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Reading the World in a Loaf of Bread

Posted: 07/19/11 03:30 PM ET

Soaring Food Prices, Wild Weather, Upheaval, and a Planetful of Trouble

Cross-posted from TomDispatch.com

What can a humble loaf of bread tell us about the world?

The answer is: far more than you might imagine.  For one thing, that loaf can be “read” as if it were a core sample extracted from the heart of a grim global economy. Looked at another way, it reveals some of the crucial fault lines of world politics, including the origins of the Arab Spring that has now become a summer of discontent.

Consider this: between June 2010 and June 2011, world grain prices almost doubled. In many places on this planet, that proved an unmitigated catastrophe.  In those same months, several governments fell, rioting broke out in cities from Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan, to Nairobi, Kenya, and most disturbingly three new wars began in Libya, Yemen, and Syria. Even on Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula, Bedouin tribes are now in revolt against the country’s interim government and manning their own armed roadblocks.

And in each of these situations, the initial trouble was traceable, at least in part, to the price of that loaf of bread.  If these upheavals were not “resource conflicts” in the formal sense of the term, think of them at least as bread-triggered upheavals.

Growing Climate Change in a Wheat Field 

Bread has classically been known as the staff of life. In much of the world, you can’t get more basic, since that daily loaf often stands between the mass of humanity and starvation.  Still, to read present world politics from a loaf of bread, you first have to ask: of what exactly is that loaf made? Water, salt, and yeast, of course, but mainly wheat, which means when wheat prices increase globally, so does the price of that loaf -- and so does trouble.

To imagine that there’s nothing else in bread, however, is to misunderstand modern global agriculture.  Another key ingredient in our loaf -- call it a “factor of production” -- is petroleum.  Yes, crude oil, which appears in our bread as fertilizer and tractor fuel.  Without it, wheat wouldn’t be produced, processed, or moved across continents and oceans.

And don’t forget labor.  It’s an ingredient in our loaf, too, but not perhaps in the way you might imagine.  After all, mechanization has largely displaced workers from the field to the factory. Instead of untold thousands of peasants planting and harvesting wheat by hand, industrial workers now make tractors and threshers, produce fuel, chemical pesticides, and nitrogen fertilizer, all rendered from petroleum and all crucial to modern wheat growing.  If the labor power of those workers is transferred to the wheat field, it happens in the form of technology. Today, a single person driving a huge $400,000 combine, burning 200 gallons of fuel daily, guided by computers and GPS satellite navigation, can cover 20 acres an hour, and harvest 8,000 to 10,000 bushels of wheat in a single day.

Next, without financial capital -- money -- our loaf of bread wouldn’t exist. It’s necessary to purchase the oil, the fertilizer, that combine, and so on. But financial capital may indirectly affect the price of our loaf even more powerfully. When there is too much liquid capital moving through the global financial system, speculators start to bid-up the price of various assets, including all the ingredients in bread.  This sort of speculation naturally contributes to rising fuel and grain prices.

The final ingredients come from nature: sunlight, oxygen, water, and nutritious soil, all in just the correct amounts and at just the right time.  And there’s one more input that can’t be ignored, a different kind of contribution from nature: climate change, just now really kicking in, and increasingly the key destabilizing element in bringing that loaf of bread disastrously to market. 

Marketing Disaster

When these ingredients mix in a way that sends the price of bread soaring, politics enters the picture.  Consider this, for instance: the upheavals in Egypt lay at the heart of the Arab Spring.  Egypt is also the world’s single largest wheat importer, followed closely by Algeria and Morocco. Keep in mind as well that the Arab Spring started in Tunisia when rising food prices, high unemployment, and a widening gap between rich and poor triggered deadly riots and finally the flight of the country’s autocratic ruler Zine Ben Ali. His last act was a vow to reduce the price of sugar, milk, and bread -- and it was too little too late.

With that, protests began in Egypt and the Algerian government ordered increased wheat imports to stave off growing unrest over food prices.  As global wheat prices surged by 70% between June and December 2010, bread consumption in Egypt started to decline under what economists termed “price rationing.” And that price kept rising all through the spring of 2011.  By June, wheat cost 83% more than it had a year before. During the same time frame, corn prices surged by a staggering 91%.  Egypt is the world’s fourth largest corn importer. When not used to make bread, corn is often employed as a food additive and to feed poultry and livestock. Algeria, Syria, Morocco, and Saudi Arabia are among the top 15 corn importers. As those wheat and corn prices surged, it was not just the standard of living of the Egyptian poor that was threatened, but their very lives as climate-change driven food prices triggered political violence.

In Egypt, food is a volatile political issue. After all, one in five Egyptians live on less than $1 a day and the government provides subsidized bread to 14.2 million people in a population of 83 million. Last year, overall food-price inflation in Egypt was running at more than 20%. This had an instant and devastating impact on Egyptian families, who spend on average 40% of their often exceedingly meager monthly incomes simply feeding themselves.

Against this backdrop, World Bank President Robert Zoellick fretted that the global food system was "one shock away from a full-fledged crisis."  And if you want to trace that near full-fledged crisis back to its environmental roots, the place to look is climate change, the increasingly extreme and devastating weather being experienced across this planet.

When it comes to bread, it went like this: In the summer of 2010, Russia, one of the world’s leading wheat exporters, suffered its worst drought in 100 years. Known as the Black Sea Drought, this extreme weather triggered fires that burnt down vast swathes of Russian forests, bleached farmlands, and damaged the country’s breadbasket wheat crop so badly that its leaders (urged on by western grain speculators) imposed a year-long ban on wheat exports.  As Russia is among the top four wheat exporters in any year, this caused prices to surge upward.

At the same time, massive flooding occurred in Australia, another significant wheat exporter, while excessive rains in the American Midwest and Canada damaged corn production. Freakishly massive flooding in Pakistan, which put some 20% of that country under water, also spooked markets and spurred on the speculators.

And that’s when those climate-driven prices began to soar in Egypt.  The ensuing crisis, triggered in part by that rise in the price of our loaf of bread, led to upheaval and finally the fall of the country’s reigning autocrat Hosni Mubarak.  Tunisia and Egypt helped trigger a crisis that led to an incipient civil war and then western intervention in neighboring Libya, which meant most of that country’s production of 1.4 million barrels of oil a day went off-line. That, in turn, caused the price of crude oil to surge, at its height hitting $125 a barrel, which set off yet more speculation in food markets, further driving up grain prices.

And recent months haven't brought much relief.  Once again, significant, in some cases record, flooding has damaged crops in Canada, the United States, and Australia. Meanwhile, an unexpected spring drought in northern Europe has hurt grain crops as well. The global food system is visibly straining, if not snapping, under the intense pressure of rising demand, rising energy prices, growing water shortages, and most of all the onset of climate chaos.

And this, the experts tell us, is only the beginning.  The price of our loaf of bread is forecast to increase by up to 90% over the next 20 years. That will mean yet more upheavals, more protest, greater desperation, heightened conflicts over water, increased migration, roiling ethnic and religious violence, banditry, civil war, and (if past history is any judge) possibly a raft of new interventions by imperial and possibly regional powers.

And how are we responding to this gathering crisis? Has there been a broad new international initiative focused on ensuring food security for the global poor -- that is to say, a stable, affordable price for our loaf of bread?  You already know the sad answer to that question.

Instead, massive corporations like Glencore, the world’s largest commodity trading company, and the privately held and secretive Cargill, the world’s biggest trader of agricultural commodities, are moving to further consolidate their control of world grain markets and vertically integrate their global supply chains in a new form of food imperialism designed to profit off global misery.  While bread triggered war and revolution in the Middle East, Glencore made windfall profits on the surge in grain prices. And the more expensive our loaf of bread becomes the more money firms like Glencore and Cargill stand to make. Consider that just about the worst possible form of “adaptation” to the climate crisis.

So what text should flash through our brains when reading our loaf of bread? A warning, obviously.  But so far, it seems, a warning ignored.

Christian Parenti, author of the just-published Tropic of Chaos: Climate Change and the New Geography of Violence (Nation Books), is a contributing editor at the Nation magazine, a Puffin Foundation Writing Fellow at the Nation Institute, and a visiting scholar at the City University of New York. His articles have appeared in Fortune, the New York Times, the Washington Post, and Mother Jones, among other places. He can be reached at Christian_parenti@yahoo.com. To listen to Timothy MacBain’s latest TomCast audio interview in which Parenti discusses the origins of his latest book and how climate change contributes to global violence, click here, or download it to your iPod here.

 
Soaring Food Prices, Wild Weather, Upheaval, and a Planetful of Trouble Cross-posted from TomDispatch.com What can a humble loaf of bread tell us about the world? The answer is: far more than you ...
Soaring Food Prices, Wild Weather, Upheaval, and a Planetful of Trouble Cross-posted from TomDispatch.com What can a humble loaf of bread tell us about the world? The answer is: far more than you ...
 
 
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12:48 AM on 07/20/2011
YES ! Lets look at this ! Grain prices went up because food is being used/converted for ethanol. [Money]government failure]] Wars are about MONEY ! And fuel prices ? Milked for every blood red cent ! Truth is that cities are displacing on cheap farm land as urban sprawl. Your scenarios about why are nothing new. Remember the french revolution ? The guillotine ? MONEY ! For Antoinette.
Flooding in Canada & the USA is yearly ! Every year somewheres. But our commodities are price controlled. Beef, milk, pork, poultry... All of it. Most our food is grown off shore. Our farmers can't make a living. Haven't you noticed the last 50 years. And that's a result of our selling other countries our Know HOW ! So now they compete against US ! Money ! American farmers go broke. Developers/speculators/investors buy cheap land. And as the price of your loaf of bread go UP ! So does PROFIT ! And yes ! They will squeeze you. For every blood penny they can. Until YOU REVOLT ! The money isn't here for YOUR benefit. It's the slave whip you die for. Their consumption of yous.
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NJP1
05:16 PM on 07/19/2011
I think Christian Parenti’s post may be the first that’s actually said that world disturbances are all resource wars, over food particularly. There is an almost universal dismissal of the truth that humanity is literally eating oil, and as the cost of it goes up, food prices rise with it. We read that the world can feed itself, but the collective wisdom of humanity knows otherwise; hence the violence in food stressed areas as shortages begin to bite. Before the introduction of artificial fertiliser world population was around 1.5 billion. Now it’s 7 billion. The world wide riots are a direct result of that jump in numbers, people are beginning the struggle for survival in its most direct sense, fighting over the basic cost and availability of food; world poverty is beginning its climb the ladder of prosperity; it will take longer to reach the ‘developed’ nations but none of us are immune. Our addiction to oil guarantees that our struggles to get it will become increasing desperate and futile because our wartoys can only run on oil. Current world population can survive only through the continued supply of oil from regions whose religious ethic seems to be a desire to return us to the lifestyle of the 14th century. Conflict must disrupt that supply within the next few years, and without it 6 billion people don’t have much of a future. http://www.yourmedievalfuture.com/
05:03 PM on 07/19/2011
Pretty intense article, figures only 3 people have commented. Seems like the more well thought out the article is on Huff post, the fewer people care about it.
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LMPE
I connect the most dissimilar things
04:34 PM on 07/19/2011
It seems like throughout history, food has been one of the motivating factors whenever countries have revolutions.
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William50
04:07 PM on 07/19/2011
PAX AMERICAN for sixty years allowed for more food and more people while the ability of the people to find work, automation plus education, natural resources and living in one resource nations came to a point when the supply of available food at a low price failed.
Today there is, possible is, still enough grain to make that one loaf a day, the trouble is supply costs, oil costs and military and civil upheavals that force prices up. Then you have in the worst areas no exports to bring in cash while the costs rise. The numbers of hungry rise, people get mad and civil wars break out.
For all of the great save every one ideas the harsh truth is we can't.
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Viet Vet 67
From being raised in poverty in a ghetto to being
03:00 PM on 07/19/2011
"And if you want to trace that near full-fledged crisis back to its environmental roots, the place to look is climate change, the increasingly extreme and devastating weather being experienced across this planet."

Of course, eight billion people all needing to be fed has at least a minor roll.