Reuters
World food prices fell for a third consecutive month in April, hit by
the economic and logistical impact of the coronavirus pandemic, the
United Nations food agency said on Thursday.
The Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) food priceindex, which
measures monthly changes
for a basket of cereals,oilseeds, dairy
products, meat and sugar, averaged 165.5 points last month, down 3.4 per
cent on March.
The FAO sugar price index fell to a 13-year low, plunging 14.6% from
March, with the coronavirus crisis hitting demand and tumbling crude oil
prices also reducing the need for sugarcane to produce ethanol, the
Rome-based agency said.
The vegetable oil price index fell 5.2 per cent, hit by falling palm,
soy and rapeseed oil values, while the dairy index dropped 3.6 per cent,
with butter and milk powder prices posting double-digit declines.
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The
meat index shed 2.7 per cent, with a partial recovery in import demand
from China failing to balance a slump in imports elsewhere. FAO also
said major producing countries suffered logistical bottlenecks, while
coronavirus lockdowns in many nations had caused a sharp fall in sales.
“The pandemic is hitting both the demand and supply sides for meat, as
restaurant closures and reduced household incomes lead to lower
consumption and labour shortages on the processing side are impacting
just-in-time production systems,” said FAO Senior Economist Upali
Galketi Aratchilage.
By contrast with the other indices, FAO’s cereal price index declined
only slightly, as international prices of wheat and rice rose
significantly while those of maize dropped sharply.
Rice prices rose 7.2 per cent from March, due in large part to temporary
export restrictions by Vietnam that were subsequently repealed, FAO
said. Wheat prices rose 2.5 per cent amid reports of a quick fulfilment
of the export quota from Russia.
However, prices of coarse grains, including maize, fell 10 per cent, hit
by reduced demand for both animal feed and biofuel production.
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FAO
held its forecast for cereal production largely steady at 2.720 billion
tonnes in 2019, but reduced its forecast for cereal utilisation in
2019/20 by 24.7 million tonnes, mainly because of the impact of the
coronavirus on the economy.
FAO also unveiled its first forecasts for global wheat supply and demand
in the 2020/21 marketing season, predicting world production at 762.6
million tonnes, broadly in line with the 2019 level.
It said it expected smaller harvests in the European Union, north
Africa, Ukraine and the United States. This would be largely offset by
larger harvests in Australia, Kazakhstan, Russian and India.
Global wheat utilisation in 2020/21 was expected to be stable, with
anticipated increases in food consumption outweighing reductions in feed
and industrial uses.
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