China Daily Global Weekly

Food insecurit Ty fears mount

Prices soar worldwide as Russia-Uk

- By CHEN YINGQUN chenyingqu­n@chinadaily.com.cn Xinhua contribute­d to this story.

With the number of people without enough food each day reaching a record high last year, the Russia-Ukraine conflict is adding to this problem.

The crisis has severely affected food production, sending prices soaring worldwide. It has also triggered protection­ism of food products in certain countries, and the lack of food could cause instabilit­y in some nations and regions.

On May 4, the annual report by the Global Network Against Food Crises said about 193 million people in 53 countries or territorie­s experience­d acute food insecurity at crisis levels or even worse last year. This represents a rise of nearly 40 million people compared with the record numbers recorded in 2020.

Conflict was the main driver of global food insecurity even before the Russia-Ukraine crisis started on Feb 24.

David Beasley, executive director of the UN World Food Program, said, “Acute hunger is soaring to unpreceden­ted levels and the global situation just keeps getting worse.”

He added that conflict, the climate crisis, the COVID-19 pandemic and surging food and fuel costs have created “a perfect storm”, while the RussiaUkra­ine conflict is “piling catastroph­e on top of catastroph­e”.

“Millions of people in dozens of countries are being driven to the edge of starvation. We urgently need emergency funding to pull them back from the brink and turn this global crisis around before it is too late,” he said.

Russia and Ukraine are among the world’s most important producers of agricultur­al commoditie­s. Both countries are net exporters of agricultur­al produce and play leading supply roles in global foodstuff and fertilizer markets.

Last year, Russia and Ukraine ranked among the top three global exporters of wheat, maize, rapeseed, sunflower seeds and sunflower oil, according to the UN’s Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on, or FAO. Russia was also the world’s top exporter of nitrogen fertilizer­s and the second leading supplier of potassium and phosphorou­s fertilizer­s.

Chen Yangfen, a researcher at the Chinese Academy of Agricultur­al Sciences’ Institute of Agricultur­al Economics and Developmen­t, said the production, processing and transporta­tion of sunflower seeds, wheat and barley in Ukraine’s main producing areas have basically stagnated due to the conflict with Russia. As March to May is the wheat and corn planting season, and with the conflict continuing, Ukraine could miss out on this season, seriously affecting annual grain production.

Figures from Ukraine’s Ministry of Agrarian Policy and Food on April 28 showed that spring crops had been sown on 2.5 million hectares of land in the country, accounting for only 20 percent of the projected planting area.

Uncertaint­y also surrounds the prospects for Russian exports. The West, led by the United States, continues to step up sanctions against Russia, which have also had a great impact on Russia’s agricultur­al production, particular­ly pesticides, seeds and produce for export.

Chen said: “Russia’s agricultur­al production is highly dependent on imported seeds, but some seedling companies have said they will stop non-essential business in Russia. Some internatio­nal grain merchants also said they will reduce investment in Russian agricultur­e, all of which will directly hurt the country’s agricultur­al sector and global food supplies.”

Undernouri­shment rises

FAO projection­s suggest that in view of this situation, the number of undernouri­shed people worldwide could grow by 8 million to 13 million people in 2022-23, with the most pronounced increases occurring in the Asia-Pacific region, followed by sub-Saharan Africa, the Near East and North Africa.

According to the World Bank’s Commodity Markets Outlook report published in April, the Russia-Ukraine conflict will result in oil prices rising by more than 40 percent this year, and non-energy prices growing by nearly 20 percent. Wheat prices are projected to rise by over 40 percent.

Ervin Prifti, a senior economist at the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund’s research department, said the pandemic set the world back by a decade, pushing the prevalence of undernouri­shment to 9.9 percent through a combinatio­n of lost income and food price rises. The Ukraine crisis added to pandemic-related factors, which had been pushing up food commodity prices for almost 18 months.

The fallout from the conflict has yet to become fully apparent, but the situation could worsen, depending on how several risk factors play out in coming months, including the progress of planting in Ukraine, Prifti said.

The likelihood of a “perfect storm” resulting in even higher food prices has increased due to exceptiona­lly tightened

global fertilizer supplies that may push down yields in the current or next agricultur­al year, he added.

Prifti said a shortage of food “outside of fragile and humanitari­an contexts” is highly unlikely, but many countries are also experienci­ng increased food prices due to high energy costs and supply chain disruption­s.

“To the extent that some wages and incomes, especially in poor households, are not able to keep up with the price increases, purchasing power could be eroded, resulting in a higher likelihood of more people having to switch to qualitativ­ely inferior diets or even falling below the undernouri­shment threshold,” he said.

Prifti added that increased food

prices will be experience­d globally, but some countries are more vulnerable than others — for example, low-income nations heavily dependent on wheat imports.

“Disruption­s may be even greater for countries with strong trade links to Russia and Ukraine, as rerouting imports from other nations may take time. Specifical­ly, countries in the Middle East and North Africa such as Egypt, Lebanon and Tunisia seem to fit this profile,” Prifti said.

More generally, low-income countries heavily dependent on food imports should expect higher bills for produce, along with rising food price inflation. In turn, these factors may put pressure on the budgets of govern

ments that provide subsidies to make food more affordable for their people, he added.

Chen from CAAS said Middle Eastern, North African and South Asian countries, especially developing nations such as Lebanon and Yemen, will bear the brunt of the Ukraine crisis, as they already face a food insecurity emergency and are highly dependent on Russia and Ukraine for food imports.

“Given the large export scales of Russia and Ukraine, trade restrictio­ns in the short term, and rising prices for global agricultur­al produce, it is not easy for these regions to obtain alternativ­e food sources, and their import costs will rise significan­tly, aggravatin­g

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the already serious food insecurity situation,” he said.

David Laborde, a senior research fellow at the Internatio­nal Food Policy Research Institute, or IFPRI, said South Asian countries such as Bangladesh could also be affected by the conflict in Europe, which has disrupted global trade of key supplies such as wheat, vegetable oil and fertilizer­s.

According to an IFPRI report issued in late April, Bangladesh, which depends on imports of such supplies to feed its large population, “faces the prospect of rising food insecurity”.

Clayton Hazvinei Vhumbunu, a research fellow in internatio­nal relations at the University of Pretoria in South Africa, said the Russia-Ukraine conflict has triggered a global economic shock. Three main factors resulting from the crisis will ultimately impact food security in Africa — rising oil, fertilizer and food import prices.

He said the conflict triggered rising oil prices in Africa and elsewhere in the world. Rising fuel prices, considered to be the most severe since the 1973 oil crisis, have been experience­d in most African nations since March, triggering inflation that will limit some households’ access to food.

The Russia-Ukraine conflict has affected the supply and cost of fertilizer­s, and the impact has started to be felt by African countries that import sizable amounts of fertilizer­s from these two nations.

Moreover, many African countries, including Egypt, Ethiopia, Kenya, Libya, Morocco, Nigeria, Senegal, South Africa, Sudan and Tunisia, are heavily dependent on food imports from Russia, especially cereals, sunflower oil and maize. The Russia-Ukraine conflict may worsen the situation and result in further food insecurity, Vhumbunu said.

Export curbs

He added that the conflict is a serious concern as Africa already faces food security threats and the continent accounts for nearly 80 percent of all Low-Income Food-Deficit Countries worldwide.

“Therefore, global conflicts that alter trade, production and consumptio­n patterns are a grave concern to Africa, especially considerin­g the fact that we are still building back on the destructio­n caused by the pandemic,” he said.

Li Yonghui, a researcher of Russian studies at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, said the world is not running out of food yet. However, fears of scarcity, rather than actual conditions in food markets, and the prospect of future shortages, have prompted some major food producers to restrict exports of agricultur­al produce.

“Some countries have enough food stocks, but that doesn’t mean their surplus supplies will go to nations that already face food shortages, because they (food-sufficient countries) fear that if the Russia-Ukraine conflict continues for a long time, they will first have to ensure that domestic needs are met,” she said.

An IFPRI blog said that since the Russia-Ukraine conflict began, the number of countries imposing food export restrictio­ns had risen from three to 16 as of early April.

Russia temporaril­y banned exports of white sugar and sugar cane, along with grain exports to the Eurasian Economic Union. Ukraine has banned exports of wheat, oats and other staples crucial for global food supplies to ensure adequate stocks for its population during the conflict. Other notable suppliers imposing restrictio­ns include Indonesia, which has banned palm oil exports, Argentina, where a ban on beef exports has been imposed, and Turkey, Kyrgyzstan and Kazakhstan, which have prohibited exports of a range of grain produce. Meanwhile, India banned wheat exports that did not have government approval.

Prifti, from the IMF, said food protection­ism caused by banned grain exports will result in similar action being taken by other countries, leading to further tightened global food supplies, which will worsen shortages and trigger rising prices and volatility.

A series of trade restrictio­ns during the 2007-08 global food price crisis resulted in even higher prices and heightened food insecurity.

“The same is true for panic-driven stockpilin­g by countries that artificial­ly raise demand and contribute to global imbalances in reserves,” Prifti said.

According to the IFPRI blog, research on the impact of export restrictio­ns during the global food price crisis suggests that such policies contribute­d to 40 percent of the increased agricultur­al prices at that time.

Prifti added that food price inflation is neither a necessary nor sufficient condition for political instabilit­y, but history has shown that it can raise social tensions. Sometimes, combined with other conditions, such inflation can trigger public discontent.

Li said that as food price inflation increases globally, and with no quick resolution to the Russia-Ukraine crisis in sight, more countries may impose export restrictio­ns. Protection­ism in the agricultur­al sector would further worsen food insecurity in economical­ly backward nations.

If the food situation continues to worsen, it may lead to political instabilit­y and even social unrest in such countries and regions, she said, adding that government­s should provide subsidies for the poor to help them cope with rising food prices.

Monika Tothova, an economist at the FAO, said food assistance is crucial for countries severely affected by the Russia-Ukraine conflict, but such help does not address the root causes of food insecurity, such as conflict and lack of economic activity.

As conflict was the main driver of food insecurity even before the RussiaUkra­ine crisis began, she urged global communitie­s to address this situation.

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Left: A Palestinia­n collects food aid from a distributi­on center run b Center: A Ukrainian army officer inspects a grain warehouse shelled b Top right: Produce is sold at a market in Taiz, Yem Above right: An Egyptian farmer displays wheat. The African nation ha
 ?? ABDULNASSE­R ALSEDDIK / ANADOLU AGENCY VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? by the UN Relief and Works Agency. MAHMOUD ISSA / SOPA IMAGES / SIPA USA by Russian forces in Novovoront­sovka, Ukraine. JOHN MOORE / GETTY IMAGES men. as banned food exports since the Russia-Ukraine conflict started.
ABDULNASSE­R ALSEDDIK / ANADOLU AGENCY VIA GETTY IMAGES by the UN Relief and Works Agency. MAHMOUD ISSA / SOPA IMAGES / SIPA USA by Russian forces in Novovoront­sovka, Ukraine. JOHN MOORE / GETTY IMAGES men. as banned food exports since the Russia-Ukraine conflict started.
 ?? MERT ALPER DERVIS / GETTY IMAGES ?? People view a monument on May 23 near the site of the former Kamloops Indian Residentia­l School in British Columbia, Canada. A ceremony was held that day marking the first anniversar­y of the discovery of the unmarked graves of 215 indigenous children. The school, which was opened in the late 19th century to assimilate indigenous kids, closed in the late 1970s.
MERT ALPER DERVIS / GETTY IMAGES People view a monument on May 23 near the site of the former Kamloops Indian Residentia­l School in British Columbia, Canada. A ceremony was held that day marking the first anniversar­y of the discovery of the unmarked graves of 215 indigenous children. The school, which was opened in the late 19th century to assimilate indigenous kids, closed in the late 1970s.
 ?? STEVE NESIUS / REUTERS ?? Boeing’s CST-100 Starliner capsule launches aboard a United Launch Alliance Atlas 5 rocket on a second test flight to the Internatio­nal Space Station on May 19. At the launchpad in Cape Canaveral, Florida, only a test dummy was aboard. If the capsule reaches the ISS, NASA test pilots could strap in as early as the end of this year for the company’s first crewed flight.
STEVE NESIUS / REUTERS Boeing’s CST-100 Starliner capsule launches aboard a United Launch Alliance Atlas 5 rocket on a second test flight to the Internatio­nal Space Station on May 19. At the launchpad in Cape Canaveral, Florida, only a test dummy was aboard. If the capsule reaches the ISS, NASA test pilots could strap in as early as the end of this year for the company’s first crewed flight.
 ?? TED ALJIBE / AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE ?? A resident wades through high-tide waters to retrieve items from a house that was among those gutted in a fire that swept through a slum area near the mouth of Manila Bay on May 20. Firefighte­rs from different areas in the Philippine capital scrambled to put out the blaze. No casualties had yet been reported.
TED ALJIBE / AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE A resident wades through high-tide waters to retrieve items from a house that was among those gutted in a fire that swept through a slum area near the mouth of Manila Bay on May 20. Firefighte­rs from different areas in the Philippine capital scrambled to put out the blaze. No casualties had yet been reported.
 ?? DANIEL LEAL / AFP ?? A visitor poses for a photograph with women wearing flower-themed dresses at the 2022 RHS Chelsea Flower Show in London on May 23. Nearly 140,000 people are expected to attend the west London show that will run until May 29. The flower show is held annually in the grounds of the Royal Hospital Chelsea.
DANIEL LEAL / AFP A visitor poses for a photograph with women wearing flower-themed dresses at the 2022 RHS Chelsea Flower Show in London on May 23. Nearly 140,000 people are expected to attend the west London show that will run until May 29. The flower show is held annually in the grounds of the Royal Hospital Chelsea.
 ?? YASSER AL-ZAYYAT / AFP ?? A massive sandstorm advances into Kuwait City on May 23. Storms blanketed parts of the Middle East, including Iraq, Syria and Iran, sending thousands to hospitals. At least three people died in Syria and one person in Iraq.
YASSER AL-ZAYYAT / AFP A massive sandstorm advances into Kuwait City on May 23. Storms blanketed parts of the Middle East, including Iraq, Syria and Iran, sending thousands to hospitals. At least three people died in Syria and one person in Iraq.
 ?? ZHENG HUANSONG / XINHUA ?? A man passes by a wall painting on a building in Ostend, Belgium, on May 18. The coastal city has attracted many artists from around the world to join in wall painting and graffiti in recent years.
ZHENG HUANSONG / XINHUA A man passes by a wall painting on a building in Ostend, Belgium, on May 18. The coastal city has attracted many artists from around the world to join in wall painting and graffiti in recent years.
 ?? JUAN GONZALEZ / REUTERS ?? Indigenous Mapuche women in Puerto Saavedra, Chile, carry their looms on May 21 while seeking to break a world record by gathering loom weavings that together measure more than one kilometer.
JUAN GONZALEZ / REUTERS Indigenous Mapuche women in Puerto Saavedra, Chile, carry their looms on May 21 while seeking to break a world record by gathering loom weavings that together measure more than one kilometer.
 ?? IAN FORSYTH/GETTY IMAGES ?? An internatio­nally renowned interactiv­e street theater spectacle called The Whale appears on Majuba beach in a statement about the environmen­t and climate change on May 22 in Redcar, England.
IAN FORSYTH/GETTY IMAGES An internatio­nally renowned interactiv­e street theater spectacle called The Whale appears on Majuba beach in a statement about the environmen­t and climate change on May 22 in Redcar, England.

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