Caused in part by 
 
crop failures linked to 
 
various climate-related 
 
natural disasters along 
 
with fuel price increases, 
 
a global food price index 
 
monitored by 
 
the United Nations 
 
Food and Agriculture 
 
Organization (FAO) 
 
has surpassed 
 
a 2008 record high, 
 
with global corn prices 
 
up 52%, wheat up 49% 
 
and soy up 28% 
 
relative to 2010. 
 
Rising food costs 
 
have already led to 
 
recent rallies and unrest 
 
in Morocco, Algeria, 
 
Jordan, Mozambique 
 
and Yemen. 
 
Officials caution that 
 
the situation is becoming 
 
dangerous, with 
 
climate change expected 
 
to decrease crop yields 
 
due to more extreme 
 
weather events. 
 
Following recent widespread 
 
and damaging floods 
 
in Australia, 
 
some food items 
 
have risen 20% in price 
 
in cities such as Sydney 
 
and Melbourne. 
 
 
The FAO cautions that 
 
those who continue 
 
to be most at risk are 
 
in the developing world, 
 
where an average 70% 
 
of household income 
 
is spent on food. 
 
 
Guriya Devi, Indian housewife:
 
Lentils cost almost 
 
$1.5 a kilo, so do you 
 
think we can eat them? 
 
The price used to be 
 
60 cents - we could 
 
buy them then, now 
 
we can't even think of it. 
 
What can we do with 
 
the income we have? 
 
Poor people like us 
 
are suffering.
 
Baiju, Indian taxi driver
 
The price of lentils and 
 
rice has gone up so much 
 
that we've stopped 
 
eating lentils. 
 
Even potatoes have 
 
become expensive… 
 
Our family survives 
 
by eating just 
 
vegetables and rice.
 
 
 
In Kenya, the price of 
 
staples such as maize 
 
and beans have spiked, 
 
causing most of 
 
the northern Kenyan 
 
population to be at risk 
 
of starvation. 
 
The nation's Red Cross 
 
reported that 
 
these conditions come 
 
after crop failures 
 
in the three consecutive 
 
planting seasons,
 
with young children, 
 
expectant mothers, 
 
and elderly suffering 
 
the worst impacts 
 
of malnutrition. 
 
International relief 
 
agencies have been trying 
 
to distribute emergency 
 
food supplies in the area. 
 
Our thanks for 
 
the concerned alerts 
 
as well as the efforts 
 
of the United Nations 
 
Food and Agriculture 
 
Organization, 
 
the Kenyan Red Cross 
 
and others in addressing 
 
the challenging situation 
 
faced by people 
 
across the globe due to 
 
increasing food prices. 
 
May we step together 
 
in sustainable, 
 
climate-stabilizing 
 
actions to ensure 
 
worldwide sustenance, 
 
especially 
 
for the most vulnerable. 
 
Supreme Master Ching Hai 
 
has often 
 
addressed concerns 
 
of high food prices 
 
and shortages while 
 
encouraging humanity's 
 
considerate participation 
 
toward alleviating 
 
these problems,
 
as during an October 
 
2009 videoconference 
 
in Indonesia.
 
Supreme Master Ching Hai: There are 
 
1.02 billion people 
with not enough food 
 
in the world. 
While we are sitting here 
 
in safety and comfort, 
 
and have sufficient food 
 
for ourselves 
 
and our family, 
our neighboring people, 
 
our world co-citizens, 
more than one billion 
 
of them, 
 
are living in poverty, 
 
in hunger, in thirst. 
 
No sufficient water, 
 
no clean water, 
 
no food to eat. 
 
Children are dying 
 
every few seconds. 
 
Statistically, 
 
every five seconds
 
one child dies of hunger. 
 
Besides, we are facing 
 
a food shortage 
 
with high food prices. 
The most important first step 
 
is to stop buying and 
 
eating meat, fish, eggs, 
 
dairy, and any animal 
 
products for you and 
 
for your family's sake, 
 
for the natural resources' 
 
sake, and 
 
to plant the seeds for a 
 
better agricultural system 
 
for everyone.
 
In this way, not only can 
 
all the farmers prosper - 
 
we help them in this way -
 
but everyone will 
 
prosper and enjoy 
 
a long and thriving life. 
http://www.spa.gov.sa/English/details.php?id=852906chttp://green.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/01/05/extreme-weather-sends-food-prices-soaring/?partner=rss&emc=rssdhttp://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/politics/the-coming-hunger-record-food-prices-put-world-in-danger-says-un-2177220.htmhttp://www.straitstimes.com/PrimeNews/Story/STIStory_621350.htmlhttp://www.straitstimes.com/STI/STIMEDIA/pdf/20110106/070111p1.pdfhttp://www.theage.com.au/national/fruit-and-vegetable-prices-to-jump-20110107-19iwe.html