苹果淫院

In the News

FOR ARCHIVAL NEWS ON GLOBAL FOOD SECURITY, PLEASE VISIT THE "NEWS WATCH" PAGE FOR EACH OF THE GLOBAL FOOD SECURITY CONFERENCES


2014

MARCH 2014

Aboriginal Food Security in Northern Canada: An Assessment of the State of Knowledge

A new report released on March 27 by the Council of Canadian Academies found that the Inuit are the most food insecure group in the developed world. The听 Expert Panel, chaired by Professor Emerita of Human Nutrition Harriet Kuhnlein, included Murray Humphries (NRS) and Mac alumna Treena Wasonti:io Delormier.

from the Council of Canadian Academies

Press coverage included: | | 听 |听 | | | | |

KARI-Kenya Project Publication Release by IDRC

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2013

Getting a better handle on hunger
Food insecurity, an issue as old as humanity itself, afflicts more than a third of the globe鈥檚 citizens. It isn鈥檛 just a developing-country phenomenon. Hugo Melgar-Qui帽onez, the new director of the 苹果淫院 Institute for Global Food Security 鈥 the only one of its kind on the planet 鈥 says food insecurity affects people everywhere and in every country. Read more in the

Brazil's agriculture boom faces constraints ahead
When you have over 13 million people who are not able to eat enough every day, we need to address this before we say whether Brazil can feed the world. -Hugo Melgar-Quinonez, Institute for Global Food Security.

Conference on Global Food Security offers food for thought
Hugo Melgar-Qui帽onez, the Director of the 苹果淫院 Institute for Global Food Security听has barely finished this year鈥檚 苹果淫院 Global Food Security Conference and he is already planning next year鈥檚 event. He鈥檚 not facing it with dread or exhaustion, as you might imagine could be the case with a conference that brings together dozens of participants from around the world, but rather with a lot of excitement and energy. He鈥檚 interested in finding new ways to reach even more people working in the area across the globe. Read more

Le MARNDR cherche 脿 d茅terminer la contribution de la production animale 脿 la S茅curit茅 Alimentaire des Petits Agriculteurs en Haiti
On estime qu'en Ha茂ti, l'agriculture repr茅sente environ 25 % du听 Produit Int茅rieur Brut (PIB) total du pays. En ce qui concerne l'茅levage, malgr茅 la part significative qui lui est attribu茅e, on ignore sa contribution r茅elle au PIB et surtout 脿 la s茅curit茅 alimentaire de la population et l鈥檃pport qu鈥檌l pourrait avoir dans la diminution du taux de malnutrition qui r猫gne dans le pays. Pour r茅pondre 脿 cette question, le Minist猫re ha茂tien de l'Agriculture a d茅cid茅 de mener une 茅tude afin de d茅terminer la contribution de la production animale 脿 la s茅curit茅 alimentaire des petits agriculteurs ha茂tiens. En ce sens, par l'interm茅diaire de sa Repr茅sentation en Ha茂ti et son programme d'Agrobusiness et Marketing bas茅e 脿 Miami, l'IICA conjugue ses efforts avec l'Institut de la S茅curit茅 alimentaire de l'Universit茅 苹果淫院 au Canada pour fournir l'assistance technique requise pour la mise en 艙uvre de cet important projet. Read article

Presentation by Dr. Chandra Madramootoo, Dean of the Faculty of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences, Associate Vice-Principal of 苹果淫院, and a James 苹果淫院 Professor in the Department of Bio-resource Engineering at International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD). .


2012

LE PRIX DES ALIMENTS AU COEUR D鈥橴N CONGR脠S 脌 MCGILL
La variation des prix des aliments est au coeur de la cinqui猫me Conf茅rence de 苹果淫院 sur la s茅curit茅 alimentaire mondiale, qui r茅unit plus de 250 personnes aujourd鈥檋ui et demain. L鈥檌nstabilit茅 politique est aussi abord茅e puisqu鈥檈lle va de pair avec les prix des aliments, a indiqu茅 Katherine Gombay, porte-parole de l鈥橴niversit茅 苹果淫院. Mme Gombay a d鈥檃illeurs avanc茅 que le prix des aliments aurait 茅t茅 l鈥檜n des 茅l茅ments d茅clencheurs du Printemps arabe. Aussi, avec l鈥檃ugmentation de la population plan茅taire, le monde aura besoin de 70 % de plus d鈥檃liments. Les dimensions sociales de la s茅curit茅 alimentaire et le r么le des acteurs soci茅taux dans la r茅solution de la crise alimentaire seront aussi examin茅s. ,

Crise alimentaire imminente
Une nouvelle crise alimentaire est 脿 nos portes. 芦Elle va arriver, en raison de la flamb茅e du prix des c茅r茅ales禄, dit Michel R. St-Pierre, pr茅sident du cinqui猫me Congr猫s mondial des agronomes, qui s'ouvre lundi 脿 Qu茅bec. La s茅cheresse aux 脡tats-Unis et en Russie a fait bondir de 17% l'indice FAO du prix des c茅r茅ales en juillet, faisant craindre le pire.

UN Raises Alarm Over Global Food Prices
With severe drought affecting the massive US wheat belt, the United Nations warns of global strife over rising prices.

Somalia facing challenging year, ICRC says
MOGADISHU, Somalia, Aug. 31 (UPI) --听A combination of conflict and food insecurity meant 2012 has been a difficult year for the majority of the Somali population, the Red Cross said. The International Committee of the Red Cross said it delivered food assistance to 1.4 million people in Somalia during the first half of 2012. The organization said the crisis wasn't as severe as last year but low rainfall in the region contributed to a lingering food emergency. "Sadly, 2012 has thus far been another challenging period for a great many Somalis, who continue to endure the tremendous hardships that have arisen from a combination of conflict and extreme weather conditions," Patrick Vial, the head of the ICRC Somalia delegation, said in a statement.

Africa: Tackling the Root Causes of High Food Prices and Hunger
Rome 鈥 The current situation in world food markets, characterized by sharp increases in maize, wheat and soybean prices, has raised fears of a repeat of the 2007-2008 world food crisis. But swift, coordinated international action can stop that from happening. We need to act urgently to make sure that these price shocks do not turn into a catastrophe hurting tens of millions over the coming months.

Zambian
GOVERNMENT has warned millers against taking advantage of people by increasing the price of mealie meal inconsiderately. Copperbelt Minister Mwenya Musenge sounded the warning yesterday in the wake of the price of mealie-meal going up in most outlets countrywide on average by K5 000. Mr Musenge said millers should take into consideration the poverty levels among most Zambians, coupled with high unemployment, making it difficult to afford the staple food. 鈥淭hey should realise that this is a matter of life and death. The millers have to take into account the affordability to purchase the commodity because already very few people could afford to buy the鈥╩ealie meal at the old price,鈥 he said.

Food Riots - A Mathematical Certainty ~ Max Keiser Report
Yaneer Bar-Yam听 of NECSI.EDU says on The Keiser Report that听听are A Mathematical Certainty "Even though prices went down prices have shot up again. That's pushed us above the level of our threshold or in the range in which we begin to be worried about social unrest, food riots and revolutions. Based on our mathematical model prices are going to continue to increase. A lot of it is due to commodity speculation. That is going to put us even higher than the previous two peaks. This isn't going to take much time, a few weeks or a few months. Then on the response side how do countries buffer their citizens, the poor from stresses in food systems. There are big policy options, but also country-based options in terms of interventions to protect its populace"听

UN food agency says hunger worsens in Zimbabwe, less staple food crops set to be harvested
HARARE, Zimbabwe 鈥 The United Nations food agency says hunger is worsening in Zimbabwe after erratic rains, shortages of seeds and fertilizer and 鈥減oor agricultural practices鈥 in the troubled economy led to a reduction in fields planted with the main staple foods. The World Food Program said cereal harvests in the current season were down by an estimated one third compared to last year. It said about 1.1 million rural people will need food aid up to December, rising to 1.6 million in the traditionally 鈥渓ean months鈥 to March.

World food prices increase 10 percent in July
Worldwide food prices increased by 10 percent in July, according to the World Bank.听In a statement on Thursday, the noted that from June to July, corn and wheat prices rose by 25 percent each, soybean prices by 17 percent, "and only rice prices went down, by 4 percent."

鈥 Articles and videos about food prices and crisis around the world

RISING FOOD PRICES COULD SPARK RIOTS WORLDWIDE
The worst drought since 1950 continues to send听food prices听soaring around the globe. Just released听Food听Price Index figures for the summer months show a听sharp spike in food prices in July. In Mozambique, prices on white corn doubled from April to July, while worldwide the United Nations reported global nutrition costs averaged 6.2 percent last month alone. Nations in the Middle East and sub-Saharan Africa, which rely heavily on foreign imports, are likely to be the hardest hit by this year鈥檚 low grain reserves.

RAIN COMES TOO LATE FOR IOWA'S CORN CROP AS DROUGHT WEIGHS ON MIDWEST MINDS
Farmers hope for better next year after summer of record drought leads to rising prices听and brings tensions to the surface. Flying into Des Moines, the corn fields look surprisingly green. America's midwest produces half the world's corn and听听its largest harvest, yet amid the worst drought in living memory all the untrained eye can see is the occasional brown mark, like a cigarette burn on the baize of a pool table. But appearances can be deceptive. The US planted 97m acres of corn for this year's crop 鈥 the most since 1937. If everything had gone according to plan, this year's harvest would have produced a new record, at close to 15bn bushels of corn (a bushel is 24 million metric tonnes). It's too early to say what the final tally will be, but the US department of agriculture has slashed its forecast to 10.8bn. Dan Basse, president of AgResources, an independent agriculture analyst, says that figure is likely to come down. "We've lost 4bn bushels of corn. That's the largest loss in history, and we could lose another," he says. The USDA has declared counties in 38 states to be "disaster areas". About 72% of cattle areas are experiencing drought.

U.N. BODY URGES G20 ACTION ON FOOD PRICES, WASTE
The world's top farm producers in the Group of 20 countries must agree coordinated action to ease worries about food prices, the head of the United Nations food agency said on Monday, as he and other experts bemoaned a huge global waste of food and water.

PHOTO ESSAY SHOWING SOME OF THE EFFECTS OF DROUGHT IN THE U.S. MIDWEST.

RAIN, RAIN COME AGAIN
Stand far enough away and the fields of Debra Pretty-Straathof 鈥檚 family farm appear green and lush. But a closer look reveals parched earth littered with dead or dying leaves, and crops whose growth has been stunted by severe heat and drought.

SHRINKING US CROPS POSE INFLATION CHALLENGE FOR COUNTRIES
For nations like China and India fighting to tamp down inflation while spurring growth, even as the global economy faces headwinds from Europe's debt crisis, shrinking U.S. crops could be an additional headache as food prices creep higher.Add to that, dry weather in eastern Europe dimming crop prospects in key grains exporting countries like Russia and Kazakhstan, and a less-than-stellar monsoon in India, the troubles for policy makers could escalate into major challenges. Read more in

FOOD COST, TRADE "DOUBLE WHAMMY" COULD HIT AFRICA
Rising food prices could hit commodity producers in Africa with a dangerous "double whammy" when combined with an economic slowdown in Europe and reducing African exports of oil and raw materials, a leading African economist said on Tuesday.

FOOD PRICES AND SUPPLY
In the summer of 2012, scorching heat and the worst drought in nearly a half-century have threatened to send food prices up, spooking consumers and leading to worries about global food costs.

WORLD BANK READY TO OFFER AID IN SHADOW OF RISING FOOD PRICES
The World Bank on Monday said it stood ready to help governments respond to a broad-based run-up in grain prices that has again put the world's poorest people at risk and could have lingering detrimental impacts for years.

ZIMBABWE: FOOD AID NEEDED
Erratic rains and farming problems have reduced this year鈥檚 maize harvest in Zimbabwe by a third, and 1.6 million people will need food aid, the said Friday.

THE WORLD IS CLOSER TO A FOOD CRISIS THAN MOST PEOPLE REALISEUnless we move quickly to adopt new population, energy, and water policies, the goal of eradicating hunger will remain just that.

HIGHER PRICES FOR FOOD ITEMS EXPECTED AS DROUGHT LINGERS
Corn, found in fuel and almost every product on store shelves, hits record price.

FOOD COSTS RISE AS CROPS WITHER
Corn yields hurt by US, Ont. drought. Read more (pdf) ...


NOVEMBER 2011

November 8, 2011

A HUNGER FOR SUCCESS - ON A WORLD SCALE
More food will be consumed in the next 50 years than in the rest of the history of humanity.On the one hand, the world's population has reached 7 billion people and will grow to 9 billion or more within 30 years. But on the other, the incomes enjoyed by these new populations are growing more rapidly than ever.As the demand for food climbs with population and income, Canada - uniquely positioned with its vast tracts of arable land, abundant water, infrastructure, and experience in the sector - faces a huge opportunity to feed the world. And yet Canadian agriculture and agri-food businesses are not only failing to maintain their share of world markets, but are falling behind.
Read more in


OCTOBER 2011

TACKLING HUNGER WEIGHTY TASK
When 苹果淫院 assembled panels of international experts to discuss world food stability at a three-day conference last week, the goal was to arrive at answers. However, speeches and panels at the conference mainly illustrated how vast and intractable the problem seems to be. Close to a billion people are considered chronically food insecure and the number is growing by tens of millions because of drought in the Horn of Africa and a 33 percent spike in food prices. International agency officials offered hope that jargon-filled processes and plans about collaboration and government investment would make a difference. There were some reports or predictions of progress.

ECONOMIC WOES COULD FORCE CHANGES TO AID
International cooperation minister Bev Oda is warning that international economic turbulence could limit the world鈥檚 ability or willingness to respond to a growing world hunger crisis.That will definitely be the case in Canada. 鈥淭he government has undertaken an exercise to reduce the deficit,鈥 Oda said.

VOLATILE FOOD PRICES SHUTTING DOWN TRADE TALKS
Volatile world food prices did more than drive millions into poverty and hunger, says an agricultural economist.They have also helped bog down World Trade Organization negotiations, says former senior Agriculture Canada economist Douglas Hedley.鈥淲hat the 2008 spike showed us is we can鈥檛 trust trade,鈥 he said Oct. 5 during a 苹果淫院 conference on global food security.

JUST PUBLISHED: The State of Food Insecurity in the World 2011 highlights the differential impacts that the world food crisis of 2006-08 had on different countries, with the poorest being most affected.This year鈥檚 report describes the effects of price volatility on food security and presents policy options to reduce volatility in a cost-effective manner and to manage it when it cannot be avoided. The report focuses also on the dangers and opportunities presented by high food prices. Climate change and an increased frequency of weather shocks, increased linkages between energy and agricultural markets due to growing demand for biofuels, and the increased financialization of food and agricultural commodities all suggest that price volatility is here to stay.


AUGUST 1, 2011

FOOD CRISIS IN ASIA
As the global population rises, farmers, particularly in developing countries, are coming under pressure to increase their crop yields to meet growing demand. D J Clark looks at the problems facing farmers and consumers in different parts of Asia, and examines some of the possible solutions.


JULY 18, 2011

ALBERTA HAS MUCH TO OFFER A THIRSTY PLANET
Flooding and water scarcity are probably the biggest issues facing the developing world, and the situation will only worsen as the global population grows and climate change intensifies. That was part of the message noted scientist Chandra Madramootoo brought to this year鈥檚 Water, Agriculture and the Environment conference in Lethbridge.
Read article


JUNE 23, 2011

G20 ACTION PLAN
G20 REPORT ON FOOD PRICE VOLATILITY

JUNE 4, 2011

A Warming Planet Struggles to Feed Itself
Now, the latest scientific research suggests that a previously discounted factor is helping to destabilize the food system: . Many of the failed harvests of the past decade were a consequence of weather disasters, like floods in the United States, drought in Australia and blistering heat waves in Europe and Russia. Scientists believe some, though not all, of those events were caused or worsened by human-induced global warming. Temperatures are rising rapidly during the growing season in some of the most important agricultural countries, and a paper published several weeks ago found that this had shaved several percentage points off potential yields, adding to the price gyrations.
Read more in the

JUNE 1, 2011

WHEN THE NILE RUNS DRY
A NEW scramble for Africa is under way. As global food prices rise and exporters reduce shipments of commodities, countries that rely on imported grain are panicking. Affluent countries like Saudi Arabia, South Korea, China and India have descended on fertile plains across the African continent, acquiring huge tracts of land to produce wheat, rice and corn for consumption back home.
Read more in the


MAY 31, 2011

Broken food system and environmental crises spell hunger for millions. Oxfam launches global GROW campaign
A broken food system and environmental crises are now reversing decades of progress against hunger according to new Oxfam analysis. Spiralling food prices and endless cycles of regional food crises will create millions more hungry people unless we transform the way we grow and share food.听听 Tomorrow, Oxfam launches a new global campaign to ensure everyone has enough to eat always.

MAY 11, 2011

CUTTING FOOD WASTE TO FEED THE WORLD
Roughly one third of the food produced in the world for human consumption every year听鈥 approximately 1.3 billion tonnes听鈥 gets lost or wasted, according to an FAO-commissioned study.

May 1, 2011

THE EVOLVING GLOBAL GOVERNANCE OF FOOD SECURITY
Paper by Matias E. Margulis, McMaster University
Department of Political Science/Department Foreign Affairs and International Trade Canada
While food security has become a major issue in global governance following the 2007-2008 global food crisis, there is no single international institution responsible for the management of this issue. Instead, responsibility for food security is spread out among a number of international organizations, which causes an overlap of rules and norms. This is a major challenge to achieving global policy coherence on food security and making progress on the eradication of world hunger. This research paper argues that a more effective governance regime for food security requires mechanisms to promote greater internal policy coherence within states and between multiple international institutions.


April 26, 2011

IFPRI 2020 VISION CONFERENCE - CONFERENCE HIGHLIGHTS
Leveraging Agriculture for Improving Nutrition and Health (PDF file)

April 18, 2011

LES PRIX D'ALIMENTS EXPLOSE
脡tablissons une chose d猫s le d茅part: pour une fois, le mot 芦explosion禄 鈥 qu'on a parfois tendance 脿 saupoudrer un peu facilement 鈥 n'est probablement pas trop fort. Les prix des denr茅es, qui ont nourri les r茅voltes populaires au Moyen-Orient, sont nettement 脿 la hausse. Quelques exemples en vrac: le prix du bl茅 est de 63 % sup茅rieur 脿 son niveau de mars 2010, celui du ma茂s a bondi de 83 %, la livre de caf茅 est pass茅e de 1,30 $ 脿 plus de 2,70 $... 芦Le stress va continuer, m锚me avec de bonnes r茅coltes禄, a dit r茅cemment Pascal Th茅riault, agro茅conomiste et professeur 脿 l'Universit茅 苹果淫院. D'ici 2025, selon lui, 200 millions de personnes dans les pays du BRIC 鈥 Br茅sil, Russie, Inde et Chine 鈥 vont gagner au moins 15 000 $ par ann茅e. Et logiquement, ils vont manger de plus en plus de viande.

April 14, 2011

High and Volatile Food Prices Continue to Threaten the World鈥檚 Poor
Driven in part by higher fuel costs connected to events in the Middle East and North Africa, global food prices are 36 percent above their levels a year ago and remain听 volatile, pushing people deeper into poverty, according to new World Bank Group numbers released today.鈥淢ore poor people are suffering and more people could become poor because of high and volatile food prices,鈥 said World Bank Group President Robert B. Zoellick. 鈥淲e have to put food first and protect the poor and vulnerable, who spend most of their money on food.鈥

Food prices: World Bank warns millions face poverty
The World Bank has warned that rising food prices, driven partly by rising fuel costs, are pushing millions of people into extreme poverty. World food prices are 36% above levels of a year ago, driven by problems in the Middle East and North Africa, and remain volatile, the bank said. That has pushed 44 million people into poverty since last June.
Read more ... on


March 3, 2011

World food prices hit record high: UN
Global food prices reached new highs in February, a United Nations food agency said Thursday, warning that oil price spikes could provoke further increases.
Read and view more on


February 26, 2011

The 9 billion-people question A special report on feeding the world
The Economist

February 18, 2011

UN food experts call for increased agricultural investment to offset soaring prices
Faced with soaring food prices for the second time in three years, senior United Nations experts today called for greater investment in agriculture from both the public and private sectors to increase smallholder productivity.
Read more on this and other related topics on the

February 15, 2011

A new menu for food investors
Harsh weather is disrupting food supply around the world just as a rising middle class in emerging markets and a burgeoning biofuels industry put extra demand on farmers. In this turmoil, investors see opportunity. Futures contracts for coffee, sugar, corn and wheat have rocketed more than 50 per cent since last summer, and financial institutions are responding with new funds that offer ways to bet on rising food prices.
Read more in


January 25, 2011

The Future of Food and Farming: Challenges and choices for global sustainability
The Government Office for Science, London.

January 21, 2011

The G20鈥檚 next project: Solve global crisis of unstable food prices
Even as the G20 wrestles with the aftermath of the financial crisis, the group of global powers is preparing to tackle another of the world's most urgent issues 鈥 wild swings in food prices. Volatile commodity prices have wreaked havoc in the developing world, threatening food supplies in some countries and creating sharp inflation in others.
Read more in


DECEMBER 2010

December 2, 2010

Climate change threatens food supply
Un meeting warned of shortages. Invest in agriculture in poor countries now to help farmers cope later, report urges.


NOVEMBER 2010

Radio Interviews with conference participants

Dr. David Nabarro interview on
Dr. David Nabarro interview on
Barbara Burlingame interview on
Victoria Quinn on
Panel discussion with Bart Schultz, Sam Asiedu and Sam Gameda on
Eugene Terry interview on
Dyno Keatinge on
Grace Marquis on

Global Food Security Conference articles in

Nutrition vital factor in solving hunger issues
UN praises Canada's foreign aid commitment
Hunger goals realistic?
FAO takes heat for alleged biotech bias
Crisis looms in Artctic: expert

Articles of interest

Solving the food crisis - On an ocean planet
Turning to the sea
Will the oceans help feed humanity?


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