10/03/2022

(AU ABC) Climate Change Already Pushing Up Food Prices, Causing Shortages And Will Get Worse, Report Says

ABC Gippsland - Jarrod Whittaker


A new report warns Australians can expect higher food prices and more shortages as temperatures increase. (ABC News: Pamela Medlen)

Key Points
  • A report says Australians are already paying more for food because of climate change
  • The report from Farmers for Climate Action says higher food prices and shortages will become more common as temperatures increase
  • One farmer says global warming and extreme weather is already making it harder to plan
Climate change is already increasing the price Australians pay for food and the problem will only get worse, a new report has warned.

The environment group Farmers for Climate Action, which commissioned the report, has warned global warming will lead to higher food prices and shortages for consumers. 

"Australia's food supply chain is more fragile than people think," report author Stephen Bartos said.

"We have seen examples in recent months of supermarkets running out of food, empty shelves.

"And that's something that, as climate change continues, is going to become an altogether more frequent occurrence."

The report warns drought is becoming more frequent and production is affected by lower crop yields, livestock stress, and higher operational costs.

It also found retailers would be hit by shorter shelf life, less reliability in the availability in some types of food, and lower nutritional value for products such as wheat and rice.

Australia's climate has risen by slightly more than 1 degree Celsius since 1910 and the report said it must be kept to below 2 degrees to prevent catastrophic consequences.

Climate change, war pushing prices higher

Russia's invasion of Ukraine is also expected to lead to higher food prices, with both countries major agricultural producers. (AP: Vitaly Timkiv)

Mr Bartos said, when he prepared the report, he was surprised to learn people were already paying more for food as a result of climate change. 

"One of the drivers is the fact that finance products, like bank loans and insurance, are becoming much more expensive for all of the players because of the uncertainty created by climate change," he said.

"There are higher costs at various different stages of the food supply chain in terms of dealing with the impacts of climate change, and that all gets passed on to consumers." 

The report also warned that, as well as climate change, risks to food supply could arise from other causes unconnected to global warming.

The Food Organisation of the United Nations' Food Price Index reported global food prices were up as much as 20 per cent on the year before.

There are also fears Russia's invasion of Ukraine will send wheat and barley prices soaring.

Climate making job harder, farmer says

Beef farmer Fergus O'Connor, from Victoria's South Gippsland region, said climate change was already making life more difficult for farmers.

South Gippsland beef farmer Fergus O'Connor is concerned about the effects of climate change and wants action to reduce emissions. (Supplied: Fergus O'Connor)
"Planning is so difficult with the climate that we've got at the moment, and farming is not easy in itself," Mr O'Connor said.

"We're always planning ahead. We're not planning ahead three weeks; we might be planning ahead three or four years."

He said climatic conditions had made that tougher and there was only one way to stop the problem from getting worse.
"It's quite simple. We have to cut emissions from fossil fuels," Mr O'Connor said.
He said Australia was "20 years behind Europe" and shifting to renewables would lead to lower power prices.

"We can all go down that path for a better, cleaner atmosphere, which will then in turn help farmers, because then they will be able to plan and things won't be in such extremes of hot and cold and wet and dry," Mr O'Connor said. 

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