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Sunday 14 July 2013

Global Food Crisis Solution

By Lyle E. Lowery


The food crisis will be the biggest crisis of the 21st century. It will push up food prices and spread hunger and poverty. Surging food prices will create inflation and create more crisis in the world. This will not only affect developing countries but also developed countries. According to United Nations World Food Programme (WFP), more than 73 million people in 78 countries who depend on food handouts are facing reduced rations this year.
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In other words, the undisputed king of low prices may not be able to hang onto the crown forever. The bottom line spin on this particular information seemed to be that we haven't seen anything yet, and that America is just "one supply shock away from a full-blown food crisis that would make the price spikes of 2008 look like a happy memory."

Increased world population,Increased demand for more food,Development,Droughts,Subsidies and Tariffs,More competition and higher prices on the commodities that are produced,Waste,High oil prices In the past few months we have heard a lot of talk and rhetoric from government officials from the pledging of more money, and promising to do more, but this is not enough we have to put systems and fail safes into place to compensate for the growing population and our efforts to find alternative energy solutions to decrease our dependency on oil.And how do we put systems into place? Through proper planning, goal setting, and training

Proper Planning: Is the task of making strategies that take you from point A to point B. If you don't have a plan you don't know where you are headed.Goal Setting: This sounds like a simple thing to do, and if it was we all would have accomplished our goals by now. But setting and achieving goals requires commitment and follow-up and being flexible enough to change as the conditions change.

The World Bank predicts global demand for food will double by 2030. This is partly because the world's population is expected to grow by three billion by 2050. Food demand will also grow due to new prosperity in India and China.Global warming will disrupt food production in many countries. It can cause climate instability which is bad for crop.Food price are affected by accelerating demand for biofuels. Biofuels, made from food crops such as corn, sugar cane, and palm oil, are seen as easing the world's dependence on gasoline. But when crude oil is expensive, these alternative energy sources can also be sold at higher price. Last year a quarter of the US maize crop was turned into ethanol to fuel vehicles. US supplies more than 60% of the world's maize exports. According to the World Bank, this is putting pressure on countries' food supplies.

China's Food Woes China is in the midst of preparing for a severe, long-lasting drought which will have a huge impact on their wheat production. At this point in time, nearly a billion people around the world go to bed hungry each and every night, and every 3.6 seconds someone in the world starves to death (75% of those are children under the age of five) Raw Story has reported that because of food shortages China is feeding its poor fake rice made from plastic.

Courageous in thinking, you want to develop new ideas to problems no matter how radical they seem and then finite the solution to where it is a manageable and workable concept.Fearless in action, most alternative concepts and solutions that are outside the norm will draw doubters like "a moth to a flame" But you have to be willing to put yourself out there on a limb and be committed to your ideas. Edward Deming the father of Japanese management was ridiculed and told his style of management would never work is a good example of this.Dr. W. Edwards Deming's name is legendary in Japan for the role he played in reinvigorating their industries after World War II. His revolutionary 14 Points for Management or Deming Method are the basis of the seven criteria of the U. S. Department of Commerce Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award and Japan's Highest Industrial Award for Excellence or Deming Prize.

Extreme weather, the bee colony collapse (bees pollinate some 90% of the world's commercial crops), the collapsing dollar, the recent Food Safety Modernization Act, rising oil prices, increased soil pollution (the aluminum in the chemtrails being sprayed has contaminated soil, killed plants, and made much of the world's soil sterile) and the GMO giants needing to complete their takeover of the world's food-with all these things working together, we may see a food crisis of truly epic proportions in the very near future.




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