by Julia Kollewe
The Observer
5 September 2010
from
Guardian Website
Poor Harvests and Demand From Developing
Countries Could Push Cost of Weekly Shop Up by 10% |
Global wheat harvest
this year has been hit by droughts and floods.
Photograph: Graham Turner for
the Guardian
Two years after the last food crisis, when prices surged by nearly 15% in
the UK, food inflation is back. Soaring global food prices have prompted
City and food industry experts to warn that the cost of the weekly shop is
set to rise by up to 10% in the coming months.
As in 2008, rocketing prices are the result of rising demand and supply
shortages caused by freak weather and poor harvests. Moreover, these
conditions are exacerbated by speculation on commodity markets and changing
diets in fast-growing Asian countries.
Last week, the UN's Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) called an
emergency meeting for 24 September to discuss the food crisis.
In Mozambique, riots broke out following the
government's decision to raise bread prices by 30%, leaving seven people
dead and hundreds injured. At the same time the Russian government extended
its export ban on wheat by another 12 months as it battles drought,
shortages and inflation at home, which threatens to push up prices further.
European wheat prices hit more than €231 (£192)
a tonne last week, just below last month's two-year high of €236 but still
60% higher than a year ago in sterling terms. Corn prices are at their
highest level since June 2009 while sugar has been on a rollercoaster ride
after hitting a 29-year peak in February.
FAO economist Abdolreza Abbassian raises the prospect of further
civil unrest in less developed countries if the price of basic food
continues to rise:
"Russia's move is another unfortunate
development that will prolong upward pressure on grain prices and
contribute to higher price instability in world markets. Rioting may
reappear in poor districts around the world if prices of basic foodstuff
commodities continue to rise further."
Surging wheat prices, along with higher sugar
and oil-seed costs, drove the FAO's international food price index up 5%
last month, the biggest rise since last November.
The organization estimates this year's wheat
crop at 646m tonnes - down 5% from last year - while world barley
production, also hit by bad weather in the former Soviet Union and the EU,
is forecast to drop by 22% to a 30-year low of 129m tonnes. Last month
global meat prices hit a 20-year high.
In the UK, Premier Foods, owner of the Hovis brand, has warned the global
shortage of wheat could push up the cost of bread by at least 5p a loaf,
while other food brands such as McDougalls flour and Mr Kipling cakes will
also cost more.
A leading UK supplier of flour, Rank Hovis, is to increase its prices from 6
September. Soaring barley prices mean that the pub price of a pint of beer
could top £4 this time next year.
Experts fear that UK food price inflation, which was running at an annual
rate of 3.4% in July, could now rise to 10% - depending on whether costs
continue to climb and to what extent food manufacturers absorb the
increases.
The Grocer's food and drink editor Alex Beckett reckons that if
prices for commodities such as wheat, sugar, cocoa and palm oil remain at
current levels, by January the weekly shop could cost 10% more than 12
months previously.
Philip Shaw, chief economist at Investec, said:
"If the current rise in prices is sustained,
food price inflation might climb to 7-8% by mid-2011."
And Philip Rush, at Nomura, sees food
prices going higher over the next year, tipping back up to above 5%
year-on-year growth.
Meat
Global meat prices have risen
sharply as a drop in production from exporters such as Argentina and the
US has coincided with rising demand from China, where consumers are
eating more meat than they used to.
The FAO's index of meat prices in August
climbed to its highest level since it started compiling the index in
1990, up 16% over the past year. Lamb prices are at a 37-year high, beef
prices are at their highest level in two years and pork and poultry have
also become dearer.
Mark Topliff at Eblex, which represents the English beef and
sheep industry, explains that in recent years, falling cattle prices
have led to fewer farmers keeping cows in major exporting nations like
Argentina, Brazil and the US, the world's biggest beef producer.
The removal of EU subsidies under the common
agricultural policy for British and European sheep farmers has also led
to a decline in sheep numbers.
Wheat
The European flour milling
association has highlighted the role of speculators in driving up wheat
prices, although the global shortage appears to be the main factor.
The main culprit is the weather - wheat
prices have been going up since the summer when crops were hit by a
drought and wildfires in Russia and dry weather in Ukraine and
Kazakhstan, compounded by unusually wet weather in Canada and the floods
in Pakistan.
Russia, the world's fourth-biggest wheat producer, has imposed an export
ban on grain amid its worst drought in at least 50 years, and prime
minister Vladimir Putin warned last Thursday that the ban could
stay in place until after the 2011 harvest, forcing importers in the
Middle East and North Africa to turn to Europe and the US for supplies.
"This has completely changed the
complexion of the market," said Sudakshina Unnikrishnan, a
commodities analyst at Barclays Capital. "We see further upside for
corn and wheat prices. Consuming countries are scrambling to gain
access to supplies," she warns.
Britain's wheat crop is expected to be close
to average this year, but Germany, which had more rain in August, could
become reliant on wheat imports for the first time in 10 years.
The winter wheat harvest will be 9% lower
this year than last, according to the German farmers' association,
forcing Germany to import grain from France and the US. Bad weather has
also affected the quality of the wheat, which suffers when it stands too
long in the rain. Lower-quality wheat is used as animal feed.
The premium for high-quality milling wheat used in bread, cereals and
biscuits, which now costs about £195 a tonne, has climbed to £30-£40
from the typical £10-£15.
"If we don't get a bumper harvest from
the southern hemisphere, namely Argentina and Australia [due at
Christmas], the wheat price could continue to stay where it is,"
said Guy Gagen, chief arable adviser at the National Farmers' Union.
The Northern hemisphere - the US, Canada,
Russia and northern Europe - produces 80% of the world's wheat supply.
Experts note, however, that the market is not in the same position as it
was in 2007/08, when global wheat stocks were very low, as there have
been two seasons of replenishment. The problem is that many countries
will not release their surplus stocks to the market but are hoarding
them, says Alexander Waugh, director general of the National
Association of British and Irish Millers.
On a brighter note, he adds:
"High prices tend to encourage farmers
to plant more crops. The situation may be uncomfortable but it's not
out of control or unmanageable."
Cocoa
In mid-July, a US commodities
trading company, Armajaro, attempted to corner the market in cocoa by
taking delivery of 7% of the world's supply at a time when prices were
at a 32-year high of $3,200 per tonne (£2,077) - a $1bn bet.
The fear was Armajaro would squeeze the
market, forcing prices even higher. In the event prices have gone into
reverse, falling by more than 25% as fears have receded that supplies
from Ivory Coast, which produces 40% of the world's cocoa, would be hit
by bad weather.
However, last week Barry Callebaut - the world's biggest chocolate
company, which supplies confectioners such as Nestlé - said prices would
stay high.
"Retailers do not want to accept higher
prices at the moment in spite of higher raw material costs," said
the company's chief executive. "But pressures will rise, prices will
just have to increase."
Sugar
Sugar prices hit a 29-year high
in February, but then fell back sharply. However, last week Brazil - the
world's biggest sugar producer - warned crops may be lower than expected
as a result of dry weather and the price climbed back to its highest
level since March.
Coffee
Coffee prices are at a 12-year
high and global stocks at their lowest level for a decade. Several
coffee bars have started to push through price rises, although Starbucks
said last week that it would not raise prices.