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Slower Global Agricultural Production In Next Decade But Prices Above Historic Average, Says FAO

Global agricultural production is expected to grow 1.5% a year on average over the coming decade, compared with annual growth of 2.1% between 2003 and 2012, according to a new report published by the OECD and FAO released this week. Limited expansion of agricultural land, rising production costs, growing resource constraints and increasing environmental pressures are the main factors behind the trend. But the report argues that farm commodity supply should keep pace with global demand. The OECD-FAO Agricultural Outlook 2013/2022 expects prices to remain above historical averages over the medium term for both crop and livestock products due to a combination of slower production growth and stronger demand, including for bio-fuels. The report says agriculture has been turned into an increasingly market-driven sector, as opposed to policy-driven as it was in the past, thus offering developing countries important investment opportunities and economic benefits, given their growing food demand, potential for production expansion and comparative advantages in many global markets. However, production shortfalls, price volatility and trade disruption remain a threat to global food security. The OECD/FAO Outlook warns: “As long as food stocks in major producing and consuming countries remain low, the risk of price volatility is amplified. A wide-spread drought such as the one experienced in 2012, on top of low food stocks, could raise world prices by 15-40%”. China, with one-fifth of the world’s population, high income growth and a rapidly expanding agri-food sector, will have a major influence on world markets, and is the special focus of the report. China is projected to remain self-sufficient in the main food crops, although output is anticipated to slow in the next decade due to land, water and rural labor constraints. Presenting the joint report in Beijing, OECD Secretary-General Angel Gurría said: “The outlook for global agriculture is relatively bright with strong demand, expanding trade and high prices. But this picture assumes continuing economic recovery. If we fail to turn the global economy around, investment and growth in agriculture will suffer and food security may be compromised”. “Governments need to create the right enabling environment for growth and trade” he added. “Agricultural reforms have played a key role in China’s remarkable progress in expanding production and improving domestic food security”. FAO Director-General José Graziano da Silva said: “High food prices are an incentive to increase production and we need to do our best to ensure that poor farmers benefit from them. Let’s not forget that 70% of the world’s food insecure population lives in rural areas of developing countries and that many of them are small-scale and subsistence farmers themselves”. He added: “China’s agricultural production has been tremendously successful. Since 1978, the volume of agricultural production has grown almost five fold and the country has made significant progress towards food security. China is on track to achieving the first millennium development goal of hunger reduction. While China’s production has expanded and food security has improved, resource and environmental issues need more attention. Growth in livestock production could also face a number of challenges. We are happy to work with China to find viable and lasting solutions.” Driven by growing populations, higher incomes, urbanization and changing diets, consumption of the main agricultural commodities will increase most rapidly in Eastern Europe and Central Asia, followed by Latin America and other Asian economies. The share of global production from developing countries will continue to increase as investment in their agricultural sectors narrows the productivity gap with advanced economies. Developing countries, for example, are expected to account for 80% of the growth in global meat production and capture much of the trade growth over the next 10 years. They will account for the majority of world exports of coarse grains, rice, oilseeds, vegetable oil, sugar, beef, poultry and fish by 2022. To capture a share of these economic benefits, governments will need to invest in their agricultural sectors to encourage innovation, increase productivity and improve integration in global value chains, FAO and OECD stressed. Agricultural policies need to address the inherent volatility of commodity markets with improved tools for risk management while ensuring the sustainable use of land and water resources and reducing food loss and waste. China’s consumption growth is expected to outpace its production growth by some 0.3 percent per year, signaling a further but modest opening of China’s agricultural sector, the report said. China’s imports of oilseeds are expected to rise by 40 percent over the next ten years, accounting for 59% of global trade. Both the meat and dairy sectors will continue to expand which will result in higher imports of feed grains. China is expected to become the world’s leading consumer of pig-meat on a per capita basis, surpassing the European Union by 2022. China should maintain its leading role in global aquaculture at 63% of global production and remain the largest fish exporter. China is projected to remain self-sufficient in the main food crops, although output growth is anticipated to slow in the next decade. Key uncertainties around the agricultural outlook for China should be closely monitored and addressed, the report said. These include the sustainability of high levels of economic growth, increasing resource constraints on production, land degradation and water depletion, and greater production variability due to climate change. According to FAO estimates, China’s food security has improved with the number of undernourished falling by almost 100 million since 1990, despite adding an additional 200 million people to its population. Ensuring the food security of the estimated 158 million persons still undernourished remains a major challenge, the report. Continue reading

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Ukraine Poised For Global Ag Role

CHERYL TEVIS 06/11/2013 @ 7:22am Today’s announcement of the opening of DuPont Pioneer’s seed production facility in Stasi, Dykanka region, Poltava oblast, Ukraine, signals the region’s expanding stature as a growing agricultural economy and an emerging player in global food security. The $40 million investment will support the increasing demand for Pioneer brand maize, sunflower, and oilseed rape hybrids in Ukraine. Pioneer sales revenue in Ukraine has risen by 30% compounded annually between 2006 and 2011. Maize and sunflower unit volume sales have doubled in the same period. “Surely there is a deficit of quality seeds in Ukraine,” says Iurii Mykhailov, an ag economist who lives in Kiev, Ukraine. But he says that the DuPont Pioneer facility joins several other companies, including Syngenta, Monsanto, France’s Euralis, Germany’s KWS, and Maisadour, a French cooperative. Ukrainian companies Mais, Swargo, and West Trading Group also have their own seed plants. Mykhailov says that the Ukrainian infrastructure may require ramping up. He pegs the estimated production of corn in 2013/14 at about 22 million tons. “The current throughput of the Ukrainian grain export terminals is 40 million tons per annum,” he says. “The total storage capacity of elevators is 35 million tons. The new storage and export capacities must be doubled to accommodate the growing production.” He says corn is in demand since it’s used as a substitute for weather-damaged winter wheat crops. Ukraine currently exports about two-thirds of its corn. “There’s no sufficient demand for feed in Ukraine,” Mykhailov says. “The new seed facilities will help to improve the seed quality that in turn will help increase exports. Ukrainian corn is welcome in the Middle East and North African countries.” Mykhailov says that technological improvements also will play a critical role in Ukraine’s goal to double its grain production. “The main improvement can be achieved by increasing fertilizer usage, irrigation in the southern regions, and adequate machinery,” he says. He adds that other foreign countries are exploring the potential for investment, including Libya and China: China has invested in increasing Ukraine’s grain storage capacity. Continue reading

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China’s Carbon Market Unlikely To Go Global For Decades

May 16, 2013 China, the world’s largest greenhouse-gas emitter, probably won’t import carbon credits for two decades as global diplomats craft a new emissions market that will increase supply, the nation’s climate negotiator said. Using offsets from outside China in that period is an “unlikely scenario,” Su Wei said in an interview in Bonn earlier this month. “Rather, internally we will have a lot of offsetting credits.” United Nations envoys are seeking to put together a new carbon market as the world negotiates a climate-protection agreement to take effect around 2020. The need for greenhouse- gas action may surge by then, when global emissions will probably exceed by at least 18 per cent the limits scientists have said will keep temperatures from rising 2 degrees Celsius, the UN estimated in November. “We are not very hopeful that we’ll see a global agreement over the next few years” that will increase demand, said Albrecht von Ruffer, Hamburg-based managing partner of Nserve Environmental Services GmbH. While China, South Korea and California are building or have installed carbon markets, “we don’t expect them to allow meaningful volumes of imports,” he said in a May 13 phone interview. The European Union is due to publish data today showing which emission credits were used by factories, power stations and airlines last year. Excess supply Certified Emission Reduction, or CER, offsets are created from carbon-reducing projects in developing countries under the Clean Development Mechanism, the biggest UN market by supply. Emission Reduction Units are from developed nation projects under the UN’s Joint Implementation mechanism. Supplies from both programs were at 2.1 billion tons as of May 14, according to data from the website of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change. That’s more than the 1.7 billion tons allowed for compliance in the EU carbon market in the 13 years through 2020, according to that market’s rules. CERs for December have jumped 48 per cent so far this month, amid buying by EU emitters for compliance in the world’s largest carbon market. They rose 1 cent, or 2.6 per cent, to settle at 40 cents a ton on ICE yesterday in London. Waning demand for UN credits drove prices 90 per cent lower in the past year, according to ICE Futures Europe in London. New market A new market might encourage installation of the latest emissions-cutting technology in developing-nation industries, said Artur Runge-Metzger, the EU’s lead negotiator. The plan, still being put together, would stimulate nations to enact policies requiring industries to cut emissions, Runge- Metzger said May 2 in an interview in Bonn. For instance, a facility in the waste-management industry may get credits for implementing technology that’s even more advanced than set out in a government policy. “That may be the part that is going to be credited,” Runge-Metzger said. “You don’t have to go project by project, or waste-management site by waste-management site.” Crediting would result from a monitoring system that’s industrywide rather than project-specific, he said. Under the Clean Development Mechanism, each project must win registration from UN-overseen regulators and monitor its own emission reductions. ‘Not attractive’ A new offsetting market is “not attractive” to China, Su said in a May 2 interview in Bonn. Nations need tighter greenhouse-gas limits to spur consumption of credits, he said. “If there are no ambitious targets, there will be no demand,” he said. “So what’s the purpose of starting a new market mechanism?” Carbon markets are needed to encourage clean technology and protect the climate, according to Norway, a country that is buying offsets. “We believe the carbon markets will be very important in the years going forward,” Kjetil Lund, an Oslo-based deputy minister in the nation’s finance ministry, said in a May 7 phone interview. “We’re not happy with the very low prices.” Nserve, founded in 2003 before the EU’s market began, also is buying selected offsets, favoring those that may be alternatively marketed to companies and people who wish to voluntarily cut their emissions, von Ruffer said. That’s because there’s still not enough certainty about the future of international regulated markets, he said. “I wouldn’t build a business on this hope at the moment.” Read more: http://www.smh.com.a…l#ixzz2TSOXbVhd Continue reading

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