Gold and Silver • JP Morgan Eligible Gold Inventories Fall Another 14% Today
JP Morgan Eligible Gold Inventories Fall Another 14% Today
Filed in Precious Metals by SRSrocco on May 14, 2013
http://srsroccoreport.com/jp-morgan-eli … -14-today/
JP Morgan drops another 22,759 oz of gold (14%) from their Eligible Inventories. They now only have 137,377 oz available in their Eligible Category. Furthermore, 32,049 oz of gold were withdrawn from Scotia Mocatta’s Eligible inventories, now reducing the total gold in the Comex vaults below 8 million oz.
Statistics: Posted by DIGGER DAN — Thu May 16, 2013 5:17 am
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Business • Don’t fall for this banking scam
Don’t fall for this banking scam
by Simon Black on May 9, 2013
If I told you that your bank only held 1% of its customer deposits in reserve, would you feel that your money was safe?
If I told you that the insurance fund which backed your bank deposit only had enough cash to bail out 0.35% of the banking system, would that make you feel any better?
Probably not. But this scam is the reality in the US banking system… and across the West.
As an example, US Bancorp has $248 billion in total customer deposits according to their most recent reporting, yet a mere $6.9 billion in cash… roughly 2.8%.
PNC Bank holds just 1.8% of its customers’ $248 billion deposits in cash. And BB&T holds barely 1.0% of its customers’ $131 billion deposits in cash.
These figures are indicative of the entire western financial system. Banks hold a very small percentage of customer deposits in cash. The rest is sitting in loans, bonds, and other securities of indeterminable value– mortgages that are still under water, shaky commercial real estate deals, etc.
Truth is, nobody really knows what’s on their books. Loan portfolios are like a black box, and the liquidity structure doesn’t leave a lot of room for error.
Think about it. If the slightest thing goes wrong– a spike in customer withdrawals, a decline in bond prices or commercial real estate, etc.– banks simply don’t have any rainy day funds set aside to handle it.
And who can blame them…? The FDIC, one of the US banking system’s chief regulators, has a mere $33.0 billion reserve fund to insure $9.3 TRILLION worth of deposits in US banks… a ratio of just 0.35%. And the FDIC is backed by the insolvent US government!
Bottom line, we simply can no longer afford to blithely assume that our bank… our most intimate financial partner… is in good financial condition.
The good news is that in 2013, it’s no longer necessary to save within the confines of our home country; it’s possible to establish a bank account in a country where the banks are actually well capitalized and liquid.
Singapore is one of those places. In fact, Singapore has ZERO net debt and has never had a banking failure in its history. Plus the banks are swimming in cash.
UOB Bank, for example, has 33.7% of its customer deposits in cash equivalents. OCBC holds 35.8%. These banks are literally 10 to 30 times more liquid than their western counterparts.
With a bit of legwork, it’s possible for both individuals and businesses to open insured accounts at either of these banks.
Today I even managed to convince one of my bankers here to open business accounts for US LLC’s… which means that anyone with a global self-directed IRA can hold retirement savings at a well-capitalized Singaporean bank. More on this soon.
The advantages of banking here are obvious; pitting the US against Singapore, there’s simply no comparison.
If everything goes fine and there are no major hiccups in the world, you won’t be worse off for holding some savings at a highly capitalized bank in Asia’s most dominant financial center.
Yet if there’s another major meltdown like we saw in 2008, or worse… these insolvent Western governments pull a Cyprus… then having funds in Singapore may turn out to be one of the sharpest financial decisions you could have made.
http://www.sovereignman.com/finance/don … cam-11817/
Statistics: Posted by yoda — Thu May 09, 2013 10:59 am
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Agriculture • Canadian grain stocks fall to multi-year lows
Fri 3rd May 2013
Canadian grain stocks fall to multi-year lows
Canada is braving a delayed sowing period, threatening a late harvest and increased reliance on old crop supplies, with the smallest wheat stocks in five years, the smallest canola inventories in eight years and thinnest barley supplies on record.
Canada’s stocks of all its top-10 crops, bar corn and rye, were lower at the end of March than a year before, Statistics Canada data showed.
Inventories of oats tumbled furthest, by 30% to 1.21m tonnes, the lowest March-end figure in a decade.
However, the drop in canola inventories was not much slower, down 25% to 3.91m tonnes, the weakest for the time of year since 2005.
And the important wheat-stocks figure was also lower, by 8.1% to a five-year low of 13.5m tonnes.
Sowing delays
Signally, unlike the US March stocks data released more than a month ago, which sent grain prices tumbling worldwide, the Canadian figures fell short of market expectations, which for canola were for stocks of at least 4.1m tonnes, and for wheat of 13.9m tonnes.
Yet they come as poor weather is delaying the important spring sowing period, meaning that users will have to rely longer on old crop supplies, whether or not yields are penalised by planting hold-ups.
"We view Canadian planting prospects over the next three weeks as of far greater importance to trade than old crop stocks," Richard Feltes, at Chicago broker RJ O’Brien, said.
However, another US analyst told Agrimoney.com: "The stocks figure cannot be dismissed too lightly.
"If the harvest is delayed, yet the old crop is tight, that does look like creating a chance of a bit of a squeeze in the market as buyers wait for new crop."
Barley concerns
In barley, the data – which showed inventories falling 9.7% to a record low for March of 2.96m tonnes – stand to provoke further nerves among buyers already concerned at sowing delays, particularly in the malting barley market.
"The general sentiment in the malting industry is nervous as ‘act of god’ clauses in barley contracts in Canada and North Dakota become more likely to be enacted as the potential late crop becomes ever more likely," malting barley consultancy RMI Analytics noted last week.
"As we have seen in Canada the planting of barley in early June can lead to frost, rains and even snows at harvest – not a good event for meeting malting specifications."
Dearth of data
Sowing progress of Canadian spring crops, while seen being heavily delayed like that of North Dakota, is hard to gauge accurately because of a void of official reports – reflecting the slow start.
The Prairies province of Alberta is to release its first crop progress report on May 10. Farmers had sown 55% of spring crops by May 17 last year, with an average of 67%.
Manitoba and Saskatchewan provinces have yet to announce the start of their crop progress reports, which began last year on April 23 and April 19 respectively.
http://www.agrimoney.com/news/canadian- … -5800.html
Statistics: Posted by yoda — Fri May 03, 2013 1:33 pm
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‘Why Indiana Shouldn’t Fall for Obamacare’s Medicaid Expansion’
Michael F. Cannon
My latest oped, in the Indy Star:
Meanwhile, many [Medicaid] enrollees can’t even find a doctor. One-third of primary care physicians won’t take new Medicaid patients. Only 20 percent of dentists accept Medicaid. In 2007, 12-year-old Deamonte Driver died — yes, died — because his mother couldn’t find one of those dentists.
For more on why states should reject ObamaCare’s Medicaid expansion, read my latest Cato white paper, “50 Vetoes: How States Can Stop the Obama Health Law.”
View full post on Cato @ Liberty
Other • How Empires Fall
How Empires Fall
April 17, 2013
The imperial tree falls not because the challenges are too great but because the core of the tree has been weakened by the gradual loss of surplus, purpose, institutional effectiveness, intellectual vigor and productive investment.
Comparing the American Empire with the Roman Empire in its terminal decline is a popular intellectual parlor game. The comparison is inexact on a number of fronts, starting with the nature of empire: Rome ruled a territorial empire, while the U.S. is a hegemony that doesn’t need to hold territory (other than key overseas military bases); its dominance is based on the global projection of hard and soft power, diplomacy, finance and the monetary regime of the reserve currency.
Despite the apparent difference, the two empires share the key characteristic of all enduring empires: they extract the cost of maintaining the empire from client states and/or allies.
The mechanisms differ, but the results are the same: the empire’s cost is distributed to those who benefit from its secure trade routes.
Two of the key characteristics of an empire in terminal decline are complacency and intellectual sclerosis, what I have termed a failure of imagination.
Michael Grant described these causes of decline in his excellent account The Fall of the Roman Empire, a short book I have been recommending since 2009:
There was no room at all, in these ways of thinking, for the novel, apocalyptic situation which had now arisen, a situation which needed solutions as radical as itself. (The Status Quo) attitude is a complacent acceptance of things as they are, without a single new idea.
This acceptance was accompanied by greatly excessive optimism about the present and future. Even when the end was only sixty years away, and the Empire was already crumbling fast, Rutilius continued to address the spirit of Rome with the same supreme assurance.
This blind adherence to the ideas of the past ranks high among the principal causes of the downfall of Rome. If you were sufficiently lulled by these traditional fictions, there was no call to take any practical first-aid measures at all.
In other words, if our idea of intellectual rigor and honesty is Paul Krugman dancing around the Neo-Keynesian Cargo Cult campfire waving dead chickens and mumbling nonsensical claims of grand success, we are well and truly doomed.
The chapter titles of the book give a precis of the other causes Grant identifies:
The Gulfs Between the Classes
The Credibility Gap
The Partnerships That Failed
The Groups That Opted Out
The Undermining of Effort
I recently read a lengthier book by Adrian Goldsworthy titled How Rome Fell: Death of a Superpower.
In Goldsworthy’s view, a key driver of decline was the constant political struggle for power drained resources away from protecting the Imperial borders from barbarian incursions and addressing the long-term problems facing the Empire.
Such conflicts for the Imperial throne often led to outright civil war, with factions of the Roman army meeting on the field of battle.
In other words, Rome didn’t fall so much as erode away, its many strengths squandered on in-fighting, mismanagement and personal aggrandizement/corruption.
More telling for the present is Goldsworthy’s identification of expansive, sclerotic bureaucracies that lost sight of their purpose. The top leadership abandoned the pursuit of the common good for personal gain, wealth and power. This rot at the top soon spread down the chain of command to infect and corrupt the entire institutional culture.
As the empire shrank and lost tax revenues, the Imperial bureaucracies continued growing, much as parasites attach themselves to a weakened host.
Individual contributions and institutional success are both difficult to measure in large bureaucracies, and it is tempting to define success by easily achieved metrics that reflect positively on individual contributions and the institutional management.
As the organization loses focus on its original purpose, the core purpose of the institution is given lip service but is replaced with facsimiles of managerial effectiveness, bureaucratic infighting over resources and the targeting of easily gamed metrics as substitutes for actual success.
People who have no skin in the game behave quite differently from those who face consequences. This disconnection of risk from consequence is called moral hazard.
Bureaucracies tend to institutionalize moral hazard: those managing the institution’s departments rarely suffer any personal consequence when the institution fails to perform its function. Funds are placed at risk, but the individuals making the bets with the institution’s money suffer no losses should their policies result in failure.
By breaking the institutional purpose into small pieces whose success is measured by easily gamed targets, the institution can be failing its primary function even as every department reports continued success in meeting its goals. Repeated failure and loss of focus erode the institution even as those in charge advance up the administrative ladder.
In the final years of the Empire, in the 5th century A.D., this institutional failure led to the absurdity of detailed descriptions of army units being distributed within the Imperial bureaucracy, while the actual units themselves–the troops, the officers and the equipment–had ceased to exist. In some cases, it appears bureaucrats and officers collected pay for supplying and commanding completely phantom legions.
The disconnect between the failure to fulfill the institution’s original function and the leadership’s rise feeds cynicism in the institution’s employees and erodes their purpose and initiative. Soon the institutional culture is one of self-aggrandizement, gaming of departmental targets, protection of budgets and a collapse of the work ethic to the minimum level needed to avoid dismissal. Personal responsibility for institutional failure is lost.
Does this describe the vast state fiefdoms and state-protected cartels of America’s military-industrial complex, sickcare and the education industry? I think the answer is self-evident: yes. While there are still hard-working, competent people within these sprawling empires of moral hazard, these few are not enough to wring long-term success from negligence, friction and incompetence. All they can do is stave off implosion for a time.
There are many other causes for Rome’s decline, including epidemics of plague, military over-reach, chronic deficits, debasement of the currency, a parasitic Elite that was immune to what was left of the rule of law, weak leadership, and rising dependence on the Central State for bread and circuses.
America is not Rome, just as the immensely successful Tang Empire in China (700-900 A.D.) was neither Rome nor America. These dissimilarities should not blind us to the underlying dynamics in the decline and fall of all great powers, which can be summarized as the slow erosion of shared purpose, surplus and the productive investment of that surplus.
When a storm arises–a conflict with neighboring powers, an outbreak of plague, a disastrous drought–the imperial tree falls, not because the challenge was too great but because the core of the tree had been weakened by the gradual loss of surplus, purpose, institutional effectiveness, intellectual vigor and productive investment.
http://www.oftwominds.com/blog.html
Statistics: Posted by yoda — Wed Apr 17, 2013 1:25 pm
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Gold and Silver • Silver Inventories Fall Off Cliff As Registered Silver Decli
Silver Inventories Fall Off Cliff As Registered Silver Declines by 10% in 48 Hours!
April 11, 2013 By The Doc COMEX registered silver inventories have fallen off the proverbial cliff this week, as registered supplies have dropped a massive 10% in the last 48 hours!
Nearly 4 million ounces of physical metal has vaporized from COMEX vaults as the rush to physical intensifies in the wake of the Cyprus bail-in wealth confiscation as news has spread that nations the Western world over are preparing to shove the next banking crisis down the throats of depositors.
http://silverdoctors.com/comex-silver-i … -48-hours/
Statistics: Posted by yoda — Thu Apr 11, 2013 8:57 pm
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Green Energy and the Fall of the Bulgarian Government
Marian L. Tupy
The Bulgarian government resigned on Wednesday after violent protests spread across the country. The protesters complained about a variety of issues, including perceived government corruption and persistently low standards of living. A key complaint, it seems, was the high price of electricity. Yet when it comes to electricity price, Bulgarians ought to understand the pernicious role played by the European Union and its obsessive drive toward renewable energy targets.
The departing minority government of Prime Minister Boyko Borisov and his center-right party, the Citizens for European Development of Bulgaria, came to power in 2009. Under the leadership of respected former World Bank official and finance minister Simeon Djankov, the government cut the budget deficit from 4.3 percent in 2009 to 2 percent in 2011. Both Standard & Poors and Moody’s upgraded Bulgaria, the only sovereign upgrade in the EU since 2008. The country’s parliament also adopted the so-called “golden rules” that prohibit the government from running deficits higher than 2 percent of GDP and a debt-to-GDP ratio to exceed 40 percent. Growth, alas, proved elusive and Djankov was forced to resign on February 18.
That said, Bulgaria remains the EU’s poorest country. In 2010, for example, Bulgaria had the lowest average gross annual earnings of full-time employees, at 4,396 euros. Neighboring Romania was one spot ahead of Bulgaria with 5,891 euros per year. A comparable number for Denmark, the EU’s richest nation, was 58,840 euros. Bulgarian economic growth has been anemic in recent years, a reminder that membership in the EU is not a panacea for economic problems. In fact, Bulgaria’s membership in the EU may have worsened the lives of its neediest citizens by artificially increasing the price of electricity.
In March 2007, European leaders agreed to a binding requirement that renewable energy would comprise 20 percent of the EU’s final energy consumption by 2020. The Bulgarian target is a somewhat lower 16 percent. In a country as poor as Bulgaria, energy consumption can amount to a staggeringly high share of income. According to Eurasia Group, average Bulgarians pay as much as a quarter of their monthly earnings for electricity and all are forced to subsidize renewable energy production through additional fees amounting to some 8 percent of their pre-tax electricity bills.
This is not to deny that EU membership brings with it some important benefits, free trade among them. Still, the costs of the EU membership have far too often been overlooked. Among those costs is the insistence of the bureaucrats in Brussels to impose the same environmental and health and safety standards throughout the EU. Yet, as the example of the East German integration into the Federal Republic of Germany shows, increasing the burden of regulation ahead of productivity gains can result in mass unemployment and stagnation.
The negative costs of over-regulation at the pan-European level can partly be offset by liberalizing measures undertaken by governments at a national level—though, as a result of the passing of the Lisbon Treaty, the scope for autonomous action by national governments has been severely restricted. That is bad news for Central and Eastern European countries like Bulgaria, which have been historically much poorer than their western neighbors—a fact compounded by four decades of communism.
Of course, for many nations, membership in the EU is not just a matter of euros and cents. Geopolitical considerations, such as proximity to Russia, matter. The same could be said, at least until recently, for political stability and the rule of law, which tended to improve with accession to the EU. Still, it is high time for the ex-communist nations to realize that the goings-on in Brussels are not necessarily to their benefit. To that effect, it is interesting to see that, according to the Eurobarometer, 30 percent of Bulgarians distrusted the EU in May 2012; up from 19 percent in October 2004. Similarly, only 20 percent of Bulgarians associated the EU with economic prosperity in May 2012; down from 47 percent in October 2004.
According to press reports, Bulgaria will soon face an early election. The current government could be returned to power or be replaced by a leftist bloc led by former prime minister Sergei Stanishev. Whoever wins, Bulgarians will hope for a more assertive representation of their interests in Brussels.
View full post on Cato @ Liberty
Gold and Silver • How long until investors fall out of love with stocks and t
How long until investors fall out of love with stocks and turn to real assets?
20 February 2013
With US stocks hitting another high yesterday it is harder and harder to be a bear, and yet logically the end of the rally must be coming closer with each new advance. We remember how the Nasdaq felt like this in November 1999 and yet only finally crashed in March 2000. Momentum is one thing, business economics are another.
For how long can total US company profits stay at an all-time high in relation to GDP? Even the bullish analysts of Wall Street have barely any profit advance pencilled in for 2013. The charts are already indicating a crash (click here).
Mean reversion
Today’s buyers are forgetting a simple fact of life: everything always reverts to the mean. Fat profit margins can therefore never last. They are a transitory phenomenon. And as profits fall so do share prices. Stock prices are only discounted future profits, after all.
You could view this as a binary competition between stocks and bonds for the prize of least ugly looking investment. If interest rates rise then bonds fall in value and stocks may fall by less and less fast.
But in the real world stocks and bonds are not the only game in town. What about real estate and other real assets like gold, silver, art, and diamonds?
At the moment the stock rally has investors transfixed by past performance. But the outlook for profits suggests that performance is truly in the past. After a three year plus rally in equities that is hardly surprising. Only an idiot buys in year four.
So if bonds are also looking ugly, and the return on them is now so low that any fool can see this unpleasant reality, and equity values are peaking then where should investors be turning next? Driving equities to further overvaluation is one course but it becomes more dangerous by the day.
Real assets
No, it is the real assets segment that will provide the best returns in the next rotation of the investment universe, and the best returns will come in the assets with the most limited supply.
There is a lot of real estate inventory still left from the last bust, so the upturn potential is more limited although we are already seeing it across the US and Dubai. Gold, diamonds and especially silver are where the supply bottlenecks will be most accute.
How long will this process take? That’s impossible to say with pin-point accuracy. But when you can see something as inevitable it most always often happens.
http://www.arabianmoney.net/gold-silver … al-assets/
Statistics: Posted by yoda — Wed Feb 20, 2013 11:07 am
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American • Fall in US Q4 GDP shows US almost in recession, not in a re
Fall in US Q4 GDP shows US almost in recession, not in a recovery
Posted on 31 January 2013
So the growth in the US economy turned out to be a charade created for an election year after all as ArabianMoney suggested a long time ago. There is no hiding from a 0.1 per cent fall in GDP in the fourth quarter in the world’s largest economy. Another quarter of decline and the US is officially back in recession.
Agora Financial managing editor Chris Mayer, who is visiting Dubai in the middle of February, said in his last newsletter that the US economy looked a bit like 1937 when tax rises and spending cuts undermined a recovery from the Great Depression. Is the US making the same mistake in 2013 and going for a bit too much austerity, too soon?
$1 trillion deficit
You could say that but a $1 trillion federal budget deficit has to be tackled at some point. A nation cannot borrow to live beyond its means indefinitely. And indeed there is now far less need to do so with all those elections out of the way.
Was the US economic upturn of 2012 just a charade created by bending statistics and hyping spending for an election year? It is certainly very suspicious that the only consistently good figures are for employment. Why does the line for food stamps continue to grow with one-in-six people in the US now dependent on this food aid program?
People are being knocked out of the official unemployment queue and handed out food stamps instead. That’s 47 million and counting, twice the level of poverty that President Obama inherited when he first took office.
The Federal Reserve said yesterday it expects growth to pick up in 2013 and for Q4 to be a temporary setback. Yet why should that happen when taxes are rising and spending being cut back? The Q4 disaster was apparently mainly down to defense expenditure cutbacks but they are not about to be reinstated.
Falling US exports
There was also a six per cent annualized fall in US exports in the fourth quarter. How does that square with the expansion of global trade currently being claimed by the Chinese and refuted by Singapore, Taiwan and South Korea? The reality is laid bare for anybody who cares to look further than the foolish bulls on Wall Street.
If you misled by tradtional financial commentators on TV or in the newspapers then you have every right to be very annoyed. They have been spinning a recovery out of thin air and now we see just how thin that air has become.
What comes next is a correction in financial markets to reflect this new reality and to wipe away the illusion of a recovery that is quite demonstably not happening when you sum up all the statistical evidence from the world’s largest economy for the final quarter of last year.
http://www.arabianmoney.net/private-equ … -recovery/
Statistics: Posted by yoda — Thu Jan 31, 2013 1:21 am
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Agriculture • "Peak farmland" is here, food crop area to fall – study
Put out by Program for the Human Environment at the Rockefeller University in New York.
"Peak farmland" is here, food crop area to fall – study
By Alister Doyle, Environment Correspondent
OSLO | Mon Dec 17, 2012 9:10pm IST
(Reuters) – The amount of land needed to grow crops worldwide is at a peak and an area more than twice the size of France can return to nature by 2060 due to rising yields and slower population growth, a group of experts said on Monday.
The report, conflicting with U.N. studies that say more cropland will be needed in coming decades to avert hunger and price spikes as the world population rises beyond 7 billion, said humanity had reached what it called "Peak Farmland".
More crops for use as biofuels and a shift towards more meat consumption in emerging economies such as China or India – demanding more cropland to feed livestock – would not offset a fall from the peak driven by improved yields, it calculated.
If correct, the land freed up from crop farming would be some 10 percent of what is currently in use – equivalent to 2.5 times the total area of France, Europe’s biggest country bar Russia, or more than all the arable land now farmed in China.
"We believe that humanity has reached Peak Farmland, and that a large net global restoration of land to nature is ready to begin," said Jesse Ausubel, director of the Program for the Human Environment at the Rockefeller University in New York.
"Happily, the cause is not exhaustion of arable land, as many had feared, but rather moderation of population and tastes and ingenuity of farmers," he wrote in a speech about the study he led in the journal Population and Development Review.
The report, supplied to Reuters by Ausubel, projected that almost 150 million hectares (370 million acres) could be restored to natural conditions such as forest by 2060. That is also equivalent to 1.5 times the area of Egypt or 10 times Iowa.
It said the global arable land and permanent crop areas rose from 1.37 billion hectares (3.38 billion acres) in 1961 to 1.53 billion (3.78 billion acres) in 2009. It projected a fall to 1.38 billion hectares (3.41 billion acres) in 2060.
LAND SCARCER
A June 2012 report by the U.N.’s Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO), however, said that a extra net 70 million hectares of land worldwide would have to be cultivated in 2050 compared to now: "Land and water resources are now much more stressed than in the past and are becoming scarcer," it said, referring to factors such as soil degradation and salinisation.
Ausubel’s study admits to making many assumptions – rising crop yields, slowing population growth, a relatively slow rise in the use of crops to produce biofuels, moderate rises in meat consumption – that could all skew the outcome if wrong.
It also does not factor in major disruptions from climate change that U.N. studies say could disrupt farm output with rising temperatures, less predictable rains, more floods, droughts, desertification and heatwaves.
Still, it points out that both China and India have already spared vast tracts of land in recent decades.
In India, for instance, wheat farmers would now be using an extra 65 million hectares – an area the size of France – if yields had stagnated at 1961 levels. China had similarly spared 120 million hectares by the same benchmark.
The authors said that the idea of "Peak Farmland" was borrowed from the phrase "Peak Oil", the possibility that world use of petroleum is at its maximum.
The study also projected that world corn yields would rise at a rate of 1.7 percent a year until 2060, against a 1.8 percent annual gain from 1983-2011. That would raise world corn yields by 2060 to roughly the current U.S. average, it said.
It said that biofuels were a wild card in calculations. The study concluded that non-food crop production – for instance not just sugar or corn used as fuel but also the likes of cotton and tobacco – was likely to exceed growth in food supply until 2060.
Growth of all crops would outstrip food supply by 0.4 percent a year until 2060, up from 0.24 percent a year from 1961-2010, it projected. That indicated a continued, but not spectacular, rise for biofuels.
Changing diets were also a big uncertainty as the world population headed towards about 10 billion and grappled with simultaneous problems of obesity and malnourishment. But there were some encouraging signs, the report found.
Meat consumption in China was only rising moderately, far below rates of economic growth. "Fortunately for the sparing of cropland," it said of world trends, "Meat consumption is rising only half as fast as affluence."
http://in.reuters.com/article/2012/12/1 … CD20121217
Statistics: Posted by yoda — Tue Dec 18, 2012 11:49 am
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