Global food prices 'set to rise'
Consumers could face more spikes in food prices as extreme weather caused by climate change affects major crops worldwide, according to a new Oxfam report.
The charity claims the full impact of climate change on future food prices is being underestimated and warns that consumers will become more vulnerable to events such as the current US drought as dependence on exports of wheat and maize increases.
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The report, Extreme Weather, Extreme Prices, said a US drought in 2030 could raise the price of maize by as much as 140 per cent over and above the average price of food, which is already likely to be double today's prices.
Oxfam's climate change policy adviser Tim Gore said: "Rising temperatures and changing rainfall patterns hold back crop production and cause steady price rises.
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"But extreme weather events like the current US drought can wipe out entire harvests and trigger dramatic food price spikes."
Drought and flooding in southern Africa could increase the consumer price of maize and other coarse grains by as much as 120 per cent by 2030, the reports said.
Nationwide drought in India or extensive flooding across South East Asia could see the world market price of rice increase by 22 per cent.
The report warned that such spikes would affect UK consumers who are already facing high food prices without the full weight of extreme weather events and climate change.
Mr Gore said: "We will all feel the impact as prices spike but the poorest people will be hit the hardest.
"The huge potential impact of extreme weather events on future food prices is missing from today's climate change debate. The world needs to wake up to the drastic consequences facing our food system of climate inaction.
"As emissions continue to soar, extreme weather in the US and elsewhere provides a glimpse of our future food system in a warming world.
"Our planet is heading for average global warming of 2.5 to 5°C this century.
"Governments must act now to slash rising greenhouse gas emissions, reverse decades of under investment in small-scale agriculture and provide money needed to help poor farmers adapt."




Comments
by prog_rock_fan
Saturday, September 08 2012, 7:25PM
“http://tinyurl.com/bl52u57”
by karinfall1955
Thursday, September 06 2012, 11:15PM
“There is no doubting climate change is real and is happening, however, how do we know we are responsible and it isn't a natural phenomenon? That is the real question.
I recycle everything I can and use my car only when absolutely necessary, my house is well insulated and I avoid wasting energy but I'm still not totally convinced it is the fault of humans.”
by prog_rock_fan
Thursday, September 06 2012, 4:59PM
“@darkrum: "Get real we are all being lied to..."
...by those silly enough to think they are smarter than the world scientific community.”
by prog_rock_fan
Thursday, September 06 2012, 4:59PM
“@darkrum: "Get real we are all being lied to..."
...by those silly enough to think they are smarter than the world scientific community.”
by darkrum
Wednesday, September 05 2012, 6:59PM
“If anyone believes in the lies of the above scaremongerers , then we really have no chance.Get real we are all being lied to and sadly people are too ignorant and gulilble to realise it.”
by prog_rock_fan
Wednesday, September 05 2012, 4:56PM
“...Good thing science is a sham and climate change is a left-wing hoax, eh, deniers?”