Les stocks mondiaux de nourriture au plus bas depuis 30 ans. - Société - Discussions
Marsh Posté le 31-12-2003 à 20:06:29
Il est chaud aujourd'hui le B&B!!!!
Va falloir penser à se calmer
Marsh Posté le 31-12-2003 à 20:09:20
harrysauce a écrit : Il est chaud aujourd'hui le B&B!!!! |
en meme temps, on en cause pas assez de ces tristes realités...
Marsh Posté le 31-12-2003 à 20:12:29
bonnanai ls gens
un plat de pate ca sufira poor moi ce soir, v pas taper ds la rezerve mondiale k est au plus bas machin tou ca
Marsh Posté le 31-12-2003 à 20:15:59
Beavis and Butt-head a écrit : |
patates sautées et steacks a chier congelés...
Marsh Posté le 31-12-2003 à 20:19:02
bonnnnnnneeeeee annnnnééééééééééééééééééééééééééééééééé
2004
Marsh Posté le 31-12-2003 à 20:20:12
Tant que l' on est dans ce sujet, quelqu' un sAUrait-il quel est le pays qui consomme le plus de nourriture au monde ?
juste une question qui me traverse l' esprit
edit1:desole pour l'orthographe
Marsh Posté le 31-12-2003 à 20:21:08
dede13 a écrit : Tant que l' on est dans ce sujet, quelqu' un serait-il quel est le pays qui consomme le plus de nourriture au monde ? |
"saurait"
Marsh Posté le 31-12-2003 à 21:22:17
harrysauce a écrit : voir la chine.....vu la population |
ils consomment moins ke les ricains pour le moment...
Marsh Posté le 31-12-2003 à 21:59:44
qques sites pour se changer les idées, pour B&B avant qu'il ne mette la tête dans son four (micro-ondes : cf son autre post)
http://lesbisounours.free.fr/
http://www.teletubbies.com/
Marsh Posté le 31-12-2003 à 22:25:03
blueteen a écrit : qques sites pour se changer les idées, pour B&B avant qu'il ne mette la tête dans son four (micro-ondes : cf son autre post) |
le meme topic par kkun d autre nous aurait evité les remarques de merde de ce genre...
Marsh Posté le 31-12-2003 à 22:47:41
bonne année à toi aussi
tiens à propos des remarques de merde... non rien, tu comprendrais pas.
je pensais juste à sa santé mentale plutôt morose
Marsh Posté le 31-12-2003 à 23:44:56
le roi du troll a encore frappé
Marsh Posté le 01-01-2004 à 02:16:12
Punaise je rentre de soirée, un tour sur HFr et que vois-je ? ENCORE ! Décidément c'est l'effet Nouvel An
Marsh Posté le 31-12-2003 à 20:03:14
Tout va pour le mieux.
En plus les récoltes de céréales sont en baisse depuis 4 ans.
Et la population mondiale augmente.
Et c'est la fin de l'ère du pétrole abondant et pas cher, ingrédient indispensable à l'agriculture productiviste, des pesticides au transport de nourriture sur grandes distances en passant par la récolte mécanisée.
Et que dire des effets dévastateurs des sécheresses sur les plantes et les récoltes?
Une sécheresse de plus l'été prochain et Raffarin connaîtra la même fin que Louis XVI?
China's rising grain prices could signal global food crisis
BEIJING (AFP) Nov 19, 2003
http://www.terradaily.com/2003/031 [...] a5roc.html
US environmentalist Lester Brown warned Wednesday that sudden food price hikes in China could be the sign of a coming world food crisis brought on by global warming and increasingly scarce water supplies among major grain producers.
"I view the price rises as an indication, as the warning tremors before the earthquake," Brown, director of the Washington-based Earth Policy Institute, told an audience of Chinese environmental non-governmental organizations. "World grain harvests have fallen for four consecutive years and world grain stocks are at the lowest level in 30 years. If farmers can't raise production by (late next year) we may see soaring grain and food prices worldwide."
In the past few months, wheat prices in northeast China have shot up 32 percent, maize prices have doubled and rice prices are up by as much as 13 percent, official reports show. China faces a 40 million ton grain shortfall this year, following five years of smaller harvests. Brown said that the world will be facing a 96 million ton shortfall in grain this year following poor harvests in the United States and India in 2002, and a poor harvest in Europe due to scorching temperatures this year. Shortfalls worldwide have been made up through dwindling grain reserves. Brown, described by the Washington Post as "one of the world's most influential thinkers," was in China to unveil the translation of his new book "Plan B, Rescuing a Planet Under Stress."
While grain producers revel in rising prices, Brown said the trends are unsustainable, especially as the world population approaches eight billion by mid-century and as the main grain producers -- China, India and the United States -- face increasing water shortages. As China's population grows, and its people demand a more meat-based diet with rising living standards, China will increasingly have to look to world markets to satisfy grain needs for both food and feed for livestock, he said.
"When China turns to the world market for grain, it will need 30, 40, 50 million tons, more than anyone else in the world imports," Brown said. "They will first come to US markets, which is going to make a fascinating geo-political situation."
With a 100 billion dollar trade surplus with the United States in 2002,China has "enormous purchasing power" to buy US grain, which "could drive up prices by two times." Already an increase in Chinese demand for American soybeans, plus last year's bad soybean harvest, have seen prices jump from five dollars a bushel to eight dollars a bushel.
China is expected to announce substantial grain purchases from the US in the weeks ahead of a visit to Washington by Premier Wen Jiabao in December. Further exacerbating falling grain harvests will be the effects of global warming as increasing scientific evidence reveals that grain production falls when temperatures mount, Brown said. Studies by the International Rice Institute and the US-based Carnegie Institution have shown that grain production can fall 10 percent with a one degree Celsius (1.7 degree Fahrenheit) increase in temperature, as the increased heat stresses the plants.
The UN's International Panel on Climate Control has come to the conclusion that global warming from greenhouse gases caused by the burning of fossil fuels will lead to temperature rises from two to five degrees Celsius this century.
"This is not encouraging for food security and we may very well be seeing that decisions made at ministries of energy will have a greater effect on food than decisions made at ministries of agriculture," Brown said.
Message édité par Beavis and Butt-head le 01-01-2004 à 11:04:05