food prices

World food price index surges in May 2021 to highest level since 2011

Reuters

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World food price index surges in May 2021 to highest level since 2011

PRICES. A woman checks imported frozen meat at a supermarket in Beijing, China, November 17, 2020.

Tingshu Wang/Reuters

On a year-on-year basis, prices are up 39.7% in May 2021

World food prices rose in May at their fastest monthly rate in more than a decade, posting a 12th consecutive monthly increase to hit their highest level since September 2011, the United Nations food agency said on Thursday, June 3.

The Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) also issued its first forecast for world cereal production in 2021, predicting output of nearly 2.821 billion tons – a new record and 1.9% up on 2020 levels.

The FAO’s food price index, which measures monthly changes for a basket of cereals, oilseeds, dairy products, meat, and sugar, averaged 127.1 points last month versus a revised 121.3 in April.

The April figure was previously given as 120.9.

On a year-on-year basis, prices were up 39.7% in May.

FAO’s cereal price index rose 6.0% in May month-on-month and 36.6% year-on-year. Maize prices led the surge and are now 89.9% above their year-earlier value, however FAO said they fell back at the end of the month, lifted by an improved production outlook in the United States.

The vegetable oil price index jumped 7.8% in May, lifted primarily by rising palm, soy, and rapeseed oil quotations. Palm oil prices were boosted by slow production growth in Southeast Asia, while prospects of robust global demand, especially from the biodiesel sector, drove up soyoil prices.

The sugar index posted a 6.8% month-on-month gain, due largely to harvest delays and concerns over reduced crop yields in Brazil, the world’s largest sugar exporter, FAO said.

The meat index rose 2.2% from April, with quotations for all meat types buoyed by a faster pace of import purchases by East Asian countries, mainly China.

Dairy prices rose 1.8% on a monthly basis and were up 28% on a year earlier. The increase was led by “solid import demand” for skim and whole milk powders, while butter prices fell for the first time in almost a year on increased export supplies from New Zealand.

FAO said its forecast for record world cereal production this year was underpinned by a projected 3.7% annual growth in maize output. Global wheat production was seen rising 1.4% year-on-year, while rice production was forecast to grow 1%.

World cereal utilization in 2021-2022 was seen increasing by 1.7% to a new peak of 2.826 billion tons, just above production levels. “Total cereal food consumption is forecast to rise in tandem with world population,” FAO said. – Rappler.com

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