17 May 2022

World wheat crops under threat


The cartoon above was originally a joke.  I saved it about 30 years ago in a humor scrapbook, the pages of which I blogged in 2020.  It's no longer a simple laughing matter, as an article in Bloomber this week explains:
As Russia’s invasion chokes off Ukrainian wheat exports, pushing up bread and noodle prices, the global harvest faces an added test: extreme weather.
Droughts, flooding and heatwaves threaten output from the U.S. to France and India, compounding shrinking production in Ukraine. Just about every major producing region is facing one threat or another. The one notable exception is Russia, which is shaping up for a bumper crop and stands to benefit from the rising prices and limited supply elsewhere.
Dryness plaguing the U.S. Central Plains has already led some growers to write off parched hard red winter wheat, used by millers and bakers for bread flour. Harvests in top producer Kansas start next month, and output will fall “well below” the five-year average, said Aaron Harries, vice president of research and operations for Kansas Wheat. Crop insurance agents expect some fields to yield zero to five bushels an acre, versus the normal 35 to 40 bushels, he said... Similar dueling weather problems are playing out across the border. Cool temperatures delayed seeding in Canada, and producers are now trying to plant in fields that are either too wet or too dry.
Related:  An analysis with a gloom-and-doom viewpoint from an op-ed columnist at The Guardian
Many people assume that the food crisis was caused by a combination of the pandemic and the invasion of Ukraine. While these are important factors, they aggravate an underlying problem...

...global food, like global finance, is a complex system, that develops spontaneously from billions of interactions. Complex systems have counterintuitive properties. They are resilient under certain conditions, as their self-organising properties stabilise them. But as stress escalates, these same properties start transmitting shocks through the network. Beyond a certain point, a small disturbance can tip the entire system over its critical threshold, whereupon it collapses, suddenly and unstoppably...

So here’s what sends cold fear through those who study the global food system. In recent years, just as in finance during the 2000s, key nodes in the food system have swollen, their links have become stronger, business strategies have converged and synchronised, and the features that might impede systemic collapse (“redundancy”, “modularity”, “circuit breakers” and “backup systems”) have been stripped away, exposing the system to “globally contagious” shocks.

On one estimate, just four corporations control 90% of the global grain trade. The same corporations have been buying into seed, chemicals, processing, packing, distribution and retail. In the course of 18 years, the number of trade connections between the exporters and importers of wheat and rice doubled. Nations are now polarising into super-importers and super-exporters. Much of this trade passes through vulnerable chokepoints, such as the Turkish Straits (now obstructed by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine), the Suez and Panama canals and the Straits of Hormuz, Bab-el-Mandeb and Malacca...
Continue reading at the source article.

6 comments:

  1. Wheat and Ukraine. Baby formula in the US. Toilet paper and chicken in the beginning of the COVID crisis. A few years ago the one factory where apparently mostly all pet food in the US gets made had to be closed causing pet food shortages. Not to forget the too-big-to-fail banks.

    We were told that globalization was good for international trade opening the market to more parties. But the result is not that. The result of all the globalization is that lots of industrial sectors have merged and merged and we're in a whole bunch of international unregulable oligarchies that are incapable of dealing with disturbances.

    In other words, globalization was supposed to yield us a finely distributed global network that was resilient against shock and disturbance. What we ended up in is a rough net work giant holes in it.

    Time for some real anti-trust busting.

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    1. Agreed! I remember debating globalization in the 90s. All I saw was trouble ahead.

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  2. Russia is shipping stolen Ukrainian grain to other countries.

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  3. If I recall correctly, the 1984 movie "Red Dawn" was premised on an invasion due to crop failure in the (then) USSR. Hmmmm.

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  4. It us said that the Arab Spring revolts were driven in part by rising food prices. Are we looking at the potential for similar unrest in the coming year?

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