Center for Advanced BioEnergy Research, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Wednesday, May 14, 2008

8 Ways to Fix the Global Food Crisis

Ideas range from improving aid programs to taking a break on biofuels
By Marianne Lavelle, Kent Garber
Posted May 9, 2008
U.S. News & World Report

The world food crisis has two faces. Here in the United States, shoppers stare in disbelief at the rising price of milk, meat, and eggs. But elsewhere on the globe, anguish spills into the streets, as in Somalia last week when tens of thousands of rioters converged on the capital to protest for food.

The strain on U.S. consumers, grappling with the sharpest increase in grocery prices in years, is small compared with the starvation that toppled Haiti's government, ignited riots around the world, and is deepening the tragedy of Myanmar's cyclone survivors. And yet the connection between the developed and developing worlds will be crucial to solving what one United Nations official has called a "silent tsunami" of food prices that has plunged 100 million people deeper into poverty. To stem the misery, relief officials are calling both for emergency aid and for changes in policy worldwide.

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