Global food prices climb
PARIS, France – Global food prices rose by 1.4 per cent in September after holding steady for two months as cereals, meat and dairy prices climbed, the UN Food and Agricultural Organization said yesterday.
The FAO’s Food Price Index, a monthly measure of changes in a basket of food commodities, edged up three points to 216 points in September.
“Following two months of stability, the Index rose slightly, mostly on strengthening dairy and meat prices and more contained increases for cereals,” a FAO statement said.
Prices of sugar and oils fell, it added.
The overall index remains far off the record 238 points reached in February 2011, and is four per cent lower than in September 2011.
The cereals sub-index also rose, by one per cent or three points from August to 263 points in September, as gains in wheat and rice offset a decline in maize.
While gains in maize, or corn, prices had been behind most of the increases in recent months, the FAO said tightening wheat suppliers were also becoming a concern.
The FAO said the Cereal Price Index is seven percent higher than in the corresponding period last year but still four percent below the peak of 274 points registered in April 2008.
The meat price index rose 2.1 percent, with pork and chicken prices seeing the biggest gains.
The dairy index jumped by seven percent from August, registering its sharpest monthly gain since January 2011, said the FAO.
The FAO said its latest forecasts confirm a decline in global cereal production this year from the record registered in 2011.
“At the currently forecast level, world cereal production in 2012 would be 2.6 percent down from the previous year’s record crop but close to the second largest in 2008,” said the FAO.
The overall decrease comprises a 5.2 percent reduction in wheat production and a 2.3 percent reduction for coarse grains, it added.
The FAO has already forecast for two months that grains consumption would outstrip production, with stocks being drawn down.
It expects grains stocks to fall by 28 million tonnes to 499 million tonnes at the end of seasons in 2013, despite global demand sliding as a result of high prices.
It noted that production has been affected by drought in key producing areas such as the United States, Europe and Central Asia.
—AFP