Global food
prices reached record highs early this year, sending millions around the
world into poverty and contributing to starvation in East Africa. Many
blame the government-subsidized growth in the market for biofuels, such
as ethanol. Biofuels are expected to consume 40 percent of this year's
corn crop from the world's largest producer -- the United States. Others
say commodities speculators caused food prices to ricochet wildly.
Europe is considering adopting restrictions on speculation similar to a
new U.S. law, but Wall Street is lobbying hard to weaken the American
regulations. Perennially high food prices may be the first sign that
changing climate is handicapping agriculture. To feed the world's
growing population, experts say farmers must double their food output by
mid-century -- a tall order to fill without destroying more rain
forests and further boosting planet-warming carbon emissions. The
solution may be a combination of two warring philosophies: high-tech
agriculture and traditional farming methods that are kinder to the
environment. CQ Global Researcher Rising Food Prices v.5-20 |
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