FAO Food Price Index rises in March

ROME: Rising international quotations for vegetable oils, dairy products and meat pushed the benchmark index for world food commodity prices up by 1.1 percent in March, its first increase in seven months, the Food and Agriculture Organisation of the U…


ROME: Rising international quotations for vegetable oils, dairy products and meat pushed the benchmark index for world food commodity prices up by 1.1 percent in March, its first increase in seven months, the Food and Agriculture Organisation of the United Nations (FAO) reported.

The FAO Food Price Index, which tracks monthly changes in the international prices of a set of globally-traded food commodities, averaged 118.3 points in March, down 7.7 percent from its corresponding value one year ago.

The FAO Vegetable Oil Price Index led the increase in March, rising 8.0 percent from February and reaching a one-year high as quotations for palm, soy, sunflower and rapeseed oils all rose. International palm oil prices increased due to seasonally lower outputs in leading producing countries and firm domestic demand in Southeast Asia, while those for soyoil recovered from multi-year lows, boosted by robust demand from the biofuel sector, particularly in Brazil and the United States of America.

The FAO Dairy Price
Index increased for the sixth consecutive month, up 2.9 percent from February, led by rising world cheese and butter prices.

The FAO Meat Price Index also increased, rising 1.7 percent from the previous month, with international prices up for poultry, pig and bovine meats.

By contrast, the FAO Cereal price Index declined by 2.6 percent, averaging 20 percent below its March 2023 value. The drop was led by decreasing global wheat export prices, which declined due to ongoing strong export competition – underscored by cancelled purchases by China – among the European Union, the Russian Federation and the United States of America. Maize export prices edged upwards in March, partly due to logistical difficulties in Ukraine, while the FAO All Rice Price Index dipped by 1.7 percent amid subdued global import demand.

The FAO Sugar Price Index declined by 5.4 percent from February, with the drop mainly driven by an upward revision to the 2023/24 sugar production forecast in India and the improved pace of the harvest
in Thailand.

Source: Emirates News Agency

Total
0
Shares
Previous Article

Fair weather forecast almost nationwide Saturday-JMD

Next Article

Under UAE President's directives, Shakhboot bin Nahyan inaugurates integrated UAE field hospital in Chad to support Sudanese refugees

Related Posts

Morocco denies ban on Russian oil imports

Morocco on Tuesday denied reports about banning Russian oil imports.“Russian gas imports rose to 13% in the period from early January to February 27,” Minister of Economy and Finance Nadia Fettah Alaoui said.Last week, members of the Social Union Part...