the 2nd wheat producing country in the world, going from producing 25 million tonnes to barely 10 million tonnes of wheat...

Uganda: 1.5 Million People Face Starvation Due to Foods, Drought
And it goes on and on...

Time to start the alarm bells in worldwide "think tanks" and government offices.

April 07, 2008

TOPIC: World Rice Shortage Bites

http://groups.google.com/group/misc.activism.progressive/browse_thread/thread/56ffd1eded971129?hl=en
==============================




From Cairo to New Delhi to Shanghai, the run on rice is threatening to
disrupt worldwide food supplies as much as the scarcity of confidence on
Wall Street earlier this year roiled credit markets.

China, Egypt, Vietnam and India, representing more than a third of global
rice exports, curbed sales this year, and Indonesia says it may do the same.
Investigators in the Philippines, the world's biggest importer, raided
warehouses last month to crack down on hoarding. The World Bank in
Washington says 33 nations from Mexico to Yemen may face ''social unrest''
after food and energy costs increased for six straight years.

Rice, the staple food for half the world, rose to a record $US20.50 per 100
pounds in Chicago on April 4, double the price a year ago and a fivefold
increase from 2001. It may reach $US22 by November, said Dennis DeLaughter,
owner of Progressive Farm Marketing in Edna, Texas.

''Rice will gain substantially over the next two years,'' said Roland
Jansen, chief executive officer of Pfaffikon, Switzerland-based Mother Earth
Investments, which holds 4% of its $US100 million funds in the grain.
Governments will likely maintain curbs on exports ''because those countries
want to be able to continue to feed their own populations,'' he said.

The upheaval parallels turmoil in global capital markets that seized up nine
months ago when subprime mortgages collapsed. The difference between what it
costs the US government to borrow and the rate banks charge each other for
three month loans ended last week at 1.36 percentage points. A year ago the
gap was 0.33 percentage point.

Export Curbs

Rice growing nations are driving up prices for producers that want to sell
abroad. The Vietnam Food Association said April 2 it asked members to stop
signing export contracts through June, following China, which imposed a 5%
tax on exports as of January 1. Egypt banned rice shipments through October.

Prices ''are not coming back to the levels we came from,'' said Mamadou
Ciss, head of Singapore-based rice broker Hermes Investments. Vietnam's 5%
broken-grain rice may be 40% higher within three months, he said.

Record grain prices are stoking inflation. Wholesale costs in India rose 7%
in the week ended March 22, the fastest pace in more than three years,
underscoring the threat from rising food costs, the Ministry of Commerce and
Industry in New Delhi said April 4.

The increase may boost profits for suppliers. Padiberas Nasional rose the
most in seven years in Kuala Lumpur stock exchange trading last week. The
company is Malaysia's only licensed rice supplier.


Commodity Rally

Goldman Sachs forecasts that all agricultural commodities it covers will
rise during the next six months, except for sugar. Global demand for cereals
will expand 2.6% this year, 1.6 percentage points above the 10-year average,
according to the Food and Agriculture Organization in Rome.

The UBS Bloomberg Constant Maturity Commodity Index of 26 raw materials
gained for six consecutive years and advanced 15% this year.

''We have some very serious problems developing globally for food and
energy,'' said Greg Smith, executive director of Global Commodities in
Adelaide, which manages $US350 million.

World rice stockpiles are at their lowest levels since the 1980s, and the
United Nations forecasts that exports will drop 3.5% this year.

Demand will increase 0.6% this year to 422.5 million tons, while production
will rise about 1% to 422.9 million tons, the U.S. Department of Agriculture
said March 11.

Grains Revolution

Rice yields globally expanded more than 40% from 1980 to 2000, according to
data compiled by the USDA. They've increased only about 5% since then, the
data show. Stockpiles will fall to 75.2 million tons, about half of where
they were at the start of the decade, the USDA said.

''There's been no new technology revolution for the rice seed since the
grains revolution in the 1970s,'' said Mehdi Chaouky, a London-based
agricultural analyst with Diapason Commodities Management, which oversees
$US8 billion.

Some analysts say buyers in Thailand and Vietnam are hoarding grain and may
release it in coming weeks, causing prices to drop. Another risk for
speculators is that the increase will lead farmers to grow more crops. Wheat
rose to a record $US13.495 a bushel in February before dropping as much as
34% in the next five weeks, partly on expectations for more planting.

Curbing Exports

''There are lessons to be learned from what happened in the wheat market,''
said Darren Cooper, a senior economist with the International Grains Council
in London. ''The market will adjust, and moving forward we will see some
restrictions on demand.''

For now, governments are limiting exports to ensure they have enough food at
home. Vietnam, the third-biggest rice exporter after Thailand and India,
will reduce shipments 11% this year to 4 million tons, Prime Minister Nguyen
Tan Dung said March 30.

''Bread is losing its place as the main staple food and rice is replacing
it, and this created the problem,'' Ali Sharaf Eldin, chairman of Egypt's
Chamber of Grains, said in an April 1 interview.

Investigators in Manila caught profiteers last month who were repackaging
20,000 fifty-kilogram bags of rice from subsidized government supplies for
sale as higher-grade grain, according to Ric Diaz, an official at the
National Bureau of Investigation.

'Social Tension'

The Philippines' state-run National Food Authority allows suppliers to sell
at a subsidized price of 18.50 pesos (44.23 US cents) per kilogram in
low-income areas. People in the warehouse north of Manila were preparing to
market the rice as a variety that sells for at least 35 pesos, Diaz said in
a March 31 interview.

Drought is hurting plantings in China, where an estimated 19.4 million
hectares (48 million acres) of arable land had been affected by March 26,
according to Xinhua, the state news agency. Consumer prices in China, the
world's fastest-growing economy, soared 8.7% in February, the most in 11
years.

''A constant price rise of rice can't be viewed as sustainable,'' said Abah
Ofon, a commodities analyst with Standard Chartered in Dubai. ''As with any
staple commodity, there's a risk of social tension when prices begin to
rise.''

http://business.smh.com.au/rice-shortage-bites/20080407-246n.html

April 01, 2008

I know that there were also legal cases against North Dakota where court decision went against Monsanto.

With the death of all grasses that is occurring, Monsanto SHOULD be losing their legal cases!!

And thanks to R. for passing this on - MONSANTO is fond of checking out this blog to see what it posts. Perhaps they will now see some of us are onto them and hope that the full weight of the LAW says that they must stop destroying the earth. It's OUR earth, not THEIR Earth - profit$ be DAMNED.

I have been after MONSANTO full tilt since the laws were passed in Iraq that in reconstruction, MONSANTO seeds had to be used.

Yeah, right - like that's not a CRIME AGAINST HUMANITY.

Veeger


Wolfram Grätz + FPF links
Legal success against Monsanto 'GM' seeds!
Sun Mar 30, 2008 2:05AM
24.132.207.228

LEGAL SUCCESS AGAINST MONSANTO 'GM' SEEDS! MONSANTO MUST PAY THE COST FOR CROP CONTAMINATION AND FIELD CLEAN-UP!

MONSANTO WILL - FROM NOW ON - BE VERY VERY BUSY . . . RUNNING AFTER THEIR OWN "GM" TRASH . . . AND CLEANING UP HUGE NEIGHBORING FIELDS!

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The web address of this text is at Url.: http://www.German-University.org/INDEX-03__000.html#01
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

PRESS RELEASE - Press statement 19 March 2008

PERCY SCHMEISER OF CANADA RECEIVES COMPENSATION FROM MONSANTO

MONSANTO ACCEPTED FULL RESPONSIBILITY FOR GENETIC CONTAMINATION.

Today (March 19, 2008), in an out-of-court agreement (settlement) between Percy Schmeiser and Monsanto - the sole responsibility for the genetic contamination of Schmeiser's RWS fields was accepted by Monsanto.

In an earlier court case, the highest Court of Justice of Canada had recognized the legal standard of the patent protection to Transgene Monsanto's, and this same high Court had at the same time transferred the fundamental question about the legality to issue a patent about "life and forms of life" to the Canadian parliament for re-valuation.

In accordance to earlier valid legal norms is the owner of the patent on a certain gene also the owner of the respective harvest. Concerning the parliament with this gene-patent-affair is still pending.

Since Schmeiser could prove at that time that he has never used genetically changed seeds of Monsanto nor the Total-herbicide Roundup Ready belonging to the Monsanto GM seeds, and he had no advantages from the pollution and contamination of his harvest, he was acquitted for compensation demands by Monsanto.

REMOVE THESE PLANTS PROFESSIONALLY

In the year 2005 Schmeiser found again Monsanto GM Rape plants (Canola Rape plants - Latin: Brassica napus) on his fields. He informed Monsanto and requested that the company removes the plants. Monsanto confirmed Schmeiser in writing that it concerns Roundup Ready raps which is the property of Monsanto. Referring to the existing judgment that the owner of a plant is also liable for plant contamination damages, Schmeiser ordered to remove these plants professionally and forwarded the removal cost invoice to Monsanto.

In earlier attempts to settlement out of court, Monsanto was not willing to pay the removal cost in the amount of 660$ -- Schmeiser subsequently sued the company.

"GAG AGREEMENT" TO BE SILENT

Monsanto would have paid for the contamination damage, but only under the special condition that Schmeiser would have signed a "gag agreement" to be silent over the damage case, which would have bared and voided the Right for him and/or his wife for the remainder of their life to ever speak about the case publicly or to ever again sue Monsanto for contamination of its harvest in the future before any court.

SCHMEISER REJECTED. THE DEMANDS RAISED BY MONSANTO ARE TOTALLY IMMORAL.

When the judge ask Monsanto why it has not simply paid the low amount of 660$, Monsanto-lawyer Richard W. Danyliuk answered, that there is a lot more involved than just $660.

One hour before the March 19. 2008 scheduled court hearing accepted Monsanto all demands of Percy Schmeiser and accepted its responsibility for the contamination on Schmeiser's [crop] fields.

Monsanto not only paid for the damage, but accepted also, that Schmeiser now reports and informs the public about the entire history of this case and to publicly express his opinion and position about this case.

The acceptance of responsibility by Monsanto, as the owner of the patented Transgene, for the contamination of neighboring fields - opens now for farmers on the entire planet the proper way for compensation demands at
Monsanto.

ADDITIONAL SOURCES - Url.: http://www.percy-schmeiser-on-tour.org <http://www.percy-schmeiser-on-tour.org/
and - Url.: http://www.percyschmeiser.com <http://www.percyschmeiser.com/> >

Interviews: Percy Schmeiser, Canada: 001-306 369 25 20 (in English)

V.i.S.d.P.: Jürgen Binder, Deutschland (in Deutsch) - Email: presse@percy-schmeiser-on-tour.org

[DISCLAIMER: The text above has been translated from German into English by Wolfram Grätz (Engl.: Graetz). The German language text had been submitted to me via Email as a "Press Release Statement". This text is NOT an official legal document of the specific legal correspondence. I am NOT responsible NOR liable in any form whatsoever for unintended mis-translation or the content of the text above.]

-0-

FPF - Related references:

* OFFSPRING DIED WHEN RATS ATE GENETICALLY ENGINEERED SOY - Url.: http://disc.server.com/discussion.cgi?disc=149495;article=97268;title=APFN

* EVERYBODY WHO EATS, DRINKS AND INHALES SHOULD READ THIS: THE POTENTIAL HAZARDS OF GENETIC ENGINEERING - Url.: http://disc.server.com/discussion.cgi?disc=234999;article=1082;title=APFN%20MESSAGE%20BOARD

* "DOOMSDAY SEED VAULT" IN THE ARCTIC - Bill Gates, Rockefeller and the GMO giants know something we don’t - By F. William Engdahl in Global Research, December 4, 2007 - Url.: http://www.globalresearch.ca/PrintArticle.php?articleId=7529

* MONSANTO WHISTLEBLOWER SAYS GENETICALLY ENGINEERED CROPS MAY CAUSE DISEASE - Url.: http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=viewArticle&code=SMI20061119&articleId=3912

* THE SMEARING OF ZIMBABWE STARTED AFTER REFUSING MONSANTO'S FRANKENSTEIN SEEDS - THE 'GM' PROFITEERS JUST GO ON MURDERING FOR PROFIT: US calls food aid refusal a crime against humanity - Url.: http://www.planetark.org/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/18949/newsDate/9-Dec-2002/story.htm

* FPF-COPYRIGHT NOTICE - In accordance with Title 17 U. S. C. Section 107 - any copyrighted work in this message is distributed by the Foreign Press Foundation under fair use, without profit or payment, to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the information. Url.: http://tinyurl.com/3z3r6

FOREIGN PRESS FOUNDATION
Editor: Henk Ruyssenaars
http://tinyurl.com/2wegpc
The Netherlands
fpf@chello.nl

March 27, 2008

Michael Vail posted item on food rioting

Grain Prices Soar Globally Leading To Food Riots


food crisis Rice farmers here are staying awake in shifts at night to guard their fields from thieves. In Peru, shortages of wheat flour are prompting the military to make bread with potato flour, a native crop. In Egypt, Cameroon, and Burkina Faso food riots have broken out in the past week.

Around the world, governments and aid groups are grappling with the escalating cost of basic grains. In December, 37 countries faced a food crisis, reports the UN Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO), and 20 nations had imposed some form of food-price controls.

In Asia, where rice is on every plate, prices are shooting up almost daily. Premium Thai fragrant rice now costs $900 per ton, a nearly 30 percent rise from a month ago.

Exporters say the price could eclipse $1,000 per ton by June. Similarly, prices of white rice have climbed about 50 percent since January to $600 per ton and are projected to jump another 40 percent to $800 per ton in April.

The skyrocketing prices have prompted millers to default on rice supply contracts and bandits to steal rice as they aim to hoard the crop, and sell it later, as prices continue to rise.

“The farmers are afraid as their fields have been robbed in the nighttime,” says Sarayouth Phumithon, an official at the Thai government’s Bureau of Rice Strategy and Supply. “This is just the beginning. The problem will get worse if the price keeps increasing.” food clashes

The reported thefts in five rice-growing provinces in central Thailand are the first signs of criminal activity in this region stemming from the sharpest global spike in commodity prices since the oil crisis in the mid-1970s. Across the world, higher food prices are triggering thefts and violence – both by people who can’t afford to eat and those who want to make an easy buck.

Three men delivering food for the World Food Programme (WFP) in Sudan were reported killed Tuesday, the latest in a surge of attacks that have delayed the arrival of vital supplies to some 2 million people in the region.

So far this year, the UN agency says 56 trucks have been hijacked in Sudan; 36 trucks remain missing, and 24 drivers are unaccounted for. The WFP says that banditry has reduced by half the amount of food normally transported to the western region of Darfur at this time of year.

“All parties must recognize that the drivers of humanitarian vehicles and their cargo are serving a neutral purpose,” WFP Sudan representative Kenro Oshidari said in a statement.

Last year, the Food and Agriculture Organization’s food price index increased an unprecedented 40 percent from 2006, and this year it is projected to continue rising. Surging oil prices (in turn, boosting fertilizer and transport costs) combined with a drop in production due to droughts in Australia and the Ukraine have helped to drain global food stocks.

While rice production is rising, consumption is growing faster. The US Department of Agriculture forecast rice stocks to fall to their lowest level since the mid-1970s, and wheat stocks are projected to hit their lowest point since 1946, the year after World War II ended.

These factors, combined with a falling US dollar, steadily rising demand from developing countries, and biofuel policies that mop up excess cereal production, have all helped boost world prices.

The FAO expects food prices to stay high for the next three to five years, presenting a challenge for governments trying to keep domestic food prices low in order to keep poor citizens properly fed and avoid mass protests and social unrest.

Some countries like Vietnam, India, and Pakistan have banned grain exports. On Wednesday, Cambodia’s prime minister ordered a two-month ban on rice exports to neighboring Thailand and Vietnam “to guarantee food security.”

Meanwhile food importers Indonesia, Korea, and Mongolia have cut or reduced import tariffs. As Philippine farmers warned that the country was facing a serious rice shortage, the government signed a deal Wednesday to import 1.5 million metric tons (1.65 million US tons) of rice from Vietnam.

Analysts note that the current shortage isn’t hitting as many people as hard as past shortages. As incomes rise worldwide, food is a smaller portion of the family budget. “Governments have tried to protect domestic prices from fluctuations in international prices, and they have succeeded in the past,” says Sumiter Broca, a policy analyst at the FAO. “The key point is that the proportion of income spent on food is much lower than it used to be, so that provides a cushion. The situation is not as serious as it was in 1974.”

Citizens of Nepal and India now spend about 35 to 40 percent of income on food, down from about 70 to 80 percent in the early 1970s, Mr. Broca says. In developing countries, food costs eat up only about 7 percent of household incomes.

The FAO expects food prices to stabilize and eventually drop as farmers plant more grains. That’s already starting to happen with wheat and corn. But the next few years could be difficult.

On Monday, the WFP, a UN agency that distributes food aid to some 70 million poor people, made an “extraordinary emergency appeal” to donor countries for $500 million to prevent cutbacks in its global operations.

In the past two weeks, two rice suppliers in Cambodia defaulted on contracts with the WFP, claiming the new higher prices would offset any penalty for reneging on the contract.

“That’s extremely worrying, as it indicates the price of rice, just like the price of wheat, is now continuing to increase,” says Paul Risley, a WFP spokesman. “That makes it very difficult for us to find rice at an affordable price. The ability to end malnutrition is limited when food prices are so high.”

Countries with higher foreign exchange reserves and food stocks, including China, Japan, and India, can still afford the high food prices if necessary. But nations with low currency reserves like the Philippines, Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Nepal may need assistance from international financial institutions to afford food if prices continue to spike.

Although higher food prices mean trouble for consumers and governments, they do increase incomes for farmers – assuming their crops aren’t stolen. Still, farmers aren’t making as much money as a middleman with a good-sized warehouse.

Rice millers in Thailand are defaulting on contracts with exporters to capitalize on higher prices, and speculators are renting warehouses to store paddy. Rice in paddy form (in the husk) can be stored for about a year and a half before quality starts to deteriorate, and milled rice can be held for another six months.

“Nobody dares to sell now as we don’t know where the price is going,” says Chookiat Ophaswongse, president of Thailand’s Rice Exporters Association. Although Thailand, the world’s largest rice exporter, has shipped record amounts in January and February, traders have lost money on futures contracts as prices have jumped more quickly than anyone expected, he says.

In the Philippines, President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo has vowed to crack down on rice hoarders. The government has ordered police to stake out warehouses and follow trucks to see where the rice was going, she said.

Thailand may try to sell off 2.1 million tons of rice stocks to keep domestic prices low. But as long as prices stay high, Thai farmers will need to burn the midnight oil keeping watch over their fields.

“Most farmers must sell crops immediately as they don’t have a good warehouse that can withstand attacks from rats, birds, chickens – or human thieves,” says Mr. Sarayouth.

Associated Press reports were used in this story.

March 17, 2008

More on wheat blight . it;'s a crime against humanity what is happening.

Billions at risk from wheat super-blight

  • 03 April 2007
  • Exclusive from New Scientist Print Edition. Subscribe and get 4 free issues
  • Debora Mackenzie
See also, Of course hemp comes up! Hemp does everything! [abovetopsecret.com] With it, you can make rope, clothes, food, furnature, computer chips, gold, planets, the One Ring, you name it, hemp can do it!

This thing has immense potential for social and human destruction." Startling words - but spoken by the father of the Green Revolution, Nobel laureate Norman Borlaug, they are not easily dismissed.

An infection is coming, and almost no one has heard about it. This infection isn't going to give you flu, or TB. In fact, it isn't interested in you at all. It is after the wheat plants that feed more people than any other single food source on the planet. And because of cutbacks in international research, we aren't prepared. The famines that were banished by the advent of disease-resistant crops in the Green Revolution of the 1960s could return, Borlaug told New Scientist.

The disease is Ug99, a virulent strain of black stem rust fungus (Puccinia graminis), discovered in Uganda in 1999. Since the Green Revolution, farmers everywhere have grown wheat varieties that resist stem rust, but Ug99 has evolved to take advantage of those varieties, and almost no wheat crops anywhere are resistant to it.

The strain has spread slowly across east Africa, but in January this year spores blew across to Yemen, and north into Sudan (see Map). Scientists who have tracked similar airborne spores in this part of the world say it will now blow into Egypt, Turkey and the Middle East, and on to India, lands where a billion people depend on wheat.

There is hope: this week scientists are assessing the first Ug99-resistant varieties of wheat that might be used for crops. However, it will take another five to eight years to breed up enough seed to plant all our wheat fields.

The threat couldn't have come at a worse time. Consumption has outstripped production in six of the last seven years, and stocks are at their lowest since 1972. Wheat prices jumped 14 per cent last year.

Black stem rust itself is nothing new. It has been a major blight on wheat production since the rise of agriculture, and the Romans even prayed to a stem rust god, Robigus. It can reduce a field of ripening grain to a dead, tangled mass, and vast outbreaks regularly used to rip through wheat regions. The last to hit the North American breadbasket, in 1954, wiped out 40 per cent of the crop. In the cold war both the US and the Soviet Union stockpiled stem rust spores as a biological weapon.

After the 1954 epidemic, Borlaug began work in Mexico on developing wheat that resisted stem rust. The project grew into the International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center, known by its Spanish acronym CIMMYT. The rust-resistant, high-yielding wheat it developed banished chronic hunger in much of the world, ended stem rust outbreaks, and won Borlaug the Nobel peace prize in 1970.

Yet once again Borlaug - now 93 and fighting cancer - is leading the charge against his old enemy. When Ug99 turned up in Kenya in 2002, he sounded the alarm. "Too many years had gone by and no one was taking Ug99 seriously," he says. He blames complacency, and the dismantling of training and wheat testing programmes, after 40 years without outbreaks.

Now a Global Rust Initiative (GRI) is under way at CIMMYT. It's head, Rick Ward, blames the delay on cuts, starting in the 1980s, in CIMMYT's funding for routine monitoring and maintenance of crops and pests.

"CIMMYT was slow to detect the extent of susceptibility to Ug99 [because] it didn't have the scientific eyes and ears on the ground any more," says Chris Dowswell of CIMMYT. "Once it did, it had to start a laborious fund-raising campaign to respond."

Ward is now being promised adequate support as fears grow in rich wheat-growing countries, but meanwhile Ug99 has got worse. It was first noticed because it started appearing on wheat previously protected by a gene complex called Sr31, the backbone of stem rust resistance in most wheat farmed worldwide. Then last year it acquired the ability to defeat another widely used complex, Sr24. "Of the 50 genes we know for resistance to stem rust, only 10 work even partially against Ug99," says Ward. Those are present in less than 1 per cent of the crop.

The first line of defence is fungicide, but the poor farmers who stand to lose most from the blight generally cannot afford it, or don't have the equipment or know-how to apply it. CIMMYT is considering "fire brigade" spray teams armed with cheap, generic fungicides in poor areas. However, they will be competing with the rich for fungicide, and depending on where Ug99 strikes, stocks could be limited.

Even rich countries face problems. The US has been fighting soybean rust with fungicide ever since spores blew in on hurricane Ivan in 2004. If Ug99 arrives as well, the US could be in trouble because it doesn't make enough fungicide for both crops. Kitty Cardwell of the US Department of Agriculture says there might be enough if the US fights Ug99 the same way as it is tackling soya rust: spotting outbreaks with a fast DNA-based field test and posting the results on an interactive website (www.sbrusa.net), so farmers spray only when danger looms. Ultimately, says Ward, the only real answer "is to get new, resistant varieties out there".

CIMMYT has been working on this by taking countries' top-yielding varieties and crossing them with wheat from its seed collections that does resist Ug99. For two years now the crosses have been tested for resistance at field stations in Njoro, Kenya, and in Ethiopia, where it is safe to release Ug99 as it is already there. Resistant strains are sent back to CIMMYT in Mexico and assessed for yield and other qualities, then sent out again for further tests. Resistant lines are now being grown on 27 plots in Nepal, India, Afghanistan and Pakistan.

So far so good, but the real challenge is multiplying up enough resistant seed so that if Ug99 hits, there will be enough to plant the next crop. This takes time - and it will only happen if the new resistant varieties match or exceed existing yields. Nor is it an exact science. No one knows why wheat that looks good in Mexico might grow as well in Egypt, say, but fail in China unless it is crossed with a local variety.

There is nothing for it but to do the tests, says Ravi Singh, the GRI's chief wheat pathologist. The resistant lines must be just as good as the ones people are growing now, he says, or farmers won't use them, and government-owned seed companies that dominate the wheat industry in developing countries won't sell them, no matter what new disease the scientists say is coming.

Singh calculates that if he can get countries to devote 3 to 5 per cent of their wheat-growing area to resistant varieties, the seed harvest will be enough to plant the whole country with resistant wheat if Ug99 hits.

So it's a race, and who wins depends on what Ug99 does now. Stem rust can arrive in a new area and lurk for years before it gets the right conditions for an outbreak. "It won't suddenly explode everywhere. It will be like a moving storm," says Dowswell.

However, Ug99 has another ace up its sleeve. The spores blowing in the wind now are from the asexual stage that grows on wheat. If any blow onto the leaves of its other host, the barberry bush (Berberis vulgaris), they will change into the sexual form and swap genes with whatever other stem rusts they find. Barberry is native to west Asia. "As if it wasn't challenging enough breeding varieties that resist this thing," laments Ward. "All I know is that what blows into Iran will not be the same as what blows out."

What's more, Ug99 will find agriculture has changed to its liking in the decades stem rust has been away. "Forty years ago most wheat wasn't irrigated and heavily fertilised," says Borlaug. Now, thanks to the Green Revolution he helped bring about, it is. That means modern wheat fields are a damper, denser thicket of stems, where dew can linger till noon - just right for fungus.

Another worry is that travel has exploded in the past 40 years. There have now been several documented cases of travellers carrying rust spores on their clothing. Some fear Ug99 will hitchhike as much as it flies - and its spread need not be innocent. New Scientist has learned that the US Department of Homeland Security met in March to discuss the possibility that someone could transport Ug99 deliberately.

Even at 93, Borlaug is looking to the long term. Eventually, scientists will have to create wheat with a wide spectrum of resistances. The genes may be hiding in other grains and grasses. "Why has rice had no rusts for millions of years?" he asks.

For now, Borlaug says, we have to rely on fungicides, wheat breeding and luck. "We're moving as fast as we can now, but we started three years too late," he says. "We'd better have some good luck. Governments think this is still small and local, but these things build up."

The USDA reports [usda.gov] that the virus can infect wheat which has the (previously) most effective rust resistant genes.

Work is being done [newscientist.com] to protect crops, but Norman Borlaug [wikipedia.org] says "This thing has immense potential for social and human destruction." Oh yes, and you can say goodbye to cheap white bread [coldclimategardening.com].


On The Death of Grass:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Death_of_Grass [wikipedia.org]

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0066154/
[imdb.com]

Newly Discovered Fungus Threatens World Wheat Crop

Posted by Zonk on Sunday March 16, @11:19PM
from the swarm-of-hungry-hungry-hippos-not-helping dept.
RickRussellTX writes "The UN reports that a variety of the rust fungus originally detected in Uganda in 1999 has already spread as far north as Iran, threatening wheat production across its range. The fungus infects wheat stems and affects 80% of wheat varieties, putting crops at risk and threatening the food sources for billions of people across central Asia. Although scientists believe they can develop resistant hybrids, the fungus is moving much faster than anticipated and resistant hybrids may still be years away. Meanwhile, national governments in the path of the fungus are telling folks that there is nothing to worry about."


The "magic" word: Monsanto and wheat shortages


"This thing has immense potential for social and human destruction." Startling words - but spoken by the father of the Green Revolution, Nobel laureate Norman Borlaug, they are not easily dismissed.

An infection is coming, and almost no one has heard about it. This infection isn't going to give you flu, or TB. In fact, it isn't interested in you at all. It is after the wheat plants that feed more people than any other single food source on the planet. And because of cutbacks in international research, we aren't prepared. The famines that were banished by the advent of disease-resistant crops in the Green Revolution of the 1960s could return, Borlaug told New Scientist.

The disease is Ug99, a virulent strain of black stem rust fungus (Puccinia graminis), discovered in Uganda in 1999. Since the Green Revolution, farmers everywhere have grown wheat varieties that resist stem rust, but Ug99 has evolved to take advantage of those varieties, and almost no wheat crops anywhere are resistant to it.

The strain has spread slowly across east Africa, but in January this year spores blew across to Yemen, and north into Sudan (see Map). Scientists who have tracked similar airborne spores in this part of the world say it will now blow into Egypt, Turkey and the Middle East, and on to India, lands where a billion people depend on wheat.

There is hope: this week scientists are assessing the first Ug99-resistant varieties of wheat that might be used for crops. However, it will take another five to eight years to breed up enough seed to plant all our wheat fields.

The threat couldn't have come at a worse time. Consumption has outstripped production in six of the last seven years, and stocks are at their lowest since 1972. Wheat prices jumped 14 per cent last year.

Black stem rust itself is nothing new. It has been a major blight on wheat production since the rise of agriculture, and the Romans even prayed to a stem rust god, Robigus. It can reduce a field of ripening grain to a dead, tangled mass, and vast outbreaks regularly used to rip through wheat regions. The last to hit the North American breadbasket, in 1954, wiped out 40 per cent of the crop. In the cold war both the US and the Soviet Union stockpiled stem rust spores as a biological weapon.

After the 1954 epidemic, Borlaug began work in Mexico on developing wheat that resisted stem rust. The project grew into the International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center, known by its Spanish acronym CIMMYT. The rust-resistant, high-yielding wheat it developed banished chronic hunger in much of the world, ended stem rust outbreaks, and won Borlaug the Nobel peace prize in 1970.

Yet once again Borlaug - now 93 and fighting cancer - is leading the charge against his old enemy. When Ug99 turned up in Kenya in 2002, he sounded the alarm.

"Too many years had gone by and no one was taking Ug99 seriously,"
he says. He blames complacency, and the dismantling of training and wheat testing programmes, after 40 years without outbreaks.

Now a Global Rust Initiative (GRI) is under way at CIMMYT. It's head, Rick Ward, blames the delay on cuts, starting in the 1980s, in CIMMYT's funding for routine monitoring and maintenance of crops and pests.

"CIMMYT was slow to detect the extent of susceptibility to Ug99 [because] it didn't have the scientific eyes and ears on the ground any more," says Chris Dowswell of CIMMYT. "Once it did, it had to start a laborious fund-raising campaign to respond."

Ward is now being promised adequate support as fears grow in rich wheat-growing countries, but meanwhile Ug99 has got worse. It was first noticed because it started appearing on wheat previously protected by a gene complex called Sr31, the backbone of stem rust resistance in most wheat farmed worldwide. Then last year it acquired the ability to defeat another widely used complex, Sr24. "Of the 50 genes we know for resistance to stem rust, only 10 work even partially against Ug99," says Ward. Those are present in less than 1 per cent of the crop.

The first line of defence is fungicide, but the poor farmers who stand to lose most from the blight generally cannot afford it, or don't have the equipment or know-how to apply it. CIMMYT is considering "fire brigade" spray teams armed with cheap, generic fungicides in poor areas. However, they will be competing with the rich for fungicide, and depending on where Ug99 strikes, stocks could be limited.

Even rich countries face problems. The US has been fighting soybean rust with fungicide ever since spores blew in on hurricane Ivan in 2004. If Ug99 arrives as well, the US could be in trouble because it doesn't make enough fungicide for both crops. Kitty Cardwell of the US Department of Agriculture says there might be enough if the US fights Ug99 the same way as it is tackling soya rust: spotting outbreaks with a fast DNA-based field test and posting the results on an interactive website (www.sbrusa.net), so farmers spray only when danger looms. Ultimately, says Ward, the only real answer

"is to get new, resistant varieties out there".

CIMMYT has been working on this by taking countries' top-yielding varieties and crossing them with wheat from its seed collections that does resist Ug99. For two years now the crosses have been tested for resistance at field stations in Njoro, Kenya, and in Ethiopia, where it is safe to release Ug99 as it is already there. Resistant strains are sent back to CIMMYT in Mexico and assessed for yield and other qualities, then sent out again for further tests. Resistant lines are now being grown on 27 plots in Nepal, India, Afghanistan and Pakistan.

So far so good, but the real challenge is multiplying up enough resistant seed so that if Ug99 hits, there will be enough to plant the next crop. This takes time - and it will only happen if the new resistant varieties match or exceed existing yields. Nor is it an exact science. No one knows why wheat that looks good in Mexico might grow as well in Egypt, say, but fail in China unless it is crossed with a local variety.

There is nothing for it but to do the tests, says Ravi Singh, the GRI's chief wheat pathologist. The resistant lines must be just as good as the ones people are growing now, he says, or farmers won't use them, and government-owned seed companies that dominate the wheat industry in developing countries won't sell them, no matter what new disease the scientists say is coming.

Singh calculates that if he can get countries to devote 3 to 5 per cent of their wheat-growing area to resistant varieties, the seed harvest will be enough to plant the whole country with resistant wheat if Ug99 hits.

So it's a race, and who wins depends on what Ug99 does now. Stem rust can arrive in a new area and lurk for years before it gets the right conditions for an outbreak. "It won't suddenly explode everywhere. It will be like a moving storm," says Dowswell.

However, Ug99 has another ace up its sleeve. The spores blowing in the wind now are from the asexual stage that grows on wheat. If any blow onto the leaves of its other host, the barberry bush (Berberis vulgaris), they will change into the sexual form and swap genes with whatever other stem rusts they find. Barberry is native to west Asia. "As if it wasn't challenging enough breeding varieties that resist this thing," laments Ward. "All I know is that what blows into Iran will not be the same as what blows out."

What's more, Ug99 will find agriculture has changed to its liking in the decades stem rust has been away. "Forty years ago most wheat wasn't irrigated and heavily fertilised," says Borlaug. Now, thanks to the Green Revolution he helped bring about, it is. That means modern wheat fields are a damper, denser thicket of stems, where dew can linger till noon - just right for fungus.

Another worry is that travel has exploded in the past 40 years. There have now been several documented cases of travellers carrying rust spores on their clothing. Some fear Ug99 will hitchhike as much as it flies - and its spread need not be innocent. New Scientist has learned that the US Department of Homeland Security met in March to discuss the possibility that someone could transport Ug99 deliberately.

Even at 93, Borlaug is looking to the long term. Eventually, scientists will have to create wheat with a wide spectrum of resistances. The genes may be hiding in other grains and grasses. "Why has rice had no rusts for millions of years?" he asks.

For now, Borlaug says, we have to rely on fungicides, wheat breeding and luck. "We're moving as fast as we can now, but we started three years too late," he says. "We'd better have some good luck. Governments think this is still small and local, but these things build up."

From issue 2598 of New Scientist magazine, 03 April 2007, page 6-7


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