Food Prices on the Sphere

 

Graphic from New York Times

World food prices continued to rise sharply in December, bringing them close to the crisis levels that provoked shortages and riots in poor countries three years ago, according to newly released United Nations data.

Farmers harvesting sugar cane in Uttar Pradesh, India. Inclement weather could mean higher prices for some commodities.

Prices are expected to remain high this year, prompting concern that the world may be approaching another crisis, although economists cautioned that many factors, like adequate stockpiles of key grains, could prevent a serious problem.

The United Nations data measures commodity prices on the world export market. Those are generally far removed from supermarket prices in wealthy countries like the United States. In this country, food price inflation has been relatively tame, and prices are forecast to rise only 2 to 3 percent this year.

But the situation is often different in poor countries that rely more heavily on imports. The food price index of the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization rose 32 percent from June to December, according to the report published Wednesday. In December, the index was slightly higher than it was in June 2008, its previous peak. The index is not adjusted for inflation, however, making an exact comparison over time difficult.

The global index was pushed up last year by rising prices for cooking oils, grains, sugar and meat, all of which could continue to remain high or rise.

“We are at a very high level,” said Abdolreza Abbassian, an economist for the organization, which is based in Rome. “These levels in the previous episode led to problems and riots across the world.”

Mr. Abbassian said that bad weather affecting commodity crops in many exporting countries might help keep prices high over the next several months.

“The concern is that the long duration of the high prices for the months to come may eventually result in these high prices reaching the domestic markets of these poorer countries,” he said. “In the event of that, there is the chance of the repeat of the events of 2007 and 2008.”

At that time, high petroleum prices, growing world demand for food and poor harvests in some areas combined to sharply push up food prices in poorer importing countries. That led to shortages and sometimes deadly riots in several countries, including Egypt, Haiti, Somalia and Cameroon.

Mr. Abbassian said there were several crucial differences this year.

Countries in central, western and southern Africa have had generally good harvests from crops planted last year, easing reliance on imports. And grain prices remain significantly below the highs they hit in 2007 and 2008. Export prices for rice are 40 to 50 percent below those highs, he said.

Grain prices have a much greater impact on the food budgets of people in poor countries than prices for commodities like sugar or meat, which tend to make up a much smaller portion of their diet.

In addition, global supplies of rice and wheat are much more robust today than during the crisis.

But ensuring sufficient grain supplies depends on good harvests this year in major exporting countries. Dry conditions in Argentina that could hurt corn, and soybean crops are worrisome, Mr. Abbassian said. Heavy rains in Australia delayed the wheat harvest there, resulting in a poorer crop. In the United States, harsh, dry weather is expected to hurt the winter wheat crop.

Gawain M. Kripke, policy director of Oxfam America, said the food price increases were a polite warning. “We may get much more rude warnings soon,” he said.

The United Nations estimates that nearly one billion people worldwide do not get enough food, Mr. Kripke noted. “That’s almost certain to increase as prices rise, especially if they rise in an aggressive manner, which they are,” he said. In the United States, meanwhile, the Agriculture Department has predicted that retail food prices will rise 2 to 3 percent in 2011. That is a higher rate than in the last two years but less than the 5.5 percent food inflation that hit American consumers in 2008. In November, the last month for which data is available, food prices in the United States rose 1.5 percent compared with the same month the previous year.

Joseph Glauber, the Agriculture Department’s chief economist, said that rising world commodity prices could be expected to have their greatest impact in this country on meat and dairy prices because they can push up the price of livestock feed.

As feed prices go up, farmers often cut the size of herds, meaning less meat ultimately reaches the market. Beef, pork and dairy prices rose faster last year than overall food prices and are expected to continue that trend this year.

Article from New York Times:

U.N. Data Notes Sharp Rise in World Food Prices

By WILLIAM NEUMAN
Published: January 5, 2011

 

 

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Lizard Food

Lizards got to eat…eat food. Food stuff makes up their bodies and food energy allows them to get around. Deprived of food, they grow cranky, then weak, then comatose, and then they die.

But it is the rare lizard that dies from lack of food, because food in lizard land is infinitely abundant. Lizard land is a bounteous cornucopia.

Endless food is in the endless sea in the form of fishes, clams, oysters, crustaceans, whales, seals, eels, and so on. Similar edible creatures swim and flow with the tides and the currents as the streams streaming off the endless lands join the sea. These foods may be caught with nets or hooks, harpoons, may be shot with rifles, gathered with rakes or by hand. When a delicious creature becomes scarce and difficult to find in size, it is only necessary to move to another location along the endless shore, or to fish out further east on the endless ocean, or to modify the local cuisine to favor another delicacy. The sea is a cornucopia of the watery kind.

On land, creatures can be hunted or trapped and eaten raw or cooked. Tasty, nourishing ones include bison, rabbits, raccoons, deer, possum, and so on. When an area becomes depleted of such desirable game, it only necessary to roam. The western lands provide an endless quantity and variety of tasty meats along with endless expanses and unlimited vistas.

Fruits and herbs are also abundant in the Western lands and may be gathered in season by nomads from nut trees and berry bushes, meadows and woodlands. Areas may be cleared, sometimes by burning, for crop plants and for domesticated animals. When these techniques of agriculture and husbandry result in local exhaustion of soils or of forage, moving to new fields in the endless lands restores the cornucopial flow.

The God Of Lizard Land is indeed a generous God! Praise GOLL!

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The Atmo-sphere

From “The Physical Geography of the Sea,” by Matthew Fontaine Maury, published in 1859 by Sampson Low, Son, and Co.

The atmosphere warms and cools by turns the earth and the living creatures that inhabit it. It draws up vapors from the sea and land, retains them dissolved in itself, or suspended in cisterns of clouds, and throws them down again as rain or dew when they are required…. It affords the gas which vivifies and warms our frames, and receives into itself that which has been polluted by use, and is thrown off as noxious….

It is only the girdling encircling air, that flows above and around all, that makes the whole world kin. The carbonic acid [carbon dioxide] with which today our breathing fills the air, tomorrow seeks its way round the world. The date-trees that grow round the falls of the Nile will drink it in by their leaves… and the palms and bananas of Japan will change it into flowers. The oxygen we are breathing was distilled for us … by the magnolias of the Susquehanna, and the great trees that skirt the Orinoco and the Amazon…. The rain we see descending was thawed for us out of the icebergs which have watched the polar star for ages, and the lotus lilies have soaked up from the Nile, and exhaled as vapor, snows that rested on the summits of the Alps.

Hence, to the right-minded mariner, and to him who studies the physical relations of earth, sea, and air, the atmosphere is something more than a shoreless ocean, at the bottom of which he creeps along…. It is an inexhaustible magazine, marvelously adapted for many benign and beneficent purposes.

Upon the proper working of this machine depends the well being of every plant and animal that inhabits the earth; therefore the management of it, its movements, and the performance of its offices, cannot be left to chance.

http://dotearth.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/11/25/appreciating-the-atmosphere/#more-27455

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Lizard Land

Lizard Land is often flat, but sometimes hilly or mountainous, and extends as far as the eye can see.  It extends forever.  To the East is the Great Sea which is unbounded. To the West are the endless lands.  The land and the sea meet at the endless sandy shore.

It is known that a long easterly sea journey will return the explorer to the Western Lands. It is known that that a determined westbound traveler will cross a sea after traversing the endless lands and eventually arrive at the edge of the Great Sea again. The Lizard mind knows this counter-intuitive land-sea-land paradox to be related to the Theory of Relativity and, therefore, not a matter of practical importance.

In Lizard Land, the sea yields up an endless bounty of fishes and clams, seaweed and coral, sponges and whales, and promises unlimited riches from reaches yet unexplored. When an area of the sea is depleted, it is only necessary to move to a new place along the endless shore in order to resume the harvest. And, the sea is endlessly receptive to the things of the land: the rivers and streams, the flux of amphibians, the flotsam and the jetsam, the waste and the dross. When the sea can no longer absorb these things in one area, it is simply necessary to move along the infinite shore line to a new place of flux and disposal.

The atmosphere of Lizard Land blows hard from the sea side at times, and gently breezes off the land at others. It loves smoke and uses it to color the sun a happy red. Every wind brings new, clean air from the infinite Eastern and Western reaches. During windless times, clean new air cycles down from the endless Heavens.

The Lizard has Dominion. The Lizard is to be Fruitful and Multiply.

Lizard Land is, verily, a Cornucopia!

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SUVs lead auto sales

The Washington Post reports that SUV sales are fine again. Apparently, people have adjusted to the rise in gas prices as optimism about economic prospects for the US rebounds. Time to resume living large.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/12/29/AR2010122904445.html

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Sphere

I live on a big round ball

I never do dream I may fall….

From Defying Gravity by Jesse Winchester ©1974

The earth is round, although it doesn’t really look that way. But it is round, and finite, although we don’t really live that way.

The intellect understands, from books and from watching ship’s masts disappear over the horizon and from traveling the globe and from meeting others who have made around the world voyages, that the earth is a bounded sphere.

But the lizard brain–the prime and primal mover of human energies–does not conceive the environment in terms of Euclidean solids and chains of implications. It is concerned with survival and expansion and excitement.

The intellect has power and we kid ourselves that it mainly rules (or should rule) human affairs. But the lizard is king.

And that is one reason why we are making infinite demands on our finite, spherical home.

Why is it so hard for the intellect to train the lizard?

(image from http://www.theoildrum.com/story/2006/11/2/19278/4139)

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BlechNog

Blog…

“Blog” is an ugly word.

It sounds like a contraction of BlechNog–that horrible, artificial and unhealthy imitation EggNog sold on the street.

Anyway, are most “Blogs” really Web Logs?  Are they “Logs” presented on the “Web”?

Can we instead call these things Topically Related and Commented Thoughts (TRACTs) or something?  As in:  “Please see my Tract on the Web” or “I am keeping up a Tract about that issue”.

As a bonus, Bloggers would then become Tractors– a name with a more down-to-earth and workish feel to it.

billh

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