Hello Friends,
 
I don't know about you, but even though I knew this was coming, I find  
myself shocked by how quickly food shortages have developed across the  planet. 
 On 
this warm Earth Day, I am grateful for the work of so many in  building up 
our local food system.  The news that Japan, though warned, has  not prepared 
itself in any meaningful way to address its vulnerable food supply  should be 
recognized as a shiny mirror reflecting upon our own  country's slow response 
to 
so many critical issues.
 
Gay
 
 
Japan's hunger becomes a dire warning for other nations

Business the Age.com
Food fears: Being a rich nation is no  protection 
for Japan, which faces the fallout of relying too 
heavily on  foreign food to supply domestic needs.

* Justin Norrie, Tokyo
* April  21, 2008
* Page 1 of 2

MARIKO Watanabe admits she could have chosen a  
better time to take up baking. This week, when 
the Tokyo housewife  visited her local Ito-Yokado 
supermarket to buy butter to make a cake, she  found the shelves bare.

"I went to another supermarket, and then another,  
and there was no butter at those either. 
Everywhere I went there were  notices saying Japan 
has run out of butter. I couldn't believe it - 
this  is the first time in my life I've wanted to 
try baking cakes and I can't get  any butter," said the frustrated cook.

Japan's acute butter shortage,  which has 
confounded bakeries, restaurants and now families 
across the  country, is the latest unforeseen 
result of the global agricultural  commodities crisis.

A sharp increase in the cost of imported cattle  
feed and a decline in milk imports, both of which 
are typically provided  in large part by 
Australia, have prevented dairy farmers from keeping pace  with demand.

While soaring food prices have triggered rioting 
among  the starving millions of the third world, 
in wealthy Japan they have forced  a pampered 
population to contemplate the shocking 
possibility of a  long-term - perhaps permanent - 
reduction in the quality and quantity of its  food.

A 130% rise in the global cost of wheat in the 
past year,  caused partly by surging demand from 
China and India and a huge injection of  
speculative funds into wheat futures, has forced 
the Government to hit  flour millers with three 
rounds of stiff mark-ups. The latest - a 30%  
increase this month - has given rise to 
speculation that Japan, which  relies on imports 
for 90% of its annual wheat consumption, is no 
longer  on the brink of a food crisis, but has fallen off the cliff.

According to  one government poll, 80% of Japanese 
are frightened about what the future  holds for their food supply.

Last week, as the prices of wheat and barley  
continued their relentless climb, the Japanese 
Government discovered it  had exhausted its ¥230 
billion ($A2.37 billion) budget for the grains  
with two months remaining. It was forced to call 
on an emergency ¥55  billion reserve to ensure it 
could continue feeding the nation.

"This  was the first time the Government has had 
to take such drastic action since  the war," said 
Akio Shibata, an expert on food imports, who 
warned the  Agriculture Ministry two years ago 
that Japan would have to cut back  drastically on 
its sophisticated diet if it did not become more  self-sufficient.

In the wake of the decision this week by 
Kazakhstan,  the world's fifth biggest wheat 
exporter, to join Russia, Ukraine and  Argentina 
in stopping exports to satisfy domestic demand, 
the situation  in Japan is expected to worsen.

Bakeries, forced to increase prices by up  to 30% 
in the past year, are warning that the trend will 
continue.  Manufacturers of miso, a culinary 
staple, are preparing to pass on the bump  in 
costs caused by the rising price of soybeans and 
cooking oil. And the  nation's largest brewer, 
Kirin, is lifting beer prices for the first time  
in almost two decades to account for the soaring cost of barley.

"In  the past, Japan was a rich country with a 
powerful yen that could easily buy  cheap imports 
such as wheat, corn and soybeans," said Mr 
Shibata, who  directs the Marubeni Research 
Institute in Tokyo. "But with enormous  
competition from the booming Chinese and Indian 
economies, that's  changed forever. You also need 
to take into account recent developments,  
including the damage to crops caused by drought 
and other disasters in  exporting countries like 
Australia," where the value of wheat exports has  
tumbled from $3.49 billion to $2.77 billion in the past three  years.

The situation has been compounded by a surge in 
demand for  bio-fuels such as ethanol, made from 
maize, encouraging farmers around the  world to 
divert their efforts away from wheat and barley 
and into maize,  further driving up prices.

Arguably Japan's biggest concern, however, is  its 
weakening ability to sustain its population with 
domestic produce.  In 2006 the country's 
self-sufficiency rate fell to 39%, according to  
the Agriculture Ministry. It was only the second 
time since the ministry  began keeping records in 
1960 that the population derived less than 40% of  
its daily calorie intake from domestically grown food.

Shinichi  Shogenji, dean of the University of 
Tokyo's graduate school of agricultural  and life 
sciences, said Japan's meat consumption had 
increased by 900%  since 1955, in part because 
expanding incomes had enabled families to  
supplement the sparse national diet of rice, fish 
and miso soup with  more Western-style food.

This trend, combined with rapid ageing and  
declining rural populations, had placed the 
country's self-sufficiency  at a perilously low level, Professor Shogenji 
said.

In view of recent  predictions by Goldman Sachs 
analysts that commodities could experience  
"explosive rallies" in the next two years, many 
are wondering if Japan  could become an example to 
other rich nations that have relied too much on  
foreign supplies to put food on their  tables.

http://business.theage.com.au/japans-hunger-becomes-a-dire-warning-for-other-n
ations/20080420-27ey.html?page=1 
----------------------------------------------------
Gay  Nicholson, Ph.D. 

607-533-7312 (home office)
607-279-6618  (cell)

1 Maple Avenue
Lansing, NY  14882
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Sustainable Tompkins 
Program  Coordinator 
w_ww.sustainabletompkins.org_ (http://www.sustainabletompkins.org/) 

Southern Tier Energy$mart Communities
Regional  Coordinator
Cornell Cooperative Extension of Tompkins County
615 Willow  Ave., Ithaca, NY 14850
[EMAIL PROTECTED]




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