16 Apr 2009

G8 farm ministers to meet on food security, supply

10:33 pm on 16 April 2009

Food security and boosting global agricultural output to stamp out hunger will top the agenda of the first ever meeting of farm ministers from major industrialised and developing nations this weekend in Italy.

After sky-high food prices sparked riots and panic buying in 2008, the world has sought to boost farm output and stocks. Richer nations including South Korea and Saudi Arabia have also been buying land overseas to feed their people.

Prices have dropped since then but experts have warned global supplies remain a structural problem and prices could take off again once the world economy starts recovering.

Farm ministers from the Group of Eight industrialised countries - to which Brazil, China, India, Mexico, South Africa, Argentina, Australia and Egypt are also invited - will run from 18-20 April.

"We are ... taking responsibility for marking out a common route able to lead us out of the crisis and respond to the world food emergency," Italian Agriculture Minister Luca Zaia said on Wednesday.

The G8 farmers groups at their meeting last month proposed creating a global grain reserve to improve supply stability and avoid price shocks, but details have yet to be worked out.

France will push the idea of regional farm policies as a way of promoting agricultural development, a French farm ministry official said.

Farmers from poor and rich countries alike want to get more funds for agriculture, saying the sector has been neglected since the economic crisis broke out.

Push to help poor

Billions of dollars were poured out to prop up ailing banks, while funds are drying up to help the world's almost 1 billion hungry, advocates for the poor say.

The United Nations' Food and Agriculture Organisation and other campaigners against hunger will push for more funds and other assistance to help low-income countries boost productivity, improve water supplies and training as well as give better access to international markets.

But richer countries are keen to protect their markets. Russia, the largest importer of chickens from the United States, aims to become self-sufficient in poultry and pork in two years.

Agreement is expected on boosting aid to poor nations, but on easing trade barriers ministers are likely to settle for a less specific call to move ahead with the Doha round of global trade talks, an official familiar with the matter said.

US President Barack Obama has pledged to ask Congress to double American aid for food safety in poor countries to $US1 billion in 2010. US Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack has said he will reiterate this commitment at the G8 meeting.

The ministers are likely to make most progress on the global partnership on farming and food security which was rolled out by French President Nicolas Sarkozy in June and backed by last year's G8 summit in Japan, the official said.