UN food agency says rice prices surging in Myanmar
Rice prices in Myanmar's capital have surged 50 percent since deadly cyclone Nargis, which flooded entire rice-growing areas, a United Nations food agency said Monday.
The cyclone hit May 3, killing thousands of people and displacing many more and rendering roads and bridges impassable. It struck as paddy farmers were harvesting the dry season crop that accounts for 20 percent of annual production, said the Rome-based Food and Agriculture Organization.
The destruction could reduce access to food and may force Myanmar to seek imports from neighboring countries, such as Thailand and Vietnam, putting further pressure on world prices, it said. Myanmar has previously been self-sufficient and an exporter of rice.
The devastation could negatively impact global rice production, the FAO said. The agency is forecasting a new record of 666 million tons worldwide this year, a global increase of 2.3 percent.
Production in Asia is expected to rise to 605 million tons from 600 million tons, with particularly large increases in Bangladesh, China, the Philippines, Thailand and Vietnam, the FAO said.
African production is forecast to grow nearly 4 percent to 23.2 million tons and in Latin America by 7.4 percent to 26 million tons, the agency said.
Rice production is expected to be down in Australia, the United States and Europe.
Rice prices skyrocketed by 76 percent from December to April, triggered in part by export restrictions in countries worried about food scarcity. The FAO said prices are expected to remain high.
- 1 "iPhone killer" Nokia 5800 XpressMusic launched in India
- 2 Human remains found near Fossetts plane wreckage, sent for DNA match
- 3 Jolies first outing after childbirth: at the premiere of "Changeling
- 4 O.J. Simpson convicted of kidnapping and armed robbery, faces life in prison
- 5 Hindustan Motors launches Mitsubishi Outlander in India, looks to lift up flagging sales
- 6 Mamata Banerjee "has pulled the trigger," says Ratan Tata, announces pullout of Nano project from Singur
- 7 No hamsters or "exotic pets" for kids: more dangerous than cat and dog
- 1 Citigroup, Wells Fargo call temporary truce, to negotiate a settlement of Wachovia's future
- 2 Orissa police nab Maoist suspects in connection with Hindu seer's murder, Christians continue to live in fear
- 3 Post Singur exit, states vie to welcome Tata Motors, announce incentives
- 4 India joins global effort to prevent recession; SEBI eases P-note curbs, RBI cuts CRR after Sensex sinks 725 points
- 5 Sensex plunges 5.78 percent to 2-year low, global financial outlook bleak
- 6 Indians head UK's super-rich losers list: Report
- 7 "iPhone killer" Nokia 5800 XpressMusic launched in India
- 1 Thai unrest: Police fire tear gas against crowd; 118 hurt
- 2 Orissa police nab Maoist suspects in connection with Hindu seer's murder, Christians continue to live in fear
- 3 "We murdered VHP Swami Laxmananda" says top Maoist leader
- 4 From farm to table: China vows overhaul of "chaotic" milk industry
- 5 Panic again: Dow finishes below 10,000, biggest loss ever
- 6 Taliban said to be furious over US missile strike
- 7 Human remains found near Fossett's plane wreckage, sent for DNA match
|
|


















