News

World food prices highest in 2 years

International food prices have risen to their highest level in two years, fuelled in part by a drought in Russia that lifted the cost of wheat, a UN agency said Wednesday.

Russian drought drives up the cost of wheat

International food prices have risen to their highest level in two years, fuelled in part by a drought in Russia that lifted the cost of wheat, a UN agency said Wednesday.

Farmers bring in the harvest with their combine harvesters, background, on a barley field near the village of Uzunovo in Moscow region, 170 km south of Moscow. The Russian government has banned grain exports due to a severe drought that has reduced this year's estimated harvest by a third. ((Ivan Sekretarev/Associated Press))
The Rome-based UN Food and Agriculture Organization said its food price index shot up five per cent between July and August. But that was still 38 per cent down from its peak in June 2008.

Drought in Russia — and the country's subsequent restrictions on wheat exports — forced a sudden sharp rise in wheat prices, the agency said. Higher sugar and oilseed prices also were factors.

The agency's Abdulreza Abbassian said there were sharp differences between the current price situation and the spring of 2008, when high oil prices and growing demand for biofuels pushed world food stocks to their lowest levels since 1982.

Stocks are much higher now and even while the forecast for world cereal production in 2010 has been lowered it is still expected to be the third highest on record.