The US Department of Agriculture (USDA) released its crop figures today. Last month France announced that the G20 would wait for this crop report before deciding whether to take joint action on the current state of food prices, which is why this is an important moment.
In response to the USDA crop report released today (12 September), Oxfam’s head of advocacy for the GROW campaign Colin Roche said:
“The picture painted by today’s USDA crop report confirms the dramatic impact the US drought has had on American production and global food supplies.
“It’s time for a meeting of the Rapid Response Forum to respond to high food prices resulting from the US drought, because millions of people still cannot afford to eat.
“G20 governments must end biofuels mandates which convert food into fuel and drive up the price of food, ensure no export restrictions are imposed by the major food exporting countries, and provide assistance to poor people at risk of hunger.
“At the Committee for Food Security meeting next month, governments must address the underlying causes of food price volatility by insisting on better regulation and more transparency in commodity markets, increasing investment in small holder agriculture and supporting poor countries to set up food reserves.”
Información de contacto
For media enquiries please contact Oxfam International Economic Justice Media Lead Sunita Bose on +1 650 353 1936
Related links
Here's Oxfam's analysis of 2012 food price hikes (pdf 237kb)
What a global food crisis looks like: Oxfam's food prices map
Rising food prices: Case studies from around the world
Issues: Food price spikes
Check out the GROW Method: What you can do to help ensure we all have enough to eat, always
For media enquiries please contact Oxfam International Economic Justice Media Lead Sunita Bose on +1 650 353 1936
Related links
Here's Oxfam's analysis of 2012 food price hikes (pdf 237kb)
What a global food crisis looks like: Oxfam's food prices map
Rising food prices: Case studies from around the world
Issues: Food price spikes
Check out the GROW Method: What you can do to help ensure we all have enough to eat, always