World food prices hit 10-year high as cereal prices surge
By Shubhangi on Oct 08, 2021 | 05:38 AM IST
Key Points
·
The cereal price index surged by
2.0% in September from the prior month as wheat prices rose by 4%.
·
World
vegetable oil prices surged 1.7% due to increase in palm oil prices.
World food
prices soared in September for the second month in a row, reaching 10-year high
due to rise in prices of cereals and vegetable oils, said the United Nations
food agency on Thursday.
The food
price index of Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) averaged 130.0 points in
September—the highest since 2011. The food price index tracks international
prices of the most globally traded food commodities.
In
September, prices were up by 32.8% on a year-on-year basis. Prices of
agricultural commodity rose sharply in the last year due to harvest challenges
and Chinese demand.
Cereal prices
The cereal
price index surged by 2.0% in September from the prior month as wheat prices rose
by 4%.
"Among major cereals, wheat will be the focus in the
coming weeks as demand need to be tested against fast rising prices,” FAO
Senior Economist Abdolreza Abbassian said in a statement.
Oil prices
In September, world vegetable oil prices surged 1.7% and an
increase of about 60% on year-on-year basis. FAO said palm oil prices increased
due to import demand and labor shortages in Malaysia.
Palm oil futures have hit record high in early October as
vegetable oils are being used in biodiesel due to gains in crude oil markets.
FAO said sugar prices rose 0.5% in September because of
adverse crop weather in Brazil.
The agency has projected a record world crop of 2.800
billion tonnes in 2021 for cereal production. A month ago, FAO had projected
2.788 billion tonnes of production.
The production would not match consumption of cereal as the
forecast of cereal use for 2021 is 2.811 billion tonnes—an increase of 2.7
million tonnes from the prior month.
(With
inputs from Reuters)
Picture
Credits: Reuters