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World Vision needs urgent help as millions starve
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CTV.ca News Staff
Date: Wed. Apr. 23 2008 10:48 PM ET
World Vision says it's forced to cut back on the number of people it will be able to help in the coming months, blaming a "perfect storm" of drought, changing food patterns and rising fuel costs.
The international aid organization is cutting back on the vital flow of food it can provide to the world's most impoverished -- saying it can no longer afford to feed 1.5 million of the 7.5 million people that received aid last year.
A confluence of factors has led to the cutbacks, according to Dave Toycen, president of World Vision Canada.
Toycen told CTV Newsnet that the cost of oil, has driven up the price of fertilizer. Furthermore, the production of biofuels is using up wheat and corn that would normally be used to feed people.
In Mexico, the soaring cost of flour has driven up the price of tortillas by 50 per cent.
Toycen said climate issues have compounded the situation, further driving up prices around the world.
"There's been a major drought in Australia," he said. "There's also changing food patterns in India and China, two countries with populations where they are now eating more meat and it takes more grain (to feed the animals) that would normally go to people."
Of the 1.5 million, 572,000 are children in urgent need of food to survive.
And the problem isn't expected to be short-lived. Toycen said he expects it will take two years for prices to stabilize and for World Vision to overcome the crisis.
The most profound result of the cutback, he said, is that hundreds of thousands of children under five, who rely on World Vision food to ensure their development, will not get the nutrition they need.
That can result in impaired brain development and stunted physical growth, which could have a devastating impact on economically challenged nations that desperately need a strong, healthy and educated future workforce, he said.
"The international community must ensure that preventing child hunger and malnutrition is the top priority in the search for a solution to the current food pricing crisis," Toycen said earlier in a news release.
World Vision is calling on countries and private donors to step up and fund the $500 million shortfall.
Toycen said that Canada has been a generous donor, but Canadians can urge their government to do more. He said tens of millions of people in refugee camps around the world are in dire need of emergency funding immediately. Toycen said it's in everyone's self interest to help.
"The more and more there's food instability and there's instability in the world, one way or another we seem to have repercussions," he said.
The organization is also asking countries that have pledged support, to make good on their promises.
World food shortage
The crisis faced by World Vision is one symptom of a global phenomenon that is being dubbed the "silent tsunami."
The United Nations World Food Programme warns that 20 million of the poorest children are at risk worldwide.
Josette Sheeran, the WFP's executive director, focused on the crisis Wednesday during a speech at a London summit dedicated to the subject.
She said the cost of rice has more than doubled in the last five weeks, and the World Bank estimates food prices have increased 83 per cent in three years.
Sheeran said the effects are being seen on all continents, and progress that has been made in the battle against poverty over the past five to 10 years could be lost if nations don't step up to meet the challenge.
British Prime Minister Gordon Brown is also involved in the summit. He said the effects of high food prices are being seen on all continents, and progress made in the battle against poverty over the past five to 10 years could be lost if nations don't step up to meet the challenge.
"Tackling hunger is a moral challenge to each of us and it is also a threat to the political and economic stability of nations," Brown said.
In the U.S., there are reports that Wal-Mart has limited the sale of rice to four bags per customer per day, over fears the supply will dry up.
With a report by CTV's John Vennavally-Rao
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I applaud the budget, even though Health Care and education may stay unscathed. Sadly this cannot last and I worry to later this year where cuts will become enviable. If anything, this provides the Wildrose Alliance plenty of ammo when an election is called.


Comments are now closed for this story
Popo
said
Helen
said
Paul X
said
dan
said
We need to make some changes.
Lena
said
Stubblejumper
said
Frank Buchan
said
It saddens me as a human being, but all these efforts have ever done is delay the inevitable to some extent.
James
said
Just a thought!
Hey Paul X, if you were faced with being a farmer who's never had a break when it comes to the money you make off your hard work, you'd be riding the cash crop wave too.
John
said
Chris
said
If you ate today thank a farmer!
Shawn Blankinship
said
d
said
boomer
said
I agree with you but only 50% Bio-diesel is the solution but not ETHANOL there is a big difference between the two. Ethanol is causing this problem right now. Bio-diesel is oil from a seed, we can grow the food collect only the seed for it oil and process the rest. when making ETHANOL the whole plant is mashed and fermented leaving nothing for food.
It's just a case of political screw up again. Bush and the Canadian government has legislated the amount of Ethanol to 15% by 2015 or something like that. Bad decision
Roger T
said
Mike J.
said
Dixie from Alberta
said
Cross
said
How many pounds of rice are required to produce a liter of ethanol?
Think about it the next time you drive to the corner store.
What a screwed up world…and we call ourselves an “advanced nation”…!
Al
said
Jon
said
Randy
said
We have children in Canada that are also not receiving enough food. Why can we not take care of them first?
JDP
said
...Al Gore, inventor of such things as the internet and global warming, gave us an 'inconvenient truth' that there would be a food crises if his 'global warming' continued. Well, the solution is causing more problems than the 'problem' itself, I would say.
When you use food for gasoline, these consequences show that perhaps bio-fuels are not as 'renewable' as we once thought. Bio-fuels should be outlawed, unless you can create a method of making them without denting the fuel supply.
Mr Chillz
said
That's the real question we need to be asking this mega-rich bureacrats
We will reap what we sow.....
said
Our culture is sadly more focused on getting more "stuff" than sharing the incredible blessings which we have received.
Who will answer the call to help?
Captialism is killing us.
said
Ken
said
Robin Hood
said
Even if all bio-fuel production were to stop today the lack of real action on climate change and current CO2 levels has guaranteed the current food crisis is only a symptom of worse things to come.
Steve
said
I did work for them years ago and was appalled at the furniture and cost of just the interior decorations.
Heavy Sarcasm
said
mac
said
Donna Thompson
said
Michele
said
2. Countries need to be more food self sufficient, avoiding large agribusiness.
3. Limit the spread of GM patented seeds, where farmers are not allowed to save seed, which is free.
4. Promote family farms.
Environmentalist
said
Now lets look at two examples first Zimbabwe. A few years ago this was the bread basket of Africa until Mugambe started implementing his rasict policy of land confiscation. The population now is starving. If the UN keeps giving them food they are ineffect helping Mugambe and postponing the time when the country can progress to a stable civiliaztion.
The second example is Afganistan. If we keep sending them food what is prompting the farmers to turn from growing poppies to growing food.
When you look back at our country we had tariffs at the beginning to help build up the country, only after industries got to a certain size and prosperity did they open the doors to free trade. What the UN is doing to these countries is perptuating the misery. Why would you be interested in buying food and developing a market when someone will give you food for free. It is hard to compete against free.
A wise man once said feed a man a fish he eats for a day. Teach a man to fish and he will eat forever.
It is pretty hard to lift a person above poverty when you force him to live off handouts.
Chris
said
You can blame the oil companies for this mess because gold is no longer the backbone of currency, its oil. And as long as oil is the driving force, basic human necessities (food, clothing, shelter) will continue to be more and more expensive.
So the only way to curb this is to start a war... history has told us that. Eliminate population so that others can survive. SAD BUT TRUE!!!
Westcoaster
said
In addition, according to a report by CNN, it takes 7 barrels of oil to produce 8 barrels of corn ethanol. Not wise, is it?
patricia
said
patricia
trudy
said
ME
said
Well this is why!! The big push on for clean energy has taken grains out of the food chain to make methane. Why? Methane should be separate from food. If people want to make methane they should grow cereal grains for just that purpose not take from the food chain.
The solution is simple. Grow grains separately for methane and help fund farmers who want to get back into farming. Canada should stop selling grain to other countries too.
Garry M
said
Raymond
said
DD
said
Problem is, bio-fuels are an easy "green" initiative for politicians who want to make it appear as though they're green when they're not. Harper is pouring millions into bio-fuels and it must stop.
Hybrids, hydrogen and electic cars are the answer, not bio-fuels!!!
Dean
said
Canuck2fan
said
OntarioGirl
said
Sadly my 7 month experience there has led me to believe that aid money either directly ends up in Switzerland or frees up local resources to get funneled there. I don't believe increasing aid is the answer...
I have no doubt in the strength and resolve of African people to find a solution to this crisis. Western meddling is not only unnecessary but damaging.
Popo
said
By the way, don't blame the farmers, they DO need to pay the bills and they're not getting enough for both their crops and their livestock.
Matt
said
We need to look at root causes.
said
1. Delaying the inevitable or
2. Encouraging over population in countries that can not sustain it.
I think that the only realistic solution is multifacted. Inconjunction with food aid we need to ensure that contrceptives are used and that resources are directed towards development for food production. If we don't take a more up stream approach we will never solve this problem.
A.L.
said
Individuals also must reach into their own pockets to donate. It's not as much as a government issue as it is an individual responsibility to give.
sash
said
if you want to help switch to a plugin electric car your monthly costs will drop from 100 dollars a month to 10-20 dollars month.. and will not add that much more work to the grid since most cars will charge due off peak hours
now if only the Canadian government would make electric cars legal in canada
DJ
said
Tracy
said
Colin
said
FreakAlert
said
PW
said
It isn't up to our governments to give more, it is up to the richest 2% of the world (that is you on the computer...) to shell out $10 to World Vision. By the way, North Americans spend more on ice cream in a year than what it would take to rid hunger for the same time period.
Andrew
said
Need any more be said?
UNKNOWN FARMER
said
The world was dealing with a corn surplus, and the depressed price allowed it to be used economically for many non food uses, including ethanol. A drought in the major wheat proding areas of the world caused the world to take a hard look at world inventories, and suddenly the price rose. A acerage battle was underway, as we have a finite number of arable acres and we needed increased production of both corn and wheat, but soybean production could not drop or we would run short there as well.
Here in Ontario the hog and beef producers are losing huge dollars with the sudden rise in feed prices.
The cattle that I take to market weight will net me $300.00 LESS THAN FEED COSTS. Hog producers are in a similar position. Hog barns througout Ontario will sit empty rather than loose money on every animal. The same will be true with the beef industry. After the liquidation, we will wake up and find a meat shortage and prices will go up rapidly.
If you want to hear of a true tragedy, the farmers of Manitoba who produce weaner pigs ( 25lb ) to send to the US to be fattened, will be killing them by the hundreds of thousands as the US farmers do not want them as they would have to label them product of Canada under COOL ( country of origin label ) Beef producers in this country are worried the same will come true for beef.
Anyone want to be a farmer??????????????
MB Farmers
said
As grain farmers, we have had to endure years of barely making ends meet. We have had pathetic prices for our grains & oilseeds and extrememly overpriced input costs. We had to live each day wondering if it would be our last to produce the best food for the world. We lived without for many, many years because this is what we love.
But throughout all of the hardships, we would donate a ton of grain to a different organization each year. This was made possible through the grain elevators. We tell them what crop we would like to donate, to who we want it to go to and in return, we would get a tax reciept.
If all you people out there really, truly care about the starving children, phone a grain elevator, tell them you want to buy a tonne of wheat, oats, soybeans, etc and donate it to World Vision, or another charity of choice (i believe there are about 8 to choose from). If every family did that, I am sure it would make a huge difference in this crisis.
Jess
said
If we keeping filling our "soul holes" with stuff and excess none of us will survive. It is so easy to condemn someone you dont know to death, but if one of these starving children were sitting next to you as you ate your Big Mac, do you honestly think you wouldn't share and then you would go waste more money on whatever your heart desired as they watched you devour everything you could because you have a "right" to do so as a capitalist?
ronaldo
said
That's a lot of food!
Jimmy
said
The problem is simple. Greed has created this problem, not global warming, not greenhouse gasses. The problem has always been here, it's just getting worse because there are even MORE needy people, plus the above mentioned problems. No matter what changes we make, we won't help right away unless we open our pockets.
I wish I were rich enough to donate, but unfortuantely our politcal leaders waste our money on making OUR lives better, while the poor people starve to death. The world can easily sustain the food needs for it's population. We just need to be more fair in how it's divided up.
CANADIEN
said
bunny
said
We want to save the planet.But at what cost?
Fog of Life
said
grim
said
Louie
said
This is not the capitalist west where gold lies in the streets and everyone is fat and healthy. The last time I looked most people in this country work hard for their money and have always been overwelmingly generous to the third world. How many billions of dollars go off shore for aid yet we are continually reminded of how many Canadians are living below the poverty line and how many of our children go to bed hungry or have to rely on school breakfast programs to eat in the morning.
The system is broke and has to be fixed but throwing more dollars at it isn't the answer. Getting to the basic problem of how to teach people to feed themselves is the answer.
Ask yourself how many dollars out of government aid or private donations go to line some politician's pocket or pays for new planes or tanks for the peoples army or is sucked up by 'administrative expenses' for some of these charitable organizations.
Jackie Barrett
said
Biofuels will only lead to more environmental damage in terms of increased dead zones like the Mississippi Delta region along the Gulf of Mexico, more carbon released into the atmosphere, and needless to say, more greenhouse gases produced as fossil fuel consumption is needed to produce biofuels.
Maybe its time USA, Brazil, and other biofuel producers switch from producing food for cars to food for mouths until the food shortage is sorted out.
Jim
said
Hydrogen now!
Zoran
said
Denise
said
Band-Aid in the '80's apparently accomplished nothing even with all its lofty goals. We're still being told that we have to eradicate world hunger. It's never going to happen as long as there are corrupt governments in the recipient countries taking the food and cash donations and diverting it for their own uses!
Andrew in BC
said
I hate to say it, but the planet can only support so many mouths at any time and whatever we do, as the blogger Randy bluntly stated (in a nutshell) nature will win.
Appauled in the west
said
Mark
said
Bio fuels are a crock.
How much longer are we going to act stupid and not demand an end to this madness by the environmental whackos and the governments we elect.
Environmentalists and their crazy schemes are doing more harm than any other entity on planet earth and until they are reined in we will all suffer.
Daryl
said
Technological change that enables higher yields through economizing on existing land and labour is the answer. Giving money to well meaning organizations like World Vision is not going to make much difference. Many international organizations have layers of bureaucracy, highly paid consultants, and work with inept and oppressive regimes in the countries they claim to help. With no feedback from the recipients, how does World Vision know if it is making a difference? Who will be held accountable if they are not?
The biggest tragedy of all is why 2.3 trillion dollars over the past 50 years has NOT stopped things like this from happening.
Environmentalists don't really care!
said
Please do not buy fuel that is made out of food.
Jason Toronto
said