Food crisis being felt around world, page
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Topic started on 2-4-2008 @ 06:23 AM by LDragonFire

Food crisis being felt around world


www.nationalpost.com
Sharply rising prices have triggered food riots in recent weeks in Mexico, Morocco, Senegal, Uzbekistan, Guinea, Mauritania and Yemen, and aid agencies around the world worry they may be unable to feed the poorest of the poor.

In the Philippines, officials are raiding warehouses in Manila looking for unscrupulous traders hoarding rice, while in South Korea, panicked housewives recently stripped grocery-store shelves of food when the cost of ramen, an instant noodle made from wheat
(visit the link for the full news article)


Related News Links:
environment.newscientist.com
www.marketoracle.co.uk
www.sundayherald.com

Related AboveTopSecret.com Discussion Threads:
Tensions rise as world faces food crisis


reply posted on 2-4-2008 @ 11:00 AM by Rockpuck
reply to post by LDragonFire



Thank God they halted their exports to feed their own people..

It won't be enough.. but.. the alternative..

Ireland's great famine could have been prevented had the sale of Wheat and meat products been halted. Even during the Famine Ireland's net export was.... food.

These countries halting food exports to keep an intra-trade of products to assist their people before making profits is a very good way to go.

But like I said.. it won't be enough.. and God forbid is something happens to a crop.. like a drought.. the situation for that country will be quite terrible.


reply posted on 2-4-2008 @ 11:24 AM by MikeboydUS
reply to post by LDragonFire




I've noticed the crisis which is why I posted this on the 31st of March

Tensions rise as world faces food crisis
www.abovetopsecret.com...


reply posted on 2-4-2008 @ 02:47 PM by LDragonFire
reply to post by MikeboydUS



and thats why I included your thread in my opening post..

I'm still surprised that there isn't more interest in this

[edit on 2-4-2008 by LDragonFire]


reply posted on 3-4-2008 @ 03:30 AM by KilgoreTrout
Originally posted by misswanderer31
I hope that governments and countries and people... wake up fast enough to do something before its too late... but I know in reality this never happens. And it is always too late.


I don't think that there is any intention to do anything about it. Geopolitically I think a major famine in China for example would solve a number of problems and could lead a civil war that will bring the country into line with the west. Any depopulation will be a bonus. Both the wheat and rice shortages have been reported for some months now, there has been no drive to raise awareness. The major news coverage will not come until people are actually starving to death and people are fighting for basic staples. The truth is that nothing can now be done to prevent it, it is going to have a knock on effect and that will keep us all too worried about ourselves to care that people are starving to death in China and inevitably Africa. For the powers that be, the NWO and the Elites this is a win, win situation.

If you take the UK for example, we are fairly reliant on imported food stuffs. Our population is currently around 60 million, at a maximum we can feed 40 million of those people using home grown produce. Even that would require some rationing. To keep the surplus 20 million from starvation the powers that be, are going to ensure that imports continue, they would rather China starved than the British or any other 'white' northern european nation. China could presumably be contained and isolated, let nature do its work and possibly step in to save the day at the opportune moment.

I've been thinking about this a great deal of late and whether there is any engineering involved in the shortages. I don't think there has to be, just a failure to plan a response to shortages - the no-planning system as developed by Heinrich Himmler.



reply posted on 3-4-2008 @ 02:49 PM by RabbitChaser
Just new articles...

"Rice Jumps to Record, Corn Near High as Demand Outpaces Supply"
www.bloomberg.com...

"The World Bank estimates ``that 33 countries around the world face potential social unrest because of the acute hike in food and energy prices,'' Robert Zoellick, the bank's president, said on the organization's Web site. For these countries ``there is no margin for survival,'' he said."

And this ties in here and ties in with my theme of the lack of common sense in this world, especially with our policy makers...

"New biofuel laws are utter madness"
www.spiderednews.com...@www.moneyweek.com...

"It just doesn’t make sense

Pimentel calculated that an acre of US corn can be processed into about 328 gallons of ethanol. But planting, growing and harvesting that much corn requires about 140 gallons of fossil fuels and costs $347 per acre. That is $1.05 per gallon of ethanol before the corn even moves off the farm. Then there’s fermentation: as many as three distillation steps and other treatments are needed to separate the ethanol from the water.

So, adding up the total energy costs of corn production and its conversion to ethanol, 131,000 British thermal units (BTUs) are needed to make 1 gallon of ethanol, which has an energy value of only 77,000 BTU.

A net energy loss?
So, 70% more energy is required to produce ethanol than the energy actually in ethanol. Every time you make 1 gallon of ethanol, there is a net energy loss of 54,000 BTU. Fans of ethanol as a fuel need to answer just one question - if producing biofuels is so cost effective, why on earth does their production require government subsidies?"
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