Disaster Shortage of Onions Threatens a New Chapter in Global Food Crisis - Soaring prices at the vegetable market are threatening nutrition and forcing governments from Morocco to the Philippines to protect supplies.

Shortage of Onions Threatens a New Chapter in Global Food Crisis
Bloomberg (archive.ph)
By Agnieszka de Sousa, Souhail Karam, and Maria Kolesnikova
2023-02-24 00:01:32GMT

Lalaine Basa would buy a kilo of onions to make spring rolls at her catering business north of Manila. She’s now changed her recipe to use half the amount because of soaring prices in the Philippines.

In the Moroccan capital Rabat, Fatima no longer buys onions and tomatoes because they are too expensive. She gets artichokes to cook tagine instead. “The market is on fire,” said the mother of three.

The experiences of the two women more than 7,500 miles (12,000 kilometers) apart shows how the global crisis over food supplies is taking an alarming twist: threatening to consume ingredients critical to the world’s nutrition.

The costs of wheat and grains have fallen in recent months, easing concern over access to some staples. But a combination of factors is now shaking up the vegetable market, the backbone of a healthy, sustainable diet. And at the sharp end of that is the humble onion.

Prices are soaring, fueling inflation and prompting countries to take action to secure supplies. Morocco and Turkey have halted some exports, as has Kazakhstan. The Philippines has ordered an investigation into cartels.

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Sources: IFPRI; Global Trade Alert
Note: Limits include export bans and restrictions that are currently in place. Lebanon restrictions are for processed produce. Grains may include wheat, corn, rice, barley or others.


Restrictions have also gone beyond onions to include carrots, tomatoes, potatoes and apples, hampering availability worldwide, the United Nations and the World Bank warned this month. In Europe, empty shelves have forced UK supermarkets to ration purchases of some fruit and vegetables after a weak harvest in southern Spain and North Africa.

“Simply having enough calories is not good enough,” said Cindy Holleman, a senior economist at the UN’s Food and Agricultural Organization in Rome. “Diet quality is a critical link between food security and nutrition. Poor diet quality can lead to different forms of malnutrition.”

Onions are the staple of cuisines across the world, the most consumed vegetable after the tomato (technically a fruit). About 106 million metric tons are produced annually — roughly the same as carrots, turnips, chillies, peppers and garlic combined. They’re used in everything from the base flavoring of curries and soups to fried toppings on hotdogs in the US, where futures trading in them has been banned since 1958 after an attempt to corner the market.

The jump in prices is a knock-on effect from disastrous floods in Pakistan, frosts damaging stockpiles in Central Asia and Russia’s war in Ukraine. In North Africa, meanwhile, farmers have battled severe droughts and an increase in the cost of seeds and fertilizers.
Poor weather has hit Moroccan growers particularly hard. At a market in the Ocean district in central Rabat, Fatima said vegetable prices remain “exuberantly high” even with the ban on sending onions and tomatoes to West Africa introduced by the government this month.

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A farmer weighs harvested onions at a farm in Bongabon, Philippines. Onion prices became so absurdly high recently that they briefly cost more than meat. Photographer: Jam Sta Rosa/AFP/Getty Images

Clutching a bag of artichokes, the 51-year-old retired government worker said her earnings no longer last until the end of the month. That financial squeeze will be felt even harder during Ramadan, when Muslims traditionally break their daily fast with a large meal before celebrating the Eid holiday.

“We are eating more lentils, white beans and fava beans and soon we will settle for rice,” said Fatima, who declined to give her full name because of the political sensitivity in Morocco surrounding food inflation.

Vegetable seller Brahim has been working in the Ocean market for over 30 years. Business has been slow, he said.

“I thought only single men bought vegetables by the piece, especially the losers,” said Brahim, 56. “Now, I bow my head when I see people who have been shopping at my stall for 10, 15, 23 years ask me in a broken voice for one tomato, one onion, one potato. People are at their limits.”

In the Philippines, a dearth of onions has compounded shortages of everything from salt to sugar over the last few months. Prices became so absurdly high that they briefly cost more than meat, while flight attendants were caught smuggling them out of the Middle East. The government of President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. has boosted imports to tame the highest inflation in 14 years.

“I just use the tiniest bits of onions,” said Basa, 58. Her almost three-decades-old business in Bulacan province caters for birthdays and weddings. “I have to adjust because I don’t want to raise prices too much and lose my customers.”

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Sources: East Fruit, Philippines Department of Agriculture, All Pakistan Fruit & Vegetable Exporters, Importers & Merchants Association, TurkStat, vendors at Moroccan vegetable markets

In Kazakhstan, the spike in prices has prompted authorities to tap strategic stockpiles while its trade minister urged people not to buy onions by the sack amid a panic rush to secure supplies in local supermarkets.

That’s on top of an export ban, also introduced in recent weeks by Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan and Tajikistan — the world’s top per-capita consumer thanks to onion-heavy national dish qurutob. Elsewhere, Azerbaijan is putting “limit” on sales and Belarus will license shipments.

As the cost of buying nutrient-rich vegetables and fruit soars and incomes struggle to keep up, healthy diets are getting out of reach. More than 3 billion people cannot afford a healthy diet, the most recent UN figures show.

That will rise up the political agenda globally, and nutrition will be a much more prominent part of government thinking, said Tim Benton, research director in emerging risks at Chatham House in London. He calls it a “nutrition time bomb” that’s exploding slowly.

“It’s not just teetering on the edge of famine in the Horn of Africa that should worry us about the current crisis,” he said. “It's the widespread growth of poor nutrition. Nutrition was already startlingly bad on a global basis, beforehand.”

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A worker carries a sack of onions at a wholesale market in New Delhi, India.
Photographer: Anindito Mukherjee/Bloomberg


For now, while many governments will happily subsidize imports of wheat or flour to keep their people happy, there’s limited support for vegetable growers. The result is that the world produces too much starchy grains, sugar and vegetable oils than the nutritional needs, but only about a third of the fruit and vegetables needed, Benton said.

Like bread, onions also have shown the potential to ignite civil unrest. In India, which has banned exports on and off for years, high prices were cited for the Bharatiya Janata Party losing the vote in New Delhi in 1998. Two decades later, Prime Minister Narendra Modi, in his campaign to gain reelection, said farmers are his “TOP” priority, meaning the tomato, onion and potato.

“The major grains are really important from a kind of emblematic functioning of global food security and starvation,” said Benton. “But for many countries, it’s these additional things that matter when it comes to keeping the populace happy. This is in a sense the tip of the iceberg.”
 
There is no reason for this except of course those that are using food as a commodity as well as leverage for global power. My last statement is directed at those Russian Cock Suckers. Thug Master Putin wants control of the Ukraine. Considered the Bread Basket for most of world. This as well as a major supplier of fertilizer are one of the major reasons for the war.
Nobody would need ukraine if the kikes didnt went around an destroy all other bread baskets...
Iraq, Rhodesia, the netherreal, ceylon... all fucked beyond beliefe because of the kikes...
 
apartment dwellers cant do that
You can’t have a big veg garden but you can do a surprising amount. If you have a balcony, just make sure you’re not exceeding any weight limits, but you can put a trellis up the wall, and grow things like cucumbers and beans, strawberries do very well in smaller pots. Pots and containers are great on balconies. Indoors you can use window ledges for smaller items - peppers, lettuce, chard, pak Choi, herbs. Even cucumber vines if you train them carefully. I’ve managed all that even in our shitty climate, if you live south I bet you can grow all sorts of stuff
You can make cheap hydroponic boxes by getting some ikea plastic opaque boxes with lids (KUGGIS) and drilling circular holes in the lid that are the diameter of the plug baskets the little soil plugs use. You can buy bulk soil plugs and baskets off Amazon as well as cheap hydroponic fluid. Put the soil plus in the baskets and the baskets in the holes and you have a windowledge sized hydroponic setup for under a tenner.
You are t going to be self sufficient but you’ll have enough to use and it’ll cut your grocery bill.
Food insecurity starts wars and revolutions. People buying single veg becasue they’re poor is a sign that things are very wrong. But the reasons stated don’t add up for me. War in Ukraine? Well ok that’s wheat screwed but how is that causing veg supplies in the levant to be lower?
I’m seeing attacks on the fertiliser supply, food processing and transport.
And a reminder that in recent history at least, while famines usually have a component of natural cause in them, you’d be hard pressed to find one that wasn’t exacerbated at the least by human activity. We should be able to feed everyone. This is being done deliberately.
 
I can't say i'm too upset about onions. (not a fan of them or fungus)

Hopefully these early game food issues teach countries to stop relying on others when at all possible for their food. Countries like the US should have no problem doing so but I do fear what leftists and green scum are attempting to do here.


View attachment 4665462

I saw this today, it's pretty accurate.

Oh no doubt. Elites, big corps and market groups buying up farms and land, others buying them up for the purpose of taking them out of food production in the name of green ideology. The new war on fertilizers for no reasons at all other than claiming it's to "fight climate change".. To say nothing of all the sudden production and farm fires. The war is on and we know what the excuses are going to be. That is going to be the end-game scare. The end of many basic freedoms.
 
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This is gonna get worse.

Industrial farming requires certain inputs. Fertilizer being a big one. The Ukraine war took Fertilizer feed stock off the global market.

The global market...ending is another issue

For example.

one pound of cotton sells for $0.91.

one pound of wheat sells for $0.14.

So a nation like Egypt will grow cotton, import cheap wheat from russia/ukraine/even america and pocket the difference.

Here a video of a guy who did a run of american wheat to north africa watch the scale of the unloading


Places arent gonna make up for that scale of production with little victory gardens
 
I keep hearing about all these shortages but have never experienced it in real life.
 
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These are the preliminary shocks heralding a proper earthquake.
When the US Navy inevitably stops guaranteeing international trade in the next 15 years, all these arid countries that had populations swell way beyond what their territory can feed are going to face the harsh reality that importing food is a dangerous road to trod.
 
These are the preliminary shocks heralding a proper earthquake.
When the US Navy inevitably stops guaranteeing international trade in the next 15 years, all these arid countries that had populations swell way beyond what their territory can feed are going to face the harsh reality that importing food is a dangerous road to trod.
Cant wait for the inevitable human tidal wave from subsaharan africa and the middle east to more arable land.
 
These are the preliminary shocks heralding a proper earthquake.
When the US Navy inevitably stops guaranteeing international trade in the next 15 years, all these arid countries that had populations swell way beyond what their territory can feed are going to face the harsh reality that importing food is a dangerous road to trod.
They will import them to Europe
 
They will import them to Europe
And European governments will welcome it, because by then they'll have fuck all productive workers as the population ages into mass retirement.
 
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