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October 11, 2008 3:20:08 PM CDT



Crop Woes track this thread

Started by H Needles; Last updated Feb 28, 08 2:54 AM CST by D Lim | View history

Crop Woes

"It's the opinion of some that crops could be grown on the moon. Which raises the fear that it may not be long before we're paying somebody not to." -Franklin P. Jones

Are we reaching the brink of a food crisis? Economic growth, contamination and harsh climate change have hit crops hard around the world. China is facing food shortages and price hikes that could translate into billions of yuan, while growers in Florida are shielding crops from record cold spells that could be devastating for the economy.

Stories

Stories 1 - 20 of 63

  • October 2008
    • Gene Tweak Could Grow Crops in Toxic Soil

      Gene Tweak Could Grow Crops in Toxic Soil

      (Newser) - Scientists have made a breakthrough that could dramatically boost the world's food production by making more land farmable, Wired reports. A slight change to a single gene allows plants to thrive in earth made toxic by aluminum, which currently renders nearly half of the world's soil useless for growing crops. The metal severely stunts root growth, and scientists think they’ve figured out why. More »

  • September 2008
    • Feds Dig Into Price-Fixing by Egg, Tomato Processors

      Feds Dig Into Price-Fixing by Egg, Tomato Processors

      (Newser) - The Justice Department is investigating allegations of price-fixing by tomato and egg processors, the Wall Street Journal reports today. California processor SK Foods is facing allegations it bribed buyers at six companies to pay inflated prices for tomato paste and chili peppers. Tomato prices have surged 16% over the past year, while overall food prices have risen only 6%. More »

    • New England Pumpkin Crop Patchy After Summer Deluge

      New England Pumpkin Crop Patchy After Summer Deluge

      (Newser) - An unseasonably wet growing season has devastated the New England pumpkin crop, the Boston Globe reports. The rain has multiple effects, almost all bad: some overwatered gourds swell so much they burst, while beds are washed out and depleted of fertilizer, leading to undersized specimens. And “pumpkins are pollinated by bees,” one grower sighed, “and bees don't fly when it's raining.” More »

    • UN Urges: Eat Less Meat to Fight Warming

      UN Urges: Eat Less Meat to Fight Warming

      (Newser) - Meat-eaters who want to help fight global warming can do so by going vegetarian at least one day a week, a top UN official tells the Guardian . The meat industry accounts for an estimated one-fifth of all greenhouse gas emissions, released during feed production and as methane by flatulent livestock. Meat consumption has gone up fivefold since 1950, and is predicted to double by 2050. More »

    • Farmers Hunt Wildlife to Keep Greens Clean

      Farmers Hunt Wildlife to Keep Greens Clean

      (Newser) - To please cautious companies, farmers have turned hunters in California's Salinas River Valley, where 60% of the nation's lettuce grows. They’re stalking wild pigs, poisoning ponds and erecting fences—disrupting wildlife and destroying habitats in the process—to avoid another E. coli contamination, the AP reports. But some question the drastic steps, given limited evidence that wildlife caused previous outbreaks. More »

  • August 2008
    • Cambodia's Food Crisis Fix? Eat Rats

      Cambodia's Food Crisis Fix? Eat Rats

      (Newser) - Food prices have rocketed so high in Cambodia that even the humblest of foods has seen its price quadruple this year. That humblest of foods is rat meat, and it’s going up precisely because so many Cambodians can’t afford any other meat, the Guardian reports. Rats have been fleeing to higher ground lately as the Mekong Delta floods, making it easy for villagers to catch, sell, and eat them. More »

    • As Food Prices Rise, Lobster Treads Water

      As Food Prices Rise, Lobster Treads Water

      (Newser) - As global demand drives food prices to new highs, there’s one high-end food item whose price is in decline, Daniel Gross points out in Slate: lobster. In Portland, Maine, a pound of lobster costs slightly more than a gallon of gasoline, a ratio that historically was more like 4-to-1. And the prices get even lower farther upstate. More »

    • Producers Quick to Pass Price Hikes Down Food Chain

      Producers Quick to Pass Price Hikes Down Food Chain

      (Newser) - Soaring grain and energy costs are driving food prices skyward, and big producers are moving to pass price hikes down the food chain to consumers on everything from cereal to meat, the Wall Street Journal reports. And costs won’t likely decrease, with biofuel demand eating up more corn than ever and livestock herds being thinned in response to the higher price of grain. More »

  • July 2008
    • Haitians Turn to Mud Cakes to Fill Empty Bellies

      Haitians Turn to Mud Cakes to Fill Empty Bellies

      (Newser) - Impoverished Haitians have been reduced to living off mud cakes, the Guardian reports. The cakes of clay and water—long eaten by poor pregnant women seeking calcium—are increasingly the only food many families can afford. The global fuel and food crisis has hit Haiti, and half the population is malnourished. More »

    • Agricultural Economist Has Growing Concerns

      Agricultural Economist Has Growing Concerns

      (Newser) - Is there any way to justify US farm subsidies? Agricultural economist Daniel Sumner has a blunt answer: “No.” In an in-depth interview with the New York Times , Sumner takes on a broad range of agricultural topics, explaining the trouble with organic food (it’s too expensive), the problems with local food (it’s often inefficient) and, of course, the insanity of subsidies. More »

    • Corn Prices Leave Catfish Farmers Gasping

      Corn Prices Leave Catfish Farmers Gasping

      (Newser) - The soaring price of corn and soybeans is moving up the food chain and drying up the South's catfish farming industry, reports the New York Times . Farmers are draining their ponds as the cost of feeding the fish becomes prohibitive. In the Mississippi Delta, heartland of the relatively new industry, thousands of much-needed jobs are disappearing. More »

    • Farmers Aim to Plow Over Conserved Land

      Farmers Aim to Plow Over Conserved Land

      (Newser) - Millions of acres set aside as grasslands and wetlands could soon be plowed under if farmers and livestock producers have their way, reports the Washington Post.   As food prices soar, the Department of Agriculture is under pressure to release acreage from the Conservation Reserve Program that pays farmers not to grow crops on some land. The program was intended to hold down production and boost prices, but a major beneficiary has been the environment. More »

    • G8 Leaders Chew on Global Food Crisis Over Caviar

      G8 Leaders Chew on Global Food Crisis Over Caviar

      (Newser) - The global food crisis tops the agenda at this year's G8 summit—and the talks seem to be hungry work, reports the Independent . The 18 dishes at the eight-course luxury dinner served to the leaders last night included caviar, sea urchin, and Kyoto beef—followed by a "G8 fantasy dessert" for those who still had room after the dinner feast and the six-course working lunch. More »

    • Floods Cloud Biofuel Future

      Floods Cloud Biofuel Future

      (Newser) - The floods that swamped the corn belt last month have raised fresh fears about the future of biofuels, the New York Times reports. The ruined corn crop has sent the price of ethanol soaring, and experts worry that unpredictable weather could lead to future spikes in the price of energy as destabilizing as those caused by turmoil in oil-producing countries. More »

  • June 2008
    • Big US Food Shipment Marks Korea Progress

      Big US Food Shipment Marks Korea Progress

      (Newser) - After a major US food shipment arrived yesterday, North Korea has approved a plan for the UN's World Food Program to expand aid delivered to the country, and has agreed to allow UN monitors more access to track where the food ends up, the Washington Post reports. "This marks a major advance in the way we work in this country," an official said. More »

    • Consumer Mood More Downbeat Than Economy

      Consumer Mood More Downbeat Than Economy

      (Newser) - The economy, statistically speaking, is sluggish, but hardly Great Depression-like—though American consumers seem to disagree, the Washington Post reports. They're paying more for everything from gasoline to grapefruit, are watching the value of their homes decline and fear their jobs may be disappearing—which, policy-makers worry, could breed behaviors that will make all the doom and gloom come true. More »