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U.N. warns of food crisis

Corn is dumped by the truckload at Archer Daniels Midland corn processing plant in Decatur, Illinois on July 2, 2009. ADM's plant is the largest corn and soybean processing facility in the world. (UPI Photo/Mark Cowan/HO)
Corn is dumped by the truckload at Archer Daniels Midland corn processing plant in Decatur, Illinois on July 2, 2009. ADM's plant is the largest corn and soybean processing facility in the world. (UPI Photo/Mark Cowan/HO) | License Photo

ABU DHABI, United Arab Emirates, March 16 (UPI) -- World governments aren't doing enough to boost food production as market speculation and climate issues raise security concerns, a U.N. official said.

The U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization estimates there needs to be a 70 percent increase in global food production to meet the expected growth in the global population.

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Meanwhile, developing countries are setting 5 percent of the national budgets aside for the agricultural sector despite economic gains from farming.

In terms of energy, the global community diverts more than 100 million tons of cereal from the food chain to biofuels, the FAO said.

Jacques Diouf, the FAO director general who was in Abu Dhabi to deliver a date palm award, said the world could be headed for a global food disaster.

"If we add the impact of droughts, floods, hurricanes and other events exacerbated by climate change and the speculation on agricultural commodity futures markets, it becomes clear that the current situation is the chronicle of a disaster foretold," he said.

Some experts question the extent to which rising food prices are behind the uprisings in Tunisia and Egypt, although, like World Bank President Robert Zoellick, they acknowledge they were "an aggravating factor."

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