World Hunger: Blame It on Farm Subsidies and Oil Prices, Says Brazil

Brazilian president Lula During his current visit to Ghana, in Africa, Brazilian President, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, blamed rising oil prices for the current global food crisis, saying that biofuels had nothing to do with the problem, as some have suggested.

He also insisted that escalating oil prices are pushing up freight costs, which in turn affects world food prices.

"Ethanol production has not contributed in any way to the food price crises," Lula told a news conference in Accra, where he was attending a United Nations Conference on Trade and Development, UNCTAD.

However UNCTAD has criticized Brazil for encouraging its farmers to grow biofuels including sugarcane, castor beans and corn, instead of traditional food crops. The UN body says the shift is a factor in the reduction of food production.

Lula said such criticism was unfounded and that there is enough land for production of both food and biofuels, especially in Africa.

To solve the global food crisis, "rich countries should end subsidies to their agricultural production and they should open market access to agricultural produce from the developing world," underlined the Brazilian president.

"It is not fair that more than one billion people consume less than the necessary calories and protein for our survival," the Brazilian president said. He also called on developed countries to transfer their agricultural expertise to the developing world to enable them to produce their required crops

"The success that Brazil has achieved in food production can be done in Africa," he said after a meeting with Ghana's President John Kufuor. "Forty years ago, Brazil's savannah zones were considered wastelands, but technology has changed that" and Africa can do the same.

The two countries signed three agreements to transfer technology to Ghana for the production of biofuels and manioc.

Mercopress

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil and Chile Discuss Human Rights

President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva is in Chile to discuss accords in the ...

Brazilian Gol Flies 32% More People and Gets Help from Weak Dollar

Brazilian Airline Gol saw a demand on it route network grow by 32.1% in ...

Brazilian Beef Exports Are Down 14%, But Revenues Up 22

Beef exports by Brazil dropped 33% during November following a significant contraction in global ...

AIDS Among Poor Women Goes Up Sharply in Brazil

Brazil’s Non-Governmental Agencies (NGOs) are organizing demonstrations in 12 Brazilian states in an effort ...

A Brazilian Blockbuster

Hollywood hunk and soap opera star in NBC’s Days of Our Lives as Officer ...

A Brazilian Slaughterhouse Turned to Europe

Slaughterhouse Mercosul, from the southernmost Brazilian state of Rio Grande do Sul, is one ...

Brazil Strikes Gas and Oil Once Again in Deep Sea

State-controlled oil multinational Petrobras confirmed this week the discovery of new natural gas reservoirs ...

In Brazil, Left Gives a Show on How to Lose Power

With minds concentrated firmly on the race for the Oval office this weekend (though ...

22 Million Chinese Tourists, 14,000 Visited Brazil. Brazil Wants to Change That.

Brazil’s Minister of Tourism, Walfrido dos Mares Guia, and the ambassador of the People’s ...

Europe and Latin America in Brazil Discussing Information

Today and tomorrow, November 22 and 23, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, is hosting the ...