Conference
on World Food Security: The Challenges of Climate Change and Bioenergy

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We need our readers' Feedback for a synthesis
document for the Madrid meeting. These will be sent to Rene Wadlow
is the Representative to the United Nations, Geneva of the Association
of World Citizens and the editor of the journal of world politics:
www.transnational-perspectives.org.

Tuesday, 22 April 2008
"Since the hungry billion in the world community believe that
we can
all eat if we set our common house in order, they believe also that
it is
unjust that some men die because it is too much trouble to arrange
for them
to live."
- Stringfellow Barr, Citizens of the World (1952)
Food riots in Haiti brought the issue of hunger to the front gates
of Haiti's presidential palace and death to a United Nations peacekeeper
from Nigeria who was shot by the crowd surging from a slum area
of Port-au-Prince. The Prime Minister, Jacques-Edouard Alexis, was
forced to resign for having failed to act despite sharp increases
in the price of food over the past several months, pushing people
who are already poor into deeper poverty.
The President of Haiti, René Préval, who was trained
as an agronomist and should have recognized the consequences of
food shortages earlier, nevertheless, promised to use foreign funds
originally destined for development projects to lower the price
of rice. This short-range policy can mean the difference between
eating and going hungry for many families.
"The Rich Have Already Eaten" was a phrase from Rev.
Andres Giron, a Guatemalan priest, leader of the National Peasant
Association for Land, used as the title of a hard-hitting study
of agricultural conditions in Central America by Solon Barraclough
and Michael Scott (1). They analysed the issues of land tenure,
agricultural production, and food security, demonstrating how the
vast majority of the rural population of Central America had been
dominated, exploited and deprived of any voice in government by
a small minority of oligarchs and military officers. Thus hunger
is a sign of a political struggle for social justice and reform
and should not be looked at as only a question of agricultural production
and distribution.
The politically-destabilizing aspect of higher food prices and
the food riots has pushed the issue of food costs to the top of
the agenda of UN Agencies. There will be a top-level meeting of
the heads of UN Agencies such as the Food and Agriculture Organization
(FAO) and the UN World Food Programme (WFP) with the UN Secretary-General
Ban Ki-moon in Switzerland 28-29 April. The President of the World
Bank, Robert Zoellick, and the Managing Director of the IMF, Dominique
Strauss-Kahn, who have already had to discuss food prices at their
annual meeting in Washington, will be there.
Rising food prices are a global concern and have led to riots
against high food prices in a number of countries such as Egypt,
Senegal and Cameroon. Using government funds to lower food prices
can only be a short-term policy. Egypt already spends more on subsidies,
including gasoline and bread, than on education and health combined.
The United Nations food specialists indicate serious food shortages
in many countries of Africa. In East and Southern Africa : Lesotho,
Swaziland, Zimbabwe, Somalia, Mozambique, and Eritrea. In West Africa:
Mauritania, Senegal, Liberia, Sierre Leone, Ivory Coast, Burkina
Faso, and Cameroon. There are serious food shortages in war-torn
Afghanistan and Iraq and chronic food shortages in North Korea.
The Somalis, who live largely thanks to the UN's World Food Program,
are under serious threat as the high price of rice and other grains
cut into the WFP budget and increased violence makes food delivery
difficult. The same is true of the refugee and internally displaced
camps of the Darfur conflict.
Governments and the UN system had grown complacent, believing
that food security mechanisms had been put into place and that the
dangers of large-scale famine had been permanently banished. The
food riots of these days indicate that important weaknesses in food
security policies remain. The world civil society must now become
more active in placing food policy at the center of the world agenda.
The late 1940s, as the world started to recover from the Second
World War, had been a time when hunger was the key symbol of underdevelopment.
Lord John Boyd Orr as the first Director General of the Food and
Agriculture Organization and Josué de Castro, who served
as the independent Chairman of the FAO Council, were both leaders
in calling attention to world hunger and the need for strong governmental
action to provide food security. In 1946, Boyd Orr presented a proposal
for a World Food Board which would be endowed with sufficient authority
and funds to stabilize the world market in food.
He pointed out that several countries were already doing this for
the domestic market but that the world market was subject to violent
fluctuations. The plan for a world food board was rejected following
the
lead of the US delegate who said "Governments are unlikely
to place large funds needed for financing such a plan in the hands
of an international agency over whose operations and price policy
they would have little direct control." (2). The FAO did encourage
governments to develop national food security policies, but these
were often overshadowed by the desire to make money through international
trade of food.
In 1974, the United Nations and the FAO organized in Rome the
World Food Conference whose final appeal stated that greater food
production and improved nutrition was the unremitting, paramount
and increasingly urgent problem of our time.
Despite the fact that millions of peasants, landless laborers
and urban dwellers suffer from hunger and malnutrition, the issue
of food production, distribution and costs had fallen off the world
agenda except
for specialists. Occasionally questions of export subsidies of agricultural
products or production quotas would be taken up by the World Trade
Organization or in the all-night negotiations of the Agriculture
Ministers of the European Union, but the complexity of the issues
and the political power of the large farm association in the USA
and Western Europe kept agricultural policies outside active political
debate. Now, food riots are bringing to light the fact that a true
world food program requires action at the world, the regional, the
national, and the local level. There are at least five issues that
need to be analyzed at the April 28-29 UN meeting for the start
of a world food policy to be put into place.
1. There is a need to intensify action on climate change. This year,
there has been bad weather in key growing areas; in particular Australia,
normally the world's second-largest wheat exporter, has been suffering
from an epic drought. This may be a result of particular weather
conditions this year or may be a sign of climate change. It is necessary
to analyse the impact of climate change on long-term food production
and see alternative strategies.
2. Higher prices for food are a reflection of the higher price of
oil and energy costs. Much modern farming is energy-intensive for
producing fertilizers, running tractors, and transporting farm products
to consumers, often at long distances. Oil prices are influenced
by the violence and social breakdown in Iraq and heavy speculation
on the oil markets. There is a need both for short term measures
to bring oil prices down to a reasonable level based on production
costs and transportation as well as longer-range energy policies
to free countries from oil dependence.
3. Higher prices for oil have encouraged a greater use of ethanol
and other biofuels, often without consideration of the impact of
the production of biofuels on land use and food production. While
biofuels are likely to be useful, their use should be limited at
present so that the consequences of their use can be studied.
4. Governmental food and agriculture policies need to be analysed
and reviewed carefully. The agricultural policies of the European
Union and the larger food exporting countries -USA, Canada, Brazil,
Australia - need to be reviewed and the impact of agricultural subsidies
and export encouragement looked at beyond trying to build political
support from farmers.
5. There needs to be a detailed analysis of the role of speculation
in the rise of commodity prices. There has been a merger of the
former Chicago Mercantile Exchange and the Chicago Board of Trade
to become the CME Group Market which deals in some 25 agricultural
commodities. Banks and hedger funds, having lost money in the real
estate mortgage packages are now looking for ways to get money back.
For the moment, there is little governmental regulation of this
speculation. There needs to be an analysis of these financial flows
and their impact on the price of grains.
The April 28-29 high-level meeting of the UN system is an important
opportunity to set out such an agenda for analysis and action, but
it must be followed up by the UN, national governments and civil
society organizations.

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