Archive for the ‘Food’ Category

Food stockpiled as truckies strike

Sunday, August 3rd, 2008

Strike action is being pushed by two Queensland groups - the Australian Long Distance Owners and Drivers Association and the National Road Transport Forum.

The two groups say thousands of truckies were to begin picket lines at oil refineries across Australia from midnight to stay in place for a fortnight, protesting low pay rates, backloading, new fatigue regulations, and soaring fuel and registration costs.

But the biggest truckies union, the Transport Workers Union, said they were not backing the action.

Organisers are calling it a nationwide strike, but a TWU spokesman said they were a local “fringe group” and the action was limited to drivers in Queensland.

NTRF spokesman Mick Pattell said the truckies would stick it out for the fortnight, but he expected public pressure to force the government to act.

“Everyone’s going to find it pretty tough to deal with if it goes that long,” he told the Seven Network this morning.

“I don’t believe it will go that long because I think the pressure coming from the public will make the government come to the table.”

He said some of the changes being introduced, including changes to fatigue laws, needed to be addressed.

“Some of these reforms are (more) about money than they are about safety. Some of the reforms regarding the driving hour regimes really don’t stack up when you compare them with what we already have.”

Margy Osmond from the Australian National Retailers Association said major grocery chains were prepared for the action.

“Many of the larger ones have already started stockpiling particularly fresh fruit and vegetables and things like meat,” she told Seven.

“Hopefully there aren’t going to be shortages, but I suppose the message is when you go into your local supermarket you might need to be a little bit patient and understanding if things start to get thin.”

“At this point in time we don’t have indications that it’s going to be uniform across the country, indications are that it’s going to be more of a problem in Queensland.

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Obama’s Uniquely Awful Veep Prospect

Saturday, August 2nd, 2008

What the Obama camp is doing is clear enough. They are signaling that the candidate might consider a bipartisan “unity” ticket. That’s reasonable, as long as the Republican has some record of taking stands that might by some reasonable stretch of the imagination be considered breaks with Republican orthodoxy. Of course, Nebraska Senator Chuck Hagel, an edgier critic of the Bush administration’s foreign policies than most Democrats who recently traveled with Obama to Afghanistan and Iraq, tops most lists of cross-over contenders.

Maybe someone like former Rhode Island Senator Lincoln Chafee, a steadfast Iraq War foe who has endorsed Obama, would find a place on a list of possible running mates.

Perhaps former U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations John Danforth, who was no liberal when he served as a senator from Missouri but who is universally recognized as an honorable and realistic political player, would fit the bill.

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Food safety overhaul sought

Friday, August 1st, 2008

Experts say the recent U.S. salmonella outbreak shows the system for protecting the nation’s food supply needs to be overhauled.

Critics say the U.S Food and Drug Administration system for ensuring food safety is broken.

“This is not a matter of throwing a few more million dollars at the problem and a ‘tomatogate’ wouldn’t happen,” he was quoted as saying.

Some have called for an overhaul of the nation’s food safety laws.

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Myanmar farmers back at work

Thursday, July 31st, 2008

Like tens of thousands of farmers, Ko Nyi Thaut labors from dawn to dusk preparing his flood-ravaged Irrawaddy delta land for a crop that should have been planted a month ago.

“It would not have been enough for my family if we still had 11 people. But the cyclone killed six of my children, so maybe we will have enough rice for the family now.”

Now comes the task of feeding the survivors, and aid workers acknowledge the odds are stacked against them being able to match the bountiful yields that turned this region into Myanmar’s rice bowl.

Many farmers have been quickly draining their land and removing fallen trees and other debris. But say they lack water buffaloes and plows, or have gone heavily into debt to buy fuel that has doubled in price. Families have lost not just their land but the fathers and sons who knew how to farm it.

“It doesn’t look good at all,” Ashley Clements of the World Vision aid group said by telephone from Myanmar. Many people will need food aid for “for the next few months and even for a year or so.”

“Normally, we try and avoid giving out food at harvest time,” said Tony Banbury, the WFP regional director in Bangkok. But this time it’s different because of the loss of animals, land or a family head who “may have left behind a wife and four kids but she doesn’t have the skills to immediately pick up farming.”

Many fields are empty, flooded or littered with yellow rice shoots killed by salty water.

Ko Nyi Thaut said he is driven by the imperative of feeding what’s left of his family.

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Community Food Bank Gets Help From Blues Festival

Wednesday, July 30th, 2008

For many years the Greater Pittsburgh Community Food Bank has been helping the needy with food, but with the tough economic times the food bank is now hurting too.

This weekend, at Hartwood Acres, the Pittsburgh Blues Festival is hoping to help turn things around for the food bank.

With the economy hurting, the food bank is getting hit from all sides, more people need help, costs are going up and donations are down.

But Blues Festival fans say they are more than willing to help out.

“Everybody needs help these days,” said festival attendee, Sue Patterson. “With the gas prices and housing and everything, everyone needs help some way or another so everybody has to do their part.”

“I think that the Blues fans have come too really like the festival because they know that not only do they get great music, but they get to do a wonderful thing at the same time,” said Valanti.

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Food crisis could hit HIV treatment

Tuesday, July 29th, 2008

Spiralling food costs could cause a new crisis in Africa’s HIV programme, a UK aid agency has warned.

Speaking ahead of an HIV-Aids conference in Mexico, Cafod said advances in treatment for the virus could be swiftly undermined by the soaring price owf foodstuff.

Its partners in Africa have reported sufferers coming off anti-retroviral (ARV) drugs, while the effectiveness of the treatment was being weakened by poor diets.

The last few years have seen a surge in the availability of anti-retroviral (ARV) drugs in poor areas of Africa. But as the cost of food continues to rise, people are increasingly struggling to afford a balanced diet essential for the success of ARV treatment.

HIV patients are also coming off treatment to avoid the cost of travelling to clinics and in some cases buying the drugs, Cafod said.

There is also evidence that some people are coming off ARV treatment so that they do not incur the increased appetite that the treatment gives.

If people stop taking ARVs there is a higher risk of resistance. This in turn could lead to a drug resistant strain of the virus being passed on, aid workers have warned.

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Many Factors Pushing Food Crisis

Sunday, May 25th, 2008

The new hunger has triggered riots from Haiti to Egypt to Ethiopia, threatening political stability; it has conjured up a raft of protectionist policies, threatening globalization. And yet the response to this crisis from governments the world over has been lackadaisical or worse.

Start with the lunatic story of rice stockpiles in Japan. A new paper from the Center for Global Development describes how Japan’s government imports rice in order to comply with its global trade commitments but withholds most of that rice from consumers lest they decide they prefer it to the local sort. Japanese traditionalists view the consumption of sticky, short-grained rice as a patriotic duty. So rather than letting Mrs. Watanabe corrupt her children’s dietary habits, Japan stores much of its imported rice until it has become unfit for human consumption, whereupon it is sold to feed livestock.

From the perspective of Japan, stockpiling rice is a costly exercise in chauvinism, but Japan can afford that. From the world’s perspective, the stockpiling is more serious. More than 3 billion people depend on rice as their daily staple, and half of them are very poor. Japan could save many of them from hunger if it released its stocks.

The scandal is not just Japanese, however. In order for Japan to sell its rice outside its borders, it needs permission from the countries that supplied it — the United States, Thailand and Vietnam. A bit of U.S. leadership could deliver that permission easily, but the Bush administration is apparently worried about a backlash from American rice growers who see no downside in high prices, thank you very much. Not for the first time in Washington do the fat welfare queens of the farm lobby trample on the poorest people in the world.

Speaking of welfare queens, Congress passed a farm bill last week with thunderous bipartisan support. The bill includes reasonable subsidies for low-income Americans hit by high food prices, but it also sprays money at farmers who already earn more than the average taxpayer and contains shockingly little for the world’s poor. Congress is considering a separate bill that would boost international food aid more substantially. But that measure has been met with shameful indifference by lawmakers and consequently has stalled.

Congress won’t even act on a common-sense proposal from the Bush administration that food aid be reformed. If the United States bought some of the food that it donates from other countries, it could get aid to the needy faster and more cheaply. But that would upset American farmers and shipping interests, as a new Council on Foreign Relations paper emphasizes. The president’s proposal has few takers on the Hill.

The Europeans, for their part, have their own way of entrenching hunger. Just as Japan is wedded to its rice culture, Europe is irrationally hostile to genetically modified food. Study after study has found no danger in seeds that have been manipulated to grow better, withstand insects or survive in arid soil. But the Europeans still feel squeamish, and their hang-up deters Africans from taking advantage of crop science lest their exports be barred from European markets. Again, a peccadillo that to Europeans is affordable starves people in the poor world.

Finally, poor countries themselves have made things worse. Panicked at the prospect of food riots, countries with crop surpluses have forbidden exports in an attempt to bottle up supply and keep prices down. More than 40 countries have imposed some kind of export restraint, with the result that countries suffering food deficits have seen prices hit the roof. This nationalized hoarding is frustrating international relief efforts. The World Food Program has sought to buy food from countries with surpluses, such as Pakistan, to ship to desperate neighbors such as Afghanistan. But Pakistan drags its feet about selling.

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Food wars and the challenge for peace-makers

Sunday, May 25th, 2008

Everyday concerns of the population rarely reach the negotiating table, in part because the economic and social problems in conflict-ridden societies are extremely complex, involve many actors and can only be resolved in the long term.

So what happens when people are driven to kill one another for food? It’s a critical question to ask as the world faces a sudden and unexpected food price crisis that is threatening to plunge millions back into poverty.

The sharp spike in food prices this year has already generated violence. Food riots in parts of Africa and the Caribbean have created social and political instability. In rice-growing countries like India, Vietnam and Thailand, hoarding has begun with export bans already in place, creating inter-state friction.

Burma’s rice-growing capacity has been devastated by Cyclone Nargis, which will add to price pressures in the coming months.

This is largely a crisis born of inflation and other market factors rather than fundamental shortages. Prices for the benchmark Thai variety of rice, a food staple across much of Asia, have increased threefold in a year, reports the Asian Development Bank. Meat prices have risen by 60% in Bangladesh in the year ending in March, and by 45% in Cambodia and 30% in the Philippines.

With this sharp increase in the price of basic staples, people are already hoarding, stealing and fighting over scarce supplies. The World Food Programme calls it a “silent tsunami.”

The threat of conflict is real, both within societies where the numbers impoverished by higher grain prices is already high, and also between states as the trend towards commercial liberalisation and conglomeration is suddenly reversed and replaced by subsidies, price-fixing cartels and export curbs.

In Indonesia, retired general recently warned: “If students demonstrate it’s not a worry, but if hungry people take to the streets, now that’s dangerous.”

Hunger causes conflict when people feel they have nothing to lose and are willing to kill their neighbours over scarce resources. The peasant wars of the late 20th century in Central and South America and the wars that sprung from famine in Nigeria, Ethiopia and Sudan, are grim reminders of man’s most basic instinct, which is to fight to survive.

The trouble is that in terms of resolving conflict, we have come to rely less on material remedies and more on political artifice. Many of the internal conflicts that have been peacefully resolved in recent years only superficially addressed the material seeds of conflict. Peace agreements have been elite affairs where leaders of armed groups and governments reached an understanding on how to share power within a common state.

This approach is a sensible first step toward conflict resolution: by convincing the people inciting violence to lay down their arms, it becomes possible to start designing a wider range of policies addressing socio-economic issues.

However, typically, the socio-economic changes and the economic reconstruction and development the public was expecting trickled down slowly, if at all. Aceh remains one of the poorest parts of Indonesia, as does Mindanao in the southern Philippines - two areas of Southeast Asia where peace has been negotiated.

When hunger drives people into conflict, we might presume that peace-making will simply be a question of providing food. We would be mistaken. In fact, the experience of humanitarian aid agencies in the 1970s and ’80s in Africa was that food aid tends to fuel conflict, as the combatants seek to harness the supply of nutrition to the goals of war.

Experts tell us that farmers will eventually adjust the supply of food to cope with higher demand so that prices stabilise. More encouragingly, there are signs that decades of improving cooperation between states is stimulating a collective urge to resolve the crisis. The sharing of technology is key, says Kofi Annan, the former UN secretary-general. He believes that farmers in Africa could double food output in five to 10 years if rich countries partner them in a “Green Revolution” for a long-term solution to the continent’s food crisis.

But realistically, trade agreements and technological advances are slow-moving transformations.

In the meantime, officials in India warn that the food price crisis could plunge millions of people into poverty in a country that is already battling an internal Marxist insurgency that draws support from impoverished and landless peasants.

In Bangladesh, where the soaring cost price of staples has forced the marginally poor to give up meat and rice, there is a significantly increased risk of conflict in an already fractured polity.

The immediate challenge, therefore, is to prevent and resolve conflict arising from the food crisis. This places a significant burden on the international community to swiftly respond to outbreaks of violence.

But if people driven to war by hunger are less inclined to compromise, this makes the task of peace-making rather more challenging.

For one thing, conflict fuelled by hunger will be more widespread, exerting strain on international agencies involved in peace-keeping and humanitarian work. Food security is already fragile in many African countries and a protracted conflict tends to drift across borders, as we have seen in Sudan and Congo.

Peace-makers need to be more aware of, and recognise, the socio-economic roots of conflict. They should incorporate in peace agreements remedies for the population’s grievances and to enlist the international community’s support behind their implementation.

Such remedies should include pledges by leaders to address in a meaningful manner contentious issues such as land distribution, job creation, and racial and ethnic discrimination leading to socio-economic inequality.

The ethnic and religious wars of the last half of the 20th century have perhaps lulled us into a false sense of security.

We have grown accustomed to resolving conflict by forging political accommodation and compromise in situations where protagonists had much to lose materially if they kept on fighting.

But in a world where environmental and market pressures can treble the price of staple commodities in a matter of a few months, it is harder to find the grounds for compromise.

This calls for more effective negotiating skills, both domestically and internationally, bilaterally as well as multilaterally, to resolve these crises.

Markets must be kept open to assist with the flow of goods to crisis situations, and in affected countries solutions must be found that address both elite and popular grievances.

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US farm bill to ignore global food crisis

Saturday, May 17th, 2008

The US Congress has passed a $290 billion farm bill, which will increase subsidies to US farmers and cut international aid programs.

George Bush has threatened to veto the bill, however, but there is still a good chance it will be passed into law. Interestingly, the presidential candidates response to the bill were contrasting with John McCain critical, Hilary Clinton supportive and Barack Obama labelling it as “far from perfect”.

“It does not target help for the farmers who really need it, and it increases the size and cost of government while jeopardizing the future of legitimate farm programs by damaging the credibility of farm bills in general,” Agriculture Secretary Ed Schafer stated. “At a time of record setting income for farmers, it sends the wrong message to the rest of the country who are not experiencing the boom of the agriculture sector. This bill is loaded with taxpayer funded pet projects at a time when Americans are struggling to buy groceries and afford gas to get to work.”

“Eight months behind schedule, Congress will send a bill to the President that is trade distorting and fails to provide meaningful reform to the adjusted gross income limit, beneficial interest or the international food aid program,” he added.

Raymond Offenheiser, President of Oxfam America, was also strong in his criticism of the bill. “Faced with a mounting food crisis at home and abroad, Congress had the opportunity through the Farm Bill to shift funds from wasteful agricultural subsidies for large scale farms to food aid to meet the needs of the poor,” Mr Offenheiser said. “But instead, Congressional leaders settled on a bill that will continue to be costly to taxpayers, undermine our rural economy, damage our trade relationships, and hurt the world’s poorest farmers.”

The slight decrease in tax credits to ethanol producers (by 5c per gallon) and increased conservation funding were welcomed, although many believe the cuts in tax credits do not go far enough.

With global food prices skyrocketing this year and global fears of a potential food shortage growing, the bill sends a disappointing message from the US to the rest of the world.

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France’s Queen of Chickens struts its stuff

Wednesday, January 16th, 2008

Over the Christmas season, this will include parties, beauty contests, a poultry market and, naturally, fine food.

Sporting the national colours  red crest, white feathers and blue feet  the Bresse chicken is the only species of poultry that has an Appelation Origine Controlee classification usually associated with wine  and breeders are celebrating its 50th anniversary.

In the village of Louhans, farmers gathered early to set out their plucked birds, heads still attached, for a jury to pick the best of the bunch, before selling them in the afternoon then attending a sumptuous dinner %26ndash; the first of four such events in the Bresse region in the run-up to Christmas.

In the afternoon, a throng of eager people pressed to get into the hall where the competition and market were taking place. Officials of the breeders association wore long red robes while French Agriculture Minister Michel Barnier and other politicians crowded on to the small platform.

Rachel Roussel-Voisard, one of the few female breeders, won the top prize, the Grand Prix Honneur, presented by the minister %26ndash; the first time for a woman to do so.

Strict rules on rearing and breeding produce tender, white flesh greatly appreciated by gourmets and used by top chefs. The birds are raised as chickens, capons (castrated males) or poulardes (fattened females).

Production is limited to about one million birds raised by some 400 farmers in an area of eastern France near the Swiss border.

The birds spend most of their lives roaming outside. They are fed organically and are given no antibiotics.

To make the flesh more tender, the farmers then confine the birds in a coop, in semi-darkness, and feed them on flour mixed with cereals and dairy produce until they reach a minimum weight of 1.2 kg at an age of four months.

The poularde is killed at five months when it weighs 1.8 kg. Capons are fattened to 3 kg at eight months.

Certainly, the breeding conditions for Bresse chickens are better than those of battery hens,%26quot; said Gerald Berger of the Protection des Animaux animal welfare association. But he said castration without anaesthetics was cruel and unnecessary.

The French consume more than six million chickens in all forms over the Christmas season, compared with 2.5 million turkeys, 1.2 million geese and 10 million quails.

A Bresse chicken can fetch upwards of 35 euros ($NZ66) and a capon 75 euros, several times the price of a supermarket chicken.

The rooster became a symbol of France because its Latin name gallus  was the same as that of a member of the Gaulish tribe, the countrys pre-Roman inhabitants, and the French admired its vigour and virility.

Members of the French national soccer and rugby teams wear it on their shirts.

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