Stating
 that prices are 29% higher than one year ago, with increases of 15% 
over the past four months alone, the World Bank has issued an alarm as 
it notes that food costs currently are only 3% lower than the peak 
prices of June 2008, when food riots had erupted across the developing 
world.
The largest recent increases have been seen in global 
wheat prices, which doubled from June 2010 to January 2011, while the 
price of maize jumped a sharp 73%, and higher prices placed on sugar and
 cooking oils, as well as vegetables in China and India, and beans in 
some African nations. 
Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala - Managing Director, World Bank Group (M):
 According to our research at the World Bank, the recent food price 
hikes have thrown another 44 million people into extreme poverty. I feel
 we've now entered a danger zone. 
VOICE: The UN Food and 
Agriculture Organization has indicated that the recent upward direction 
in prices has come from a combination of factors, including increased 
consumption of meat and dairy products, speculative trading, soil 
erosion, food crops used for biofuels, and decreased or failed harvests 
due to climate change effects such as water scarcity. 
Prolonged 
widespread drought in northern China, for instance, caused wheat crop 
failures that recently sparked concerns about the impact on global food 
prices. If China were ever to have to import a large amount of wheat, 
global prices for the grain would surge and add to the strain already 
being felt worldwide. 
Shanghai-based agriculture analyst Lief 
Chiang of Rabobank noted that not only China's drought, but also other 
disasters in late 2010 have driven up global wheat prices, such as 
floods in Australia, drought in Russia and an unusually early frost in 
Canada. 
Our thanks, World Bank and United Nations for these 
reports alerting us to the potential crisis of escalating food prices 
and global food security. Let us work together to implement solutions 
that ensure sustainable food supplies for all who are in need. 
During
 an October 2009 videoconference in Hong Kong, Supreme Master Ching Hai 
addressed the interrelated issues of food production and climate change,
 explaining the cost-saving solution for both areas. A lot of the news 
today is not very good due to the effects of global warming. We hear 
about glaciers melting, water becoming more scarce, rising food 
shortages, rising food prices with over one billion people going hungry 
every day, and so forth. The food prices are getting higher and higher 
nowadays. 
Supreme Master Ching Hai : As
 it has already been mentioned, recent research shows that more than 50%
 of emissions, which heat up our planet, which put our lives in danger, 
are from the livestock industry. 
Now, the meat industry is not a
 very lucrative business, with very high production costs for 
electricity, water, and grains that have to be wasted to produce the 
same amount of so-called “food,” which is replaceable and better. We 
have better food than meat. 
I don't know how difficult can it be
 to replace a piece of meat with a piece of tofu, or a piece of 
vegetable protein. It looks the same, it tastes even better, is cheaper 
any way, and good for your health. 
The solution is at hand for 
each and every one of us, which is simply to forego animal products and 
become vegan - one small change; it's no big deal. 
http://web.worldbank.org/WBSITE/EXTERNAL/NEWS/0,,contentMDK:22833625~pagePK:64257043~piPK:437376~theSitePK:4607,00.html  http://web.worldbank.org/WBSITE/EXTERNAL/NEWS/0,,contentMDK:22833439~pagePK:64257043~piPK:437376~theSitePK:4607,00.html http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T1hhQGc78Ws