World food prices continue to climb in January: UN FAO


Rome, Feb 7 (IANS): World food prices rose for the fourth consecutive month in January, as prices for oils and sugar continued to grow, according to the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO).

The overall index rose a modest 0.7 per cent in January compared to the previous month, putting the index at its highest level since 2015, Xinhua reported on Thursday.

As in December, the main drivers in January were vegetable oils and sugar, which rose 7.0 per cent and 5.5 per cent, respectively, building on gains in December. Vegetable oils have now climbed more than 15 per cent in two months, led by tightening global supplies of soy and sunflower oils combined with increasing demand.

Prices for grains and cereals -- the largest component in the index -- climbed 2.9 per cent, the third highest in the index.

FAO said gains came across the board, with wheat prices climbing the most based on worries about export quotas in Russia. Corn prices, meanwhile, rose on higher-than-anticipated demand, while rice prices climbed due to poor weather in several major rice-producing countries.

Dairy prices climbed slightly in January, though they are more than 10 per cent higher than the same point in 2019.

Meat prices, meanwhile, fell by 4.0 per cent. It was the first decrease for the meat sub-index after 11 months of increases. FAO said the main factor pushing prices lower was a decrease in imports from China and other Asian markets.

The monthly FAO Food Price Index is based on worldwide prices for 23 food commodity categories covering prices for 73 different products compared to a baseline year.

  

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Title: World food prices continue to climb in January: UN FAO



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