
An earthquake in China. Over 51,000 dead. A cyclone in Burma (aka Myanmar). An estimated 130,000 lives lost and 2 million homeless. Two extreme tragedies that have occurred this month (May 2008). The media has closely followed the struggle of rescue efforts and aid distribution. I have two personal friends who have just entered Myanmar to assist in giving out food, water purification tablets and medicine. The need for help in these two areas is urgent and extreme. But there is another crisis that is much less public and potentially just as devastating--the Global Food Crisis.
What is the Global Food Crisis? An unbalance in the food supply due to poor harvests and underinvestment in agriculture, rising energy costs, growing demand from population increases, problems in economic policies, competition with biodiesel fuels, tied aid and restrictions in global trade have created an drastic upsurge in the price of staple foods. Termed a "Silent Tsunami," this food crisis is the worst in the world's history since the 1970s. Food riots have broken out inBangladesh, Cameroon, Egypt, Haiti, Indonesia, Mauritania, Mexico, Senegal, Somalia, Uzbekistan, and Yemen. The current food hardship threatens to push 100 million people back into extreme poverty. This is a dire circumstance that has potentially calamitous implications.
This topic has coincidentally presented itself several times to me over the past few weeks. I originally skimmed a news story about the rising prices of staple foods that underplayed its significance. Then at the RESULTS groupstart/informational meeting the focus was the food crisis and action steps to prevent further aggravation. Finally, a close friend from my time in Bangladesh has undertaken a project to raise awareness and funds for the global food crisis, called the 40 hour famine.
I will post some resources up that I encountered throughout the previous month, but would also invite discussion and feedback. Have you heard of the Global Food Crisis? What is your perspective? How dire is the situation? What action steps can be taken? I hope to do some more research and brainstorming about this issue in the near future. But here's a look at info I've found so far and you can also click on the title to check out the Washington Post website.
http://resultsmusings.blogspot.com
This site includes general info and statistics, action steps, and a conference call with David Beckmann, Bread for the World President.