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As Russia’s war in Ukraine threatens global food supply, Asia needs a rethink of biofuel push

March 26, 2022
in ASIA, Food, Lifestyle
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As Russia’s war in Ukraine threatens global food supply, Asia needs a rethink of biofuel push
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As food commodity prices surge at the fastest pace in a decade, experts are warning that policymakers in Asia and elsewhere will soon have to grapple with urgent questions about the use of biofuels.

Countries around the world, from the United States, China, Malaysia and Indonesia all have what is known as a biofuel mandate – where the government requires refiners to blend certain biofuels such as corn-based ethanol, soy-based diesel, palm oil biodiesel and other biofuels into fuel each year or purchase credits from those who do.

But with the price of food commodities jumping sharply since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, a major grains producer, one mitigation strategy is making more grains available for food and meat production.

In Washington, the Biden administration is considering a waiver of the nation’s biofuel policy, the Renewable Fuel Standard, Reuters reported on March 3. Ukraine and Russia combined account for 75 per cent of world sunflower oil exports and 26 per cent of wheat exports.

Russia was the top wheat exporter in 2018 and Ukraine the fifth largest, according to World Bank data.

Thomas Mielke, executive director of ISTA Mielke GmbH and publisher of Oil World, which provides global market analysis, said “a new debate about biofuels versus food” emerged in the aftermath of the Ukraine invasion.

Amid the current food crisis and inability of consumers in developing economies to afford the high prices of edible oil, there was increasing demand for biofuel mandates to be reduced, Mielke said.

Doing so, he said, would reduce “consumption of vegetable oils in the energy sector, and

Many countries have seen production shortfalls the past several months, partly due to weather-caused oilseed crop losses and partly due to reserved farmer selling and smaller than expected oilseed crushings, Mielke said. Palm oil production has fallen short of expectations in Malaysia and Indonesia, reducing export supplies, he added.

Dorab Mistry, director of Godrej International Trading & Investments struck a more optimistic tone on food security but was pessimistic about the global economy.

“Palm oil prices may be at or near a peak already. My sense is that prices generally peak in anticipation of critical shortages. So unless the situation in Ukraine deteriorates further, prices are peaking and from here they will plateau for some time. Once hostilities cease, prices will decline,” said Dorab.

He did not believe that “we are not staring at food shortages.”

“Prices are rising and high prices will lead to substitution and demand destruction,” Dorab said. Demand destruction occurs when a period of high prices or restricted supply causes consumers to look for alternatives.

“We should never underestimate human ingenuity and resourcefulness,” said Dorab, adding that people in “price sensitive markets of Asia and Africa” had shown themselves to be resilient.

Nonetheless, he opined that the world economy would slip into a recession during the second half of 2022 as the overall impact of the war in Ukraine on the Russian economy and the world economy “is quite dramatic.”

As for what’s to come for the region amid the current crisis, Mielke noted governments had begun taking steps to reduce prices by cutting import taxes, implementing export controls, increasing export taxes or by stepping up releases from government stocks.

Last week, the Indonesian government increased the export levy on palm oil to US$375 (S$509) a tonne. Under previous rules, the maximum export tax was US$175 per tonne, Reuters reported.

Indonesian authorities have been struggling to control the domestic market for cooking oil, made from refined crude palm oil, after prices surged 40 per cent at the start of the year due to high global prices.

In Malaysia, the price shock involving wheat – of which Ukraine is one of the largest global exporters – has manifested in an increase in bread prices, among other things.

In 2020, 25 per cent of all wheat in Malaysia was imported from Ukraine, the second largest exporter after Australia, according to data from the Ukrainian embassy in Kuala Lumpur.

In 2021, Ukraine was among the top 5 suppliers of wheat to Malaysia.

Ukraine is also the main supplier of sunflower oil to Malaysia. In 2020, the Eastern European country supplied 48.5 per cent of Malaysia’s sunflower oil needs, and in 2021 that figure was 57 per cent, according to the embassy.

This article was first published in Asia One . All contents and images are copyright to their respective owners and sources.

Tags: #foods#Fossil fuels#Russia-Ukraine conflict#supply chain#Wars and conflictsbiofuelglobal food supplyRussia war in Ukrainewar in Ukraine
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