ROME, Oct. 3, 2013 – The outlook for global cereal supply in the 2013/14 marketing season remains generally favorable despite downward adjustments to forecasts for world cereal production and closing stocks, according to the latest issue of FAO's quarterly Crop Prospects and Food Situation report.
Despite this downward adjustment, world cereal production would still surpass the 2012 level by nearly 8 percent.
Meanwhile, the FAO Food Price Index dropped for the fifth month in a row in September, driven by a sharp fall in the international prices of cereals. The prices of dairy, oils, meat and sugar rose slightly.
The Index, which measures the monthly change in the international prices of a basket of 55 food commodities, averaged 199.1 points last month, 2.3 points or 1 percent below its August value. It is down 11 points or 5.4 percent since the beginning of the year.
However, it is still higher than in the same period in 2009 or 2010.
FAO will hold a second Ministerial
Meeting on International Food Prices on Monday at its
Rome headquarters to provide a forum to discuss food price volatility and the
policy challenges it poses. More than 40 government ministers are expected.
Cereal production up by 8 percent over 2012
At 2,489 million tons, FAO's current forecast for world cereal production in 2013 is marginally lower (by 3 million tons) than reported in September, mainly reflecting poorer prospects for the South America wheat crop, following adverse weather.
The expected 8 percent increase in world cereal production this year over 2012 is mainly the result of an 11 percent anticipated expansion in coarse grains output to about 1 288 million tons.
The United States, the world's largest maize producer, would
account for the bulk of the increase, as it is expected to harvest a record
maize crop of 348 million tons, 27 percent higher than the previous year's
drought-reduced level.
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