What happens when you grow fuel rather than food.

Jon

==================================================================

The New York Times
January 19, 2008
The Food Chain
An Oil Quandary: Costly Fuel Means Costly Calories
By KEITH BRADSHER

KUANTAN, Malaysia -- Rising prices for cooking oil are forcing
residents of Asia’s largest slum, in Mumbai, India, to ration
every drop. Bakeries in the United States are fretting over higher
shortening costs. And here in Malaysia, brand-new factories built
to convert vegetable oil into diesel sit idle, their owners unable
to afford the raw material.

This is the other oil shock. From India to Indiana, shortages and
soaring prices for palm oil, soybean oil and many other types of
vegetable oils are the latest, most striking example of a
developing global problem: costly food.

The food price index of the Food and Agriculture Organization of
the United Nations, based on export prices for 60 internationally
traded foodstuffs, climbed 37 percent last year. That was on top
of a 14 percent increase in 2006, and the trend has accelerated
this winter.

In some poor countries, desperation is taking hold. Just in the
last week, protests have erupted in Pakistan over wheat shortages,
and in Indonesia over soybean shortages. Egypt has banned rice
exports to keep food at home, and China has put price controls on
cooking oil, grain, meat, milk and eggs.

According to the F.A.O., food riots have erupted in recent months
in Guinea, Mauritania, Mexico, Morocco, Senegal, Uzbekistan and
Yemen.

"The urban poor, the rural landless and small and marginal farmers
stand to lose," said He Changchui, the agency’s chief
representative for Asia and the Pacific.

A startling change is unfolding in the world’s food
markets. Soaring fuel prices have altered the equation for growing
food and transporting it across the globe. Huge demand for
biofuels has created tension between using land to produce fuel
and using it for food.

A growing middle class in the developing world is demanding more
protein, from pork and hamburgers to chicken and ice cream. And
all this is happening even as global climate change may be
starting to make it harder to grow food in some of the places best
equipped to do so, like Australia.

In the last few years, world demand for crops and meat has been
rising sharply. It remains an open question how and when the
supply will catch up. For the foreseeable future, that probably
means higher prices at the grocery store and fatter paychecks for
farmers of major crops like corn, wheat and soybeans.

There may be worse inflation to come. Food experts say steep
increases in commodity prices have not fully made their way to
street stalls in the developing world or supermarkets in the West.

Governments in many poor countries have tried to respond by
stepping up food subsidies, imposing or tightening price controls,
restricting exports and cutting food import duties.

These temporary measures are already breaking down. Across
Southeast Asia, for example, families have been hoarding palm
oil. Smugglers have been bidding up prices as they move the oil
from more subsidized markets, like Malaysia’s, to less subsidized
markets, like Singapore’s.

No category of food prices has risen as quickly this winter as
so-called edible oils -- with sometimes tragic results. When a
Carrefour store in Chongqing, China, announced a limited-time
cooking oil promotion in November, a stampede of would-be buyers
left 3 people dead and 31 injured.

Cooking oil may seem a trifling expense in the West. But in the
developing world, cooking oil is an important source of calories
and represents one of the biggest cash outlays for poor families,
which grow much of their own food but have to buy oil in which to
cook it.

Few crops illustrate the emerging problems in the global food
chain as well as palm oil, a vital commodity in much of the world
and particularly Asia. From jungles and street markets in
Southeast Asia to food companies in the United States and
biodiesel factories in Europe, soaring prices for the oil are
drawing environmentalists, energy companies, consumers, indigenous
peoples and governments into acrimonious disputes.

The oil palm is a stout-trunked tree with a spray of frilly fronds
at the top that make it look like an enormous sea anemone. The
trees, with their distinctive, star-like patterns of leaves, cover
an eighth of the entire land area of Malaysia and even greater
acreage in nearby Indonesia.

An Efficient Producer

The palm is a highly efficient producer of vegetable oil, squeezed
from the tree’s thick bunches of plum-size bright red fruit. An
acre of oil palms yields as much oil as eight acres of soybeans,
the main rival for oil palms; rapeseed, used to make canola oil,
is a distant third. Among major crops, only sugar cane comes close
to rivaling oil palms in calories of human food per acre.

Palm oil prices have jumped nearly 70 percent in the last year
because supply has grown slowly while demand has soared.

Farmers and plantation companies are responding to the higher
prices, clearing hundreds of thousands of acres of tropical forest
to replant with rows of oil palms. But an oil palm takes eight
years to reach full production. A drought last year in Indonesia
and flooding in Peninsular Malaysia helped constrain
supply. Worldwide palm oil output climbed just 2.7 percent last
year, to 42.1 million tons.

At the same time, palm oil demand is growing steeply for a variety
of reasons around the globe. They include shifting decisions among
farmers about what to plant, rising consumer demand in China and
India for edible oils, and Western subsidies for biofuel
production.

American farmers have been planting more corn and less soy because
demand for corn-based ethanol has pushed up corn prices. American
soybean acreage plunged 19 percent last year, producing a drop in
soybean oil output and inventories.

Chinese farmers also cut back soybean acreage last year, as urban
sprawl covered prime farmland and the Chinese government provided
more incentives for grain.

Yet people in China are also consuming more oils. China not only
was the world’s biggest palm oil importer last year, holding
steady at 5.2 million tons in the first 11 months of the year, but
it also doubled its soybean oil imports to 2.9 million tons,
forcing buyers elsewhere to switch to palm oil.

Concerns about nutrition used to hurt palm oil sales, but they are
now starting to help. The oil was long regarded in the West as
unhealthy, but it has become an attractive option to replace the
chemically altered fats known as trans fats, which have lately
come to be seen as the least healthy of all fats.

New York City banned trans fats in frying at food service
establishments last summer and will ban them in bakery goods this
summer. Across the country, manufacturers are trying to replace
trans fats. American palm oil imports nearly doubled in the first
11 months of last year, rising by 200,000 tons.

"Four years ago, when this whole no-trans issue started, we
processed no palm here," said Mark Weyland, a United States
product manager for Loders Croklaan, a Dutch company that supplies
palm oil. "Now it’s our biggest seller."

Last year, conversion of palm oil into fuel was a fast-growing
source of demand, but in recent weeks, rising prices have thrown
that business into turmoil.

Here on Malaysia’s eastern shore, a series of 45-foot-high green
and gray storage tanks connect to a labyrinth of yellow and silver
pipes. The gleaming new refinery has the capacity to turn 116,000
tons a year of palm oil into 110,000 tons of a fuel called
biodiesel, as well as valuable byproducts like glycerin. Mission
Biofuels, an Australian company, finished the refinery last month
and is working on an even larger factory next door at the base of
a jungle hillside.

But prices have spiked so much that the company cannot cover all
its costs and has idled the finished refinery while looking for a
new strategy, such as asking a biodiesel buyer to pay a price
linked to palm oil costs, and someday switching from palm oil to
jatropha, a roadside weed.

"We took a view that palm oil prices were already high; we didn’t
think they could go even higher, and then they did," said Nathan
Mahalingam, the company’s managing director.

Growth in Biofuels

Biofuels accounted for almost half the increase in worldwide
demand for vegetable oils last year, and represented 7 percent of
total consumption of the oils, according to Oil World, a
forecasting service in Hamburg, Germany.

The growth of biodiesel, which can be mixed with regular diesel,
has been controversial, not only because it competes with food
uses of oil but also because of environmental concerns. European
conservation groups have been warning that tropical forests are
being leveled to make way for oil palm plantations, destroying
habitat for orangutans and Sumatran rhinoceroses while also
releasing greenhouse gases.

The European Union has moved to restrict imports of palm oil grown
in unsustainable ways. The measure has incensed the Malaysian palm
oil industry, which had plunged into biofuel production in part to
satisfy European demand.

Another controversy involves the treatment of indigenous peoples
whose lands have been seized by oil plantations. This has been a
particular issue on Borneo.

Anne B. Lasimbang, executive director of the Pacos Trust in the
Malaysian state of Sabah in northern Borneo, said that while some
indigenous people had benefited from selling palm oil that they
grow themselves, many had lost ancestral lands with little to show
for it, including lands that used to provide habitats for
endangered orangutans.

"Finally, some of the pressures internationally have trickled
down. Some of the companies are more open to dialogue; they want
to talk to communities," said Ms. Lasimbang, a member of the Dusun
indigenous group. "On our side, we are still suspicious."

Demand Outstrips Supply

As the multiple conflicts and economic pressures associated with
palm oil play out in the global economy, the bottom line seems to
be that the world wants more of the oil than it can get.

Even in Malaysia, the center of the global palm oil industry for
half a century, spot shortages have cropped up. Recently, as
wholesale prices soared, cooking oil refiners complained of
inadequate subsidies and cut back production of household oil,
sold at low, regulated prices.

Street vendors in the capital, Kuala Lumpur, complain that they
cannot find enough cooking oil to prepare roti canai, the
flatbread that is the national snack. "It’s very difficult; it’s
hard to find," said one vendor who gave only his first name,
Palani, after admitting that he was secretly buying cooking oil
intended for households instead of paying the much higher price
for commercial use.

Many of the hardest-hit victims of rising food prices are in the
vast slums that surround cities in poorer Asian nations. The Kawle
family in Mumbai’s sprawling Dharavi slum, a household of nine
with just one member working as a laborer for $60 a month, is
coping with recent price increases for palm oil.

The family has responded by eating fish once a week instead of
twice, seldom cooking vegetables and cutting its monthly rice
consumption. Next to go will be the weekly smidgen of lamb.

"If the prices go up again," said Janaron Kawle, the family
patriarch, "we’ll cut the mutton to twice a month and use less
oil."

--

Contributing reporting were Andrew Martin in New York, Anand
Giridharadas in Kale, India, and Michael Rubenstein in Mumbai.


_______________________________________________
RSS, archives, subscription & listserv information for:
[email protected]
http://lists.mutualaid.org/mailman/listinfo/sustainabletompkins
free hosting by http://www.mutualaid.org

Reply via email to