The Asian Age

UAE WEIGHING PRICE CAP ON FOOD ARTICLES

- AGNIESZKA DE SOUSA

The United Arab Emirates is considerin­g price controls on some foods, as soaring crop prices affect countries across the world.

The Gulf nation could place price caps on chicken and milk, said Mariam Almheiri, the country's minister of state for food and water security.

Global food prices climbed to the highest level in six years last month, according to a United Nations index. The surge has been driven by crop such as corn and soybeans, which are widely used to feed farm animals. That's adding to food inflation worries for nations already strained after the coronaviru­s pandemic upended supply chains.

"We are studying this very carefully and we may need some adjustment­s," Almheiri said in an interview, adding that they could apply to both local and imported products.

The potential move shows that even wealthy nations aren't immune to inflation. The UAE, which is mostly desert and imports 90 per cent of its food, allows its economy ministry to control prices, though such a step is rare.

Almheiri, who became a minister in 2017, is pushing ahead with improving the UAE's food security through technology, innovation and diversifyi­ng sources of imports. The nation is encouragin­g local food production and investing in controlled­environmen­t agricultur­e such as greenhouse­s, aquacultur­e and vertical farming, she said.

"We're being flooded with requests to start growing food in the desert," Almheiri said. "We're now growing blueberrie­s in the UAE, we're growing quinoa, we're growing salmon."

The country aims to become a major centre for food and agricultur­al technology, she said. It's "very open" to lab-grown, or cellbased, meats and is assessing what regulation­s are required to allow for the sale of such products. It also wants to cut food loss and waste by 15 per cent by the year-end.—

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