A recent report by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) has indicated that world food prices are set to hit an all-time high soon.
It said the global food import bill was expected to surpass US$1.75 trillion, a 14 per cent increase from the previous year. It would be a 12 per cent increase from an earlier forecast in June.
The FAO said the despite the resilience shown in covid19, rising prices of food and energy have placed developing and poorer countries at insurmountable risk.
'The increase is driven by higher price levels of internationally traded food commodities and a threefold increase in freight costs.
'Developing regions account for 40 per cent of the total and their aggregate food import bill is expected to rise by 20 per cent compared to 2020. Even faster growth is expected for low-income food deficit countries, due to higher costs more than higher food import volumes,' it said.
Cereals, animal fats, vegetable oils and oilseeds, fruits and vegetables, fishery products and beverages, the FAO said, were driving the bulk of the increases for developed regions.
Minister of Agriculture, Land and Fisheries Clarence Rambharat told Sunday Newsday the report only emphasised the need for increased local production and local consumption.
He said the 30 per cent global food price increase at the end of September was not only driven by the covid19 pandemic but also external extremities such as labour shortages, flood, drought and extreme cold, shipping logjam and wildfires in key production areas like western Canada and California.
'TT feeds itself with a combination of imported staples and other food and locally grown or produced food. We are price takers of imported staples and food.
It signals the need to eat what we grow. Local produce is widely available and though we see seasonal increases of a few items of produce, generally prices have been lower than previous years driven by increased production and increased availability at the markets and from a wide range of vendors.'
Rambharat said of concern was grain prices because it as a major imported staple and affected the prices of protein and critical imported food, but the ministry continued to monitor the global market to make adjustments accordingly.
Agricultural economist Omardath Maharaj said the idea of food diplomacy, like vaccine diplomacy, will be a source in which developed countries leverage their power on the developing world, and TT would be no exception.
'This possible outcome, directly resulting from our history of underinvestment and failed policy in agriculture, challenges the ability to feed ourselves - inclusively - into the future.
'These conversations and issues affect everyone. It is not only a problem for farmers, fisherfolk, coastal communities or those living in the low-lying areas of our country.'
Maharaj said a compounding effect of the pending food pandemic, as he described it, wou