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World Food Prices Fall For Fifth Month In A Row – UN

    Advertisement World food prices have fallen for a fifth consecutive month, partly thanks to the resumption of exports from Ukraine’s Black Sea ports, … Continue reading World Food Prices Fall For Fifth Month In A Row – UN


A woman cooks food for her flood affected family at a makeshift camp after heavy monsoon rainfall in Naw?bsh?h district of Sindh province, southern Pakistan on August 25, 2022. – Figures from the national disaster agency showed on August 25 that 903 people had died in the floods since June, and over 180,000 were forced to flee their rural homes. (Photo by Asif HASSAN / AFP)
A vendor gestures to a customer at a local market in Lahore on August 29, 2022, amid a big hike in prices of food items in the wake of massive floods in Pakistan. – The death toll from monsoon flooding in Pakistan since June has reached 1,061, according to figures released on August 29, 2022, by the country’s National Disaster Management Authority. (Photo by Arif ALI / AFP)

 

 

World food prices have fallen for a fifth consecutive month, partly thanks to the resumption of exports from Ukraine’s Black Sea ports, a UN agency said on Friday.

The Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) food price index, which tracks the monthly change in international prices of a basket of food commodities, has been falling steadily since hitting an all-time high in March following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

There was a moderate decline of 1.9 percent in August.

Vegetable oils have fallen below their level a year ago, after a 3.3 percent drop.

The FAO cereals index fell by 1.4 percent, driven by a 5.1 percent drop in international wheat prices.

It came off the back of “improved production prospects in North America and Russia as well as the resumption of exports from the Black Sea ports in Ukraine for the first time in over five months of interruption”, the FAO said.

Global wheat prices were still 10.6 percent above their values in August last year, the FAO said.

Exports from Ukraine — one of the world’s biggest suppliers of wheat, corn and sunflower oil before the war — had ground to a trickle due to a Russian blockade of the Black Sea.

The shipments resumed in early August under a deal brokered by the UN and Turkey.