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Feeding the Future - News in RSSMore than 1 billion people suffer hunger today, according to the UN. A crucial part of this complex problem is food production and distribution. Is it possible to increase food production in an environmentally and socially sustainable way? Can modernisation, research and investment enhance food security? Is there anything to learn from traditional knowledge? How do trade and energy policies affect the equation? And gender? Where and when is food aid really needed? Can the upswing of commodity prices be positive for some countries? How are farmers coping with climate change?

IPS finds the stories behind the current food crisis to understand local and global causes of shortages and rising prices, and their long term effects.

Mexico: Food Emergency
Food security in Colombia
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Sustainable Development
FOOD CRISIS
Farming the Future
Environment
Biodiversity - One Planet - 1.4 Millon Species
Kyoto on the Horizon
Millennium Development Goals
Commodities' Return
Subsidies
From Aid to Trade with Africa -- Fact or Fiction?
News in RSS
LEBANON: Rich Feast Through Month of Fasting
MIDEAST: Pessimistic About Peace, Yet…
U.N. Lagging on Water and Sanitation Development Goals
Environmental Forensics for BP Gulf Spill
Uganda Could Become Regional Rice Exporter say Researchers
ARGENTINA-BRAZIL: Nuclear Safeguards System an Example for the World
RIGHTS-INDIA: Law to Restrict Foreign Funding Alarms NGOs
PHILIPPINES: Criminal Ban, Stigma Drive Unsafe Abortions
SRI LANKA: Anger Rises Over Torture Case, But Solution Unclear
Further Victims Identified in DRC Mass Rapes Case
More >>

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Uganda Could Become Regional Rice Exporter say Researchers
By Joshua Kyalimpa
KAMPALA - In a small garden at the Entebbe Botanical garden, about 40 kilometres from Kampala, a few yellowish plants are trying to adapt to their new environment.
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Funding Begins Flowing for African Agriculture
By Claire Ngozo
WINDHOEK - The Comprehensive Africa Agriculture Development Programme (CAADP) has received a major boost as several countries have begun drawing on funds from a $22 billion pledge made by the G8.
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SOUTHERN AFRICA
Growing Seed Security
By Mantoe Phakathi
WINDHOEK - Farmer Obed Dlamini, like many of his colleagues from Swaziland, finds it difficult to find quality maize seeds each planting season. Not only are the seeds expensive but they are often not available.
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AFRICA
Outrage Over Claim that Anti-GM Campaign "Causes Hunger"
By Miriam Mannak
CAPE TOWN - Civil society organisations have reacted with outrage to claims that the international campaign against genetically modified (GM) crops is partly responsible for food shortages and food insecurity in Africa.
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WORLD
Fair Trade Is Growing But Africans Lag Behind
By Hilaire Avril
PARIS - Despite its minuscule share of world trade, fair trade is a booming business, importing certified foodstuffs and products from all over the world to Northern supermarkets. But there is increasing concern that this growth is yet to benefit poor countries in Africa.
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SOUTH AFRICA
Climate Change Policy Ignores Women Farmers
By Kristin Palitza
CAPE TOWN - When asked if they have already felt the effects of climate change, Mary-Anne Zimri and Katrina Scheepers eagerly nod their heads. The two small-scale farmers say lack of rain this winter has foiled their planting season, ruined their harvest – and drastically slashed their income.
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ECUADOR
Small Farmers Sell to Government in "Inclusive Markets"
By Gonzalo Ortiz
QUITO - The powerful middleman threatened them: "I hope it lasts for you. I hope the government buys your beans forever, because I don't want you ever coming back to me!"
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MEXICO
Junk Food Regulations in Schools Fall Short, Consumer Groups Say
By Emilio Godoy
MEXICO CITY - What was initially announced as a government ban on sales of junk food in schools has failed to keep fried and sugary foods out of the classrooms to which Mexico's 25 million primary and secondary students returned Monday after summer break.
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ENERGY
Brazilian Biofuels Run into EU Obstacles
By Yans Felippe Geckler*
RIO DE JANEIRO - Brazil has begun a counterattack on the European Union's measures for certifying crop-based fuels, which could lead to import barriers for this energy source coming from the South American giant.
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COLOMBIA
The Violent "Agrarian Counter-Reform" Conspiracy
By Constanza Vieira*
BOGOTA - An unknown number of agribusiness owners and public employees at all levels, as well as far-right paramilitaries, have a common link with rural people who have been forced off their farms or killed in Colombia: the land stolen from the latter group in the armed conflict.
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Niger Facing Growing Food Crisis
By Ousseini Issa*
NIAMEY - In April, the United Nations World Food Programme estimated it would need 190 million dollars to respond to a food crisis threatening more than 7 million people in Niger. By July, the WFP had revised the amount needed upwards to $371 million: a month later, the U.N. agency has been forced to scale back aid for lack of funds.
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CHILE
Salmon Industry Won't Give Up
By Daniela Estrada*
SANTIAGO - The once booming salmon industry in Chile is trying to get back on its feet after the devastating health crisis that cut production in half. But its long-term viability has been called into question.
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SOUTHERN AFRICA
Land Reform Underfinanced and Failing
By Fidelis Zvomuya
RAFFINGORA, Zimbabwe - Mavis Muchena sits on the veranda of her mud hut, a middle-aged single mother of four with a face worn beyond her years and hands creased from working the soil. She should represent the future of a renewed farming boom in Zimbabwe, but instead she represents its failure.
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Americas Social Forum Calls for Agriculture Based on Solidarity
By Natalia Ruiz Díaz
ASUNCION - Small-scale agriculture based on the principles of solidarity and cooperation is the only way to guarantee food sovereignty in Latin America, said peasant and indigenous activists meeting in the Paraguayan capital this week.
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GUATEMALA
Multi-Pronged Effort to Boost Food Security Still Falling Short
By Danilo Valladares
GUATEMALA CITY - "I used to work on the south coast, cutting sugar cane, and I would go all the way to Belize to pick oranges during the harvest. I went through a lot so we could get by," Héctor Pan, a Q'eqchi Indian in Guatemala who has now abandoned farming to become a river rafting guide, told IPS.
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