Grex Agora46 Conference

Item 220: Was *that* the plan for getting rid of EU ag subsidies?

Entered by russ on Fri Sep 12 03:30:57 2003:

August 27, 2003-7

Copyright © 2003 Earth Policy Institute

RECORD TEMPERATURES SHRINKING WORLD GRAIN HARVEST: Monthly Drop Equal
to One Half of U.S. Wheat Harvest

Lester R. Brown

On August 12 at 8:30 a.m., the U.S. Department of Agriculture
released its monthly estimate of the world grain harvest, reporting a
32-million-ton drop from the July estimate. When grain futures markets
opened later in the morning, prices of wheat, rice, and corn jumped.

This 32-million-ton drop, equal to half the U.S. wheat harvest, was
concentrated in Europe where record-high temperatures have withered
crops. The affected region stretched from the United Kingdom and
France in the west through the Ukraine in the east. The searing heat
damaged crops in virtually every country in Europe.

The soaring temperatures of the past several weeks rewrote the record
book. On August 10, the temperature in London reached 100 degrees
Fahrenheit (38 degrees Celsius)—the first triple-digit reading on
record in the United Kingdom. France had 11 consecutive days in August
with temperatures above 35 degrees Celsius (95 degrees Fahrenheit). In
Italy, temperatures reached 41 degrees Celsius (105 degrees
Fahrenheit).

The heat wave in Europe started in early summer when Switzerland,
situated in the heart of Europe, experienced the hottest June since
recordkeeping began 140 years ago. In July the heat wave spread across
the rest of Europe.

Crops suffered the most in Eastern Europe, which is harvesting its
smallest wheat crop in 30 years. In the Ukraine, the wheat crop,
already severely damaged by winter kill, was reduced further by the
heat, plummeting from 21 million tons last year to 5 million tons this
year. As a result, the Ukraine, a leading wheat exporter last year,
has been forced to import wheat as bread prices threaten to spiral out
of control. Romania, which was particularly hard hit by heat and
drought, is expecting to harvest the smallest wheat crop on record.
The Czech Republic is expecting its poorest grain harvest in 25 years.

The prolonged heat wave, which persisted through mid August, also
reduced the German grain harvest. The German Farmers Union reports
that in southeastern Germany some farmers may lose half of their grain
crop.

This reduced estimate of the world grain harvest will expand the
world grain shortfall this year to 82 million tons. With projected
world grain consumption of 1,912 million tons exceeding production of
1,830 million tons by 4 percent, the world is engaged in a massive
drawdown of grain stocks. (See data.) With this year's drawdown, world
grain stocks have dropped to the lowest level since the early 1970s.
When world grain stocks dropped to a dangerously low level in 1973,
world prices of wheat and rice doubled.

As atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) levels climb higher each year in
an unbroken ascent, they are creating a greenhouse effect, raising the
earth's temperature. Over the last quarter century the earth's average
temperature has risen 0.7 degrees Celsius or more than 1 degree
Fahrenheit.

As temperatures rise, crop-withering heat waves are becoming more and
more common. Last year the grain harvests in India and the United
States were hit hard by high temperatures and drought. This year
Europe is bearing the brunt.

During this life-threatening heat wave Europeans may have felt that
the temperature could not rise much higher, but the Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), a group of some 1,500 of the world's
leading climate scientists, is projecting a rise in average global
temperature of somewhere between 2.5 and 10.4 degrees Fahrenheit (1.4
to 5.8 degrees Celsius) during this century if we continue with
business-as-usual energy policies.

Even if the earth's temperature increases only a few degrees, as in
the low end of the IPCC projections, we will likely see heat waves far
more intense than anything we can easily imagine. If rising
temperatures shrink harvests and drive up food prices, consumer
pressure to reduce the use of fossil fuels will intensify. Indeed,
rising food prices could be the first global economic indicator to
signal the need for a fundamental shift in energy policy, one that
would move the world toward renewable energy sources and away from
climate-disrupting fossil fuels.

Copyright © 2003 Earth Policy Institute

(Reproduced without permission.
http://www.earth-policy.org/Updates/Update27.htm)
24 responses total.

#1 of 24 by sno on Fri Sep 12 16:01:23 2003:

get ready for the change.  It's gonna happen no matter what is done to 
prevent it.



#2 of 24 by gull on Fri Sep 12 19:05:17 2003:

Ultimately those European farmers are going to end up switching to other
crops.


#3 of 24 by rcurl on Fri Sep 12 19:07:08 2003:

...or none at all. Same for farmers here too, of course.


#4 of 24 by happyboy on Fri Sep 12 19:13:46 2003:

cargill corp will pick up all of the slack.

it'll be ok.

love,
     satan


#5 of 24 by keesan on Sun Sep 14 15:38:21 2003:

Much (most?) of the world's grain is fed to animals.  Maybe not the wheat but
most of the corn, I think.  People could stop feeding the animals and grow
more wheat instead of corn, or eat more corn. 
The poor areas of E. Europe used to eat corn bread and mush.


#6 of 24 by tod on Sun Sep 14 17:30:38 2003:

This response has been erased.



#7 of 24 by keesan on Sun Sep 14 23:29:51 2003:

Corn bread, corn meal porridge.   Romanian manaliga?  Pigs eat garbage and
day-old city bread.


#8 of 24 by other on Mon Sep 15 00:49:30 2003:

Pigs eat everything.  


#9 of 24 by dah on Mon Sep 15 00:58:50 2003:

But what do Jews eat?


#10 of 24 by other on Mon Sep 15 01:30:40 2003:

Depends on the preferences of the individual Jew.


#11 of 24 by klg on Mon Sep 15 02:00:04 2003:

Isn't it cruel to starve animals to death?


#12 of 24 by tod on Mon Sep 15 06:26:04 2003:

This response has been erased.



#13 of 24 by dah on Mon Sep 15 19:52:23 2003:

I like Jews.  There are at lesat two Jews posting in this item.  I like this
item.


#14 of 24 by tsty on Tue Sep 16 05:35:41 2003:

the *french* went on holiday for this .. 10k+ died. how nice.


#15 of 24 by tod on Tue Sep 16 16:58:06 2003:

This response has been erased.



#16 of 24 by keesan on Wed Sep 17 22:47:35 2003:

Where I grew up (an apartment in the Boston area, followed by a house in the
suburbs) there was always a little metal container in the back yard with a
lid where people used to put their garbage to be collected separately to feed
the pigs.  They had stopped collecting it by 1950 or earlier but were still
collecting when the house was built in the very late 30s.  In former
Yugoslavia all the day-old bread went to the pigs. 


#17 of 24 by tod on Wed Sep 17 22:56:34 2003:

This response has been erased.



#18 of 24 by dah on Wed Sep 17 22:57:07 2003:

And then people just ended up eating the day-old bread with but less of it.


#19 of 24 by tod on Wed Sep 17 23:03:16 2003:

This response has been erased.



#20 of 24 by dah on Wed Sep 17 23:07:35 2003:

I eat.


#21 of 24 by gull on Thu Sep 18 14:48:24 2003:

I sometimes freeze bread items that I know I won't be eating right away,
like hot dog buns.


#22 of 24 by dah on Thu Sep 18 18:16:30 2003:

I hate hot dogs.


#23 of 24 by gull on Thu Sep 18 19:46:17 2003:

They hate you, too.


#24 of 24 by bru on Thu Sep 18 22:59:18 2003:

Oooh... Chili dogs...


There are no more items selected.

You have several choices: