World food price index rises, at highest level since July 2014, says UN food agency
World food prices rose for an eighth consecutive month in January, hitting their highest level since July 2014, led by jumps in cereals, sugar and vegetable oils, the United Nations food agency said on Thursday.
For all the latest headlines follow our Google News channel online or via the app
The Food and Agriculture Organization’s food price index, which measures monthly changes for a basket of cereals, oilseeds, dairy products, meat and sugar, averaged 113.3 points last month versus an upwardly revised 108.6 in December.
The December figure was previously given as 107.5.

The Rome-based FAO also said in a statement that worldwide cereal harvests remained on course to hit an annual record in 2020, but warned of a sharp fall in stocks and signaled unexpectedly large import demands from China.
FAO’s cereal price index climbed 7.1 percent month-on-month in January, led higher by international maize prices, which soared 11.2 percent, some 42.3 percent above their level a year ago, buoyed in part by purchases by China and lower-than-expected US production.
Wheat prices increased 6.8 percent, driven by strong global demand and expectations of reduced sales by Russia when its wheat export duty doubles in March 2021, FAO said.
Sugar prices jumped 8.1 percent, with worries about worsening crop prospects in the European Union, Russia and Thailand, and dry
weather conditions in South America, pushing up import demand.
The vegetable oil price index increased 5.8 percent to reach its highest level since May 2012, pushed up in part by lower-than-expected palm oil production in Indonesia and Malaysia due in part to heavy rainfall.
A rise in soyoil prices was fueled by reduced export opportunities and prolonged strikes in Argentina.
Dairy prices rose 1.6 percent, underpinned by heavy Chinese purchases ahead of the upcoming New Year holiday.
The meat index posted a 1.0 percent gain, led by brisk imports of poultry, especially from Brazil, amid avian influenza outbreaks that have hampered exports from several European countries.
FAO revised up its forecast for the 2020 cereal season to 2.744 billion tonnes from a previous estimate of 2.742 billion tonnes made in December, with both wheat and rice yields seen rising. The forecast for coarse grains production was trimmed because of reduced prospects for the United States and Ukraine.
“Looking ahead to 2021 cereal output, early production prospects for winter wheat crops in the northern hemisphere indicate a modest increase this year,” FAO said.
The UN agency said China was importing unexpectedly large quantities of maize this season, which was having a significant knock-on impact on estimates for world utilization and stocks.
The forecast for world cereal utilization in 2020/21 was put at 2.761 billion tonnes against a previous estimate of 2.744 billion, while the forecast for world cereal stocks was pegged at 802 million tonnes down from a previous 866.4 million tonnes.
“At this level, the world stocks-to-use ratio of cereals would decline from 29.7 percent in 2019/20 to 28.3 percent in 2020/21, marking a seven-year low,” FAO said.
It said the contraction stemmed largely from “a massive downward adjustment” to maize inventories in China.
The FAO forecast for world cereal trade in 2020/21 was hiked by 10.6 million tonnes to 465.2 million tonnes -- a projected 5.7 percent rise on the previous season’s record high. Trade in all major cereals was expected to climb, the agency said.
-
World Food Program chief highlights urgent need to support vulnerable supply chains
The head of the World Food Program said Wednesday that the COVID-19 pandemic highlighted the need to strengthen vulnerable supply chains to ... Coronavirus -
Egypt to get $1.1 bln from ITFC to fund petroleum, food commodity imports in 2021
Egypt will get funding of $1.1 billion from the International Islamic Trade Finance Corporation (ITFC) to finance imports of petroleum and staple ... Economy -
Vegan Saudi prince invests in lab-grown seafood company
A Saudi Arabian prince who is a strong advocate for veganism is investing in a lab-grown seafood company.Prince Khaled bin Alwaleed Al Saud’s firm, ... Economy -
PepsiCo partners with plant-based food producer Beyond Meat
PepsiCo and Beyond Meat are creating a joint venture to develop snacks and drinks made from plant-based proteins.The companies didn’t reveal what ... Technology -
Britain to ban promotion of unhealthy foods in latest effort to tackle obesity
Britain will ban “buy one get one free” promotions for food high in fat, sugar or salt and free refills of sugary soft drinks in restaurants from ... Healthy Living -
Turkish inflation jumps more than expected to 14.6 pct in Dec. as food costs soar
Turkish annual inflation rose more than expected to 14.6 percent in December as food costs jumped, official data showed on Monday, keeping pressure on ... Economy -
Abu Dhabi invests in poultry, fish farms for food security
Abu Dhabi is investing $143 million to boost local production of produce, fish, cattle and poultry in its push to improve food security.Much of the ... Economy