The Coming Hunger Wars: Heat, Drought, Rising Food Costs, and Global Unrest 
by Michael T. Klare


The Great Drought of 2012 has yet to come to an end, but we 
already know that its consequences will be severe. With more than 
one-half of America’s counties designated as drought disaster areas, the 2012 
harvest of corn, soybeans, and 
other food staples is guaranteed to fall far short of predictions. This, in 
turn, will boost food prices domestically and abroad, causing increased misery 
for farmers and 
low-income Americans and far greater hardship for poor people in 
countries that rely on imported U.S. grains.
This, however, is just the beginning of the likely consequences: if 
history is any guide, rising food prices of this sort will also lead to 
widespread social unrest and violent conflict.
Food -- affordable food -- is essential to human survival and 
well-being. Take that away, and people become anxious, desperate, and 
angry. In the United States, food represents only about 13% of the average 
household budget, a relatively small share, so a boost 
in food prices in 2013 will probably not prove overly taxing for most 
middle- and upper-income families.  It could, however, produce 
considerable hardship for poor and unemployed Americans with limited 
resources. “You are talking about a real bite out of family budgets,” commented 
Ernie Gross, an agricultural economist at Omaha’s Creighton University. This 
could add to the discontent already evident in depressed and 
high-unemployment areas, perhaps prompting an intensified backlash 
against incumbent politicians and other forms of dissent and unrest.
It is in the international arena, however, that the Great Drought is 
likely to have its most devastating effects. Because so many nations 
depend on grain imports from the U.S. to supplement their own harvests, 
and because intense drought and floods are damaging crops elsewhere as 
well, food supplies are expected to shrink and prices to rise across the 
planet. “What happens to the U.S. supply has immense impact around the 
world,” says Robert Thompson, a food expert at the Chicago Council on Global 
Affairs. As the crops most affected by the drought, corn and soybeans, 
disappear from world markets, he noted, the price of all grains, 
including wheat, is likely to soar, causing immense hardship to those 
who already have trouble affording enough food to feed their families.
The Hunger Games, 2007-2011
What happens next is, of course, impossible to predict, but if the 
recent past is any guide, it could turn ugly. In 2007-2008, when rice, 
corn, and wheat experienced prices hikes of 100% or more, sharply higher prices 
-- especially for bread -- sparked “food riots” in more than two dozen 
countries, including Bangladesh, 
Cameroon, Egypt, Haiti, Indonesia, Senegal, and Yemen. In Haiti, the 
rioting became so violent and public confidence in the government’s 
ability to address the problem dropped so precipitously that the Haitian Senate 
voted to oust the country’s prime minister, Jacques-Édouard Alexis. In other 
countries, angry protestors clashed with army and police forces, leaving scores 
dead.
Those price increases of 2007-2008 were largely attributed to the 
soaring cost of oil, which made food production more expensive. (Oil’s 
use is widespread in farming operations, irrigation, food delivery, and 
pesticide manufacture.)  At the same time, increasing amounts of 
cropland worldwide were being diverted from food crops to the 
cultivation of plants used in making biofuels.
The next price spike in 2010-11 was, however, closely associated with climate 
change. An intense drought gripped much of eastern Russia during the summer of 
2010, reducing the wheat harvest in that breadbasket region by one-fifth and 
prompting Moscow to ban all wheat exports. Drought also hurt China’s grain 
harvest, while intense flooding destroyed much of Australia’s wheat crop. 
Together with other extreme-weather-related effects, these disasters sent wheat 
prices soaring by more than 50% and the price of most food staples by 32%.
Once again, a surge in food prices resulted in widespread social 
unrest, this time concentrated in North Africa and the Middle East. The 
earliest protests arose over the cost of staples in Algeria and then 
Tunisia, where -- no coincidence -- the precipitating event was a young 
food vendor, Mohamed Bouazizi, setting himself on fire to protest government 
harassment. Anger over 
rising food and fuel prices combined with long-simmering resentments 
about government repression and corruption sparked what became known as the 
Arab Spring. The rising cost of basic staples, especially a loaf of bread, was 
also a cause of unrest in Egypt, 
Jordan, and Sudan. Other factors, notably anger at entrenched autocratic 
regimes, may have proved more powerful in those places, but as the 
author of Tropic of Chaos, Christian Parenti, wrote, “The initial trouble was 
traceable, at least in part, to the price of that loaf of bread.”
As for the current drought, analysts are already warning of instability in 
Africa, where corn is a major staple, and of increased popular unrest in China, 
where food prices are expected to rise at a time of growing 
hardship for that country’s vast pool of low-income, migratory workers 
and poor peasants. Higher food prices in the U.S. and China could also 
lead to reduced consumer spending on other goods, further contributing 
to the slowdown in the global economy and producing yet more worldwide 
misery, with unpredictable social consequences.
The Hunger Games, 2012-??
If this was just one bad harvest, occurring in only one country, the 
world would undoubtedly absorb the ensuing hardship and expect to bounce back 
in the years to come. Unfortunately, it’s becoming evident that 
the Great Drought of 2012 is not a one-off event in a single heartland 
nation, but rather an inevitable consequence of global warming which is 
only going to intensify.  As a result, we can expect not just more bad 
years of extreme heat, but worse years, hotter and more often, and not just in 
the United States, but globally for the indefinite future.
Until recently, most scientists were reluctant to blame particular 
storms or droughts on global warming.  Now, however, a growing number of 
scientists believe that such links can be demonstrated in certain cases. In one 
recent study focused on extreme weather events in 2011, for instance, climate 
specialists at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration 
(NOAA) and Great Britain’s National Weather Service concluded that 
human-induced climate change has made intense heat waves of the kind 
experienced in Texas in 2011 more likely than ever before. Published in 
the Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, it reported that global 
warming had ensured that the incidence of that Texas heat 
wave was 20 times more likely than it would have been in 1960; 
similarly, abnormally warm temperatures like those experienced in 
Britain last November were said to be 62 times as likely because of 
global warming.
It is still too early to apply the methodology used by these 
scientists to calculating the effect of global warming on the heat waves of 
2012, which are proving to be far more severe, but we can assume the level of 
correlation will be high. And what can we expect in the 
future, as the warming gains momentum?
When we think about climate change (if we think about it at all), we 
envision rising temperatures, prolonged droughts, freakish storms, 
hellish wildfires, and rising sea levels. Among other things, this will 
result in damaged infrastructure and diminished food supplies.  These are, of 
course, manifestations of 
warming in the physical world, not the social world we all inhabit and 
rely on for so many aspects of our daily well-being and survival. The 
purely physical effects of climate change will, no doubt, prove 
catastrophic.  But the social effects including, somewhere down the 
line, food riots, mass starvation, state collapse, mass migrations, and 
conflicts of every sort, up to and including full-scale war, could prove even 
more disruptive and deadly.
In her immensely successful young-adult novel The Hunger Games(and the movie 
that followed), Suzanne Collins riveted millions with a 
portrait of a dystopian, resource-scarce, post-apocalyptic future where 
once-rebellious “districts” in an impoverished North America must supply two 
teenagers each year for a series of televised gladiatorial games 
that end in death for all but one of the youthful contestants. These 
“hunger games” are intended as recompense for the damage inflicted on 
the victorious capitol of Panem by the rebellious districts during an 
insurrection. Without specifically mentioning global warming, Collins 
makes it clear that climate change was significantly responsible for the hunger 
that shadows the North American continent in this future era. 
Hence, as the gladiatorial contestants are about to be selected, the 
mayor of District 12’s principal city describes “the disasters, the 
droughts, the storms, the fires, the encroaching seas that swallowed up 
so much of the land [and] the brutal war for what little sustenance 
remained.”
In this, Collins was prescient, even if her specific vision of the 
violence on which such a world might be organized is fantasy. While we 
may never see her version of those hunger games, do not doubt that some 
version of them will come into existence -- that, in fact, hunger wars 
of many sorts will fill our future. These could include any combination 
or permutation of the deadly riots that led to the 2008 collapse of 
Haiti’s government, the pitched battles between massed protesters and 
security forces that engulfed parts of Cairo as the Arab Spring 
developed, the ethnic struggles over disputed croplands and water 
sources that have made Darfur a recurring headline of horror in our world, or 
the inequitable 
distribution of agricultural land that continues to fuel the insurgency 
of the Maoist-inspired Naxalites of India.
Combine such conflicts with another likelihood: that persistent drought and 
hunger will force millions of people to abandon their traditional lands and 
flee to the squalor of shantytowns and 
expanding slums surrounding large cities, sparking hostility from those 
already living there. One such eruption, with grisly results, occurred in 
Johannesburg’s shantytowns in 2008 
when desperately poor and hungry migrants from Malawi and Zimbabwe were 
set upon, beaten, and in some cases burned to death by poor South 
Africans. One terrified Zimbabwean, cowering in a police station from 
the raging mobs, said she fled her country because “there is no work and no 
food.” And count 
on something else: millions more in the coming decades, pressed by 
disasters ranging from drought and flood to rising sea levels, will try 
to migrate to other countries, provoking even greater hostility. And 
that hardly begins to exhaust the possibilities that lie in our 
hunger-games future.
At this point, the focus is understandably on the immediate 
consequences of the still ongoing Great Drought: dying crops, shrunken 
harvests, and rising food prices. But keep an eye out for the social and 
political effects that undoubtedly won’t begin to show up here or 
globally until later this year or 2013.  Better than any academic study, these 
will offer us a hint of what we can expect in the coming decades 
from a hunger-games world of rising temperatures, persistent droughts, 
recurring food shortages, and billions of famished, desperate people.
© 2012 Michael T. Klare 
Michael T. Klare is the Five College Professor of Peace and 
World Security Studies at Hampshire College in Amherst, Massachusetts. His 
newest book, The Race for What's Left: The Global Scramble for the World's Last 
Resources, has just recently been published. His other books include: Rising 
Powers, Shrinking Planet: The New Geopolitics of Energy andBlood and Oil: The 
Dangers and Consequences of America's Growing Dependence on Imported Petroleum. 
A documentary version of that book is available from the Media Education 
Foundation.



http://www.commondreams.org/view/2012/08/07-2


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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