Thursday, August 21, 2008   19:23 GMT    
IPS Direct to Your Inbox!
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
 - Africa
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
 - Asia-Pacific
     Afghanistan
     Iran
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
 - Caribbean
      Haiti
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
 - Europe
      Union in Diversity
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
 - Latin America
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
 - Mideast &
   Mediterranean
      Iraq
      Israel/Palestine
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
 - North America
      Neo-Cons
      Bush at War
Agencia de Noticias Inter Press Service
Agencia de Noticias Inter Press Service
Agencia de Noticias Inter Press Service
Agencia de Noticias Inter Press Service
 - Development
      MDGs
      City Voices
      Corruption
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
 - Civil Society
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
 - Globalisation
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
 - Environment
      Energy Crunch
      Climate Change
      Tierramérica
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
 - Human Rights
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
 - Health
      HIV/AIDS
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
 - Indigenous Peoples
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
 - Economy & Trade
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
 - Labour
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
 - Population
      Reproductive Rights
      Migration&Refugees
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
 - Arts & Entertainment
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
 - Education
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
 - ExPress Freedom
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
 - Columns
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
 - In Focus
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
 
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
 - Readers' Opinions
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
 - Email News
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
  What is RSS?
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
   ENGLISH
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
   ESPAÑOL
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
   FRANÇAIS
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
   ARABIC
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
   DEUTSCH
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
   ITALIANO
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
   JAPANESE
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
   NEDERLANDS
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
   PORTUGUÊS
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
   SUOMI
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
   SVENSKA
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
   SWAHILI
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
   TÜRKÇE
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency

Feeding the Future - News in RSSMore than 800 million people suffer hunger today. A crucial part of this complex problem is food production and distribution. Is it possible to increase food production in an environmentally and socially sustainable way? Can modernisation, research and investment enhance food security? Is there anything to learn from traditional knowledge? How do trade and energy policies affect the equation? And gender? Where and when is food aid really needed? Can the upswing of commodity prices be positive for some countries? How are farmers coping with climate change? IPS finds the stories behind the current food crisis to understand local and global causes of shortages and rising prices, and their long term effects.


Winners of the 2008 Friends of the Earth International Dreams,
Hopes and Possibilities for a Better Future photo competition

2008 Award for Communicating the Food Crisis
Food and Agriculture Organisation
World Food Programme
IAASTD
FEWS NET - Famine Early Warning Systems
Global Information and Early Warning System
Oxfam on Food Aid
Food Aid Convention
IPS is not responsible for the content of external sites
Environment
Biodiversity - One Planet - 1.4 Millon Species
Kyoto on the Horizon
Millennium Development Goals
Commodities' Return
Subsidies
From Aid to Trade with Africa -- Fact or Fiction?
News in RSS
CULTURE-SOUTH AFRICA: Crafts That Steal Hearts All Over the World
POLITICS-COTE D'IVOIRE: Anti-Xenophobia Law Gets Lukewarm Reception
SOUTH AFRICA: Measuring the Carbon Footprint of Fruit and Wine
ASIA: Rock Star's Expulsion Says No to Child Sex Tourists
POLITICS-US: McCain's Plan to Privatise Veterans' Health Care
CHINA: Agony Turns Ecstasy as Gold Medals Pile Up
MIDDLE EAST: In the Race for Renewable Energy Sources
BOLIVIA: Businesses Take On the Green Challenge
PORTUGAL: Easing Food Safety Standards for Traditional Products
KENYA: Gathering Storm of Expectations in Nairobi Slum
More >>

ASIA: Rock Star's Expulsion Says No to Child Sex Tourists
By Marwaan Macan-Markar
BANGKOK - When a British rock star, convicted on paedophilia charges, was turned away at two Asian airports, this week, it was seen by child rights activists as a sign that this region will no longer tolerate sex tourism that exploits minors.
MORE >>
 

PORTUGAL: Easing Food Safety Standards for Traditional Products
By Mario de Queiroz
LISBON - As the only alternative for preventing the disappearance of small-scale farming, farmers’ markets, rural slaughterhouses, taverns and traditional food products, Portugal has decided to interpret the strict European Union regulations on food safety with a domestic slant.
MORE >>
 

See picture details
ZIMBABWE: Farmers Can't Afford to Leave Markets -- Literally
By Tonderai Kwidini
HARARE - It is a wintry Tuesday evening at one of the tobacco auction floors in the Zimbabwean capital Harare. A group of small-scale tobacco farmers are preparing food for the night.
MORE >>
 

See picture details
TRADE-AFRICA: ‘‘An Injury To One Market Is an Injury to All’’
By Stanley Kwenda
JOHANNESBURG - Southern African non-governmental organisations have put forward demands to their governments in resistance to the continuing talks on economic partnership agreements (EPAs) between the European Union and the African, Caribbean and Pacific (ACP) states.
MORE >>
 

See picture details
PHILIPPINES: Hungry for Rice, Unwilling to Invest
By Prime Sarmiento
MANILA - When the price of rice nearly doubled to about 90 US cents per kilo, two months ago, Liza Valino put cheaper substitutes like bananas and sweet potatoes on the table to feed her family of ten. But no one was satisfied.
MORE >>
 

See picture details
DEVELOPMENT-AFRICA: Retailer Creates Jobs With Green Practices
By Johan Eybers
JOHANNESBURG - Seven years ago, 54 subsistence farmers in the Umbumbulu district on the KwaZulu-Natal coast of South Africa were struggling to feed their families. They could barely pay their children’s school fees.
MORE >>
 

See picture details
PAKISTAN: Experts Warn of Unrest Over Food Prices
By Zofeen Ebrahim
KARACHI - For Mohammed Bashir, a restaurant chef, it was galling to have to be standing in line at a langar (soup kitchen) waiting to be served a free meal. Bashir lost his job four months ago when he injured a finger in a traffic accident.
MORE >>
 

BULGARIA: Small Farmers Strike for Survival
By Claudia Ciobanu
BUCHAREST - Thousands of Bulgarian milk and meat producers have been protesting for more than a week in various regions around the country, warning the government that life for small farmers has become impossible in Bulgaria.
MORE >>
 

DEVELOPMENT-TOGO: High Cost of Living Exacerbated By Floods
By Noël Kokou Tadégnon
LOME - Recent flooding in Togo caused the collapse of over 10 bridges connecting the capital of Lomé to the north of the country. The consequences have been increased transportation costs and a steady climb in the price of consumer products.
MORE >>
 

TRADE: ''Doha Collapse Won't Mean Suffering for The Poor''
Analysis by Aileen Kwa
GENEVA - At the heart of the collapse of the World Trade Organisation’s Doha Round last week are the different opinions on liberalisation and its relation to development. Developed countries promote the idea that liberalisation will bring about development and thus that the failure of the Round constitutes a blow for the poor.
MORE >>
 

TRADE-CHINA: Food Security Prompted Tough Line at Geneva
By Antoaneta Bezlova
BEIJING - China's tough stance at the 'Doha' trade talks in Geneva has less to do with political posturing than with the country's long-standing obsession with food security, experts here suggest.
MORE >>
 

TRADE-AFRICA: Safeguards for Small Farmers Straw That Broke Doha
Analysis by Aileen Kwa
GENEVA - Safeguards to protect small farmers’ livelihoods in African and other developing states, as opposed to subsidies for commercial agricultural interests in rich countries, remained an insurmountable obstacle in the World Trade Organisation (WTO) talks, leading the Doha Round to collapse last week.
MORE >>
 

See picture details
CHILE-PERU: Preserving Potatoes More Important than Age-Old Dispute
By Daniela Estrada and Milagros Salazar
SANTIAGO - Policies to get small farmers involved in saving, preserving, producing, marketing and genetically improving potatoes should take precedence over the age-old dispute between Chile and Peru about where potatoes originated, experts from both countries say.
MORE >>
 

See picture details
AGRICULTURE: The Climate Costs of a Glass of Milk
By Raúl Pierri*
MONTEVIDEO - A simple glass of milk on the breakfast table can carry high environmental costs. Because of this, some farmers and scientists are looking for ways to reduce the impacts of agriculture and livestock, which are responsible for 12 to 14 percent of global emissions of greenhouse gases.
MORE >>
 

AGRICULTURE-CUBA: Fresh Produce for City-Dwellers
By Patricia Grogg
HAVANA - Urban farming has taken off in Cuba over the last two decades, based on low-cost agro-ecological practices and a stable labour force, and could serve as a model for the rest of the agriculture sector in this period of reforms.
MORE >>
 

DEVELOPMENT: Think Tank Urges Major Changes in U.S. Food Aid
By Jim Lobe
WASHINGTON - The United States should urgently implement major changes in its emergency food aid and overseas trade and development policies to deal with the record rise in global grain prices that is threatening recent gains in poverty reduction in many developing countries, according to a report by a bipartisan task force sponsored by a major foreign policy think tank here.
MORE >>
 

ARGENTINA: Soy - High Profits Now, Hell to Pay Later
By Marcela Valente
BUENOS AIRES - At a time when the price of soy, Argentina’s main export crop, has reached record levels on the international markets, family agriculture experts and environmental groups are warning about its severe social and environmental effects.
MORE >>
 

TRADE: Subsidies (and Food Prices) Soar at Doha
By Gustavo Capdevila
GENEVA - Bias in the WTO proposals to reform agricultural trade, which are being analysed for the second consecutive week, will definitely aggravate the food crisis caused in recent months by the high prices of farm commodities, according to Aftab Alam Khan, an expert with the non-governmental organisation ActionAid.
MORE >>
 

 

Next >>

 
IPS News Feeds News Feeds RSS/XML
Make IPS your homepage Make IPS News your homepage!
Free Email Newsletters Free Email Newsletters
IPS Mobile IPS Mobile
Text Only Text Only