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Home » Global Food Prices Surge To Two-Year High Amid Supply Crunches

Global Food Prices Surge To Two-Year High Amid Supply Crunches

Adam Green By Adam Green August 14, 2025 7 Min Read
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Global Food Prices Surge To Two-Year High Amid Supply Crunches

This article was originally published by Willow Tohi at Natural News. 

    • Global Food Price Index hits its highest level since February 2023, driven by surging vegetable oil and meat prices.
    • Vegetable oils rise 7 percent to a three-year high amid lower palm oil output and biofuel demand for soy oil.
    • Meat prices hit an all-time record due to strong U.S.-China demand and Brazil’s poultry rebound post-avian flu.
    • Fragile states face a heightened risk of food insecurity and political unrest as prices climb.
    • Experts warn stagnant supply chains and geopolitical instability may keep costs elevated through 2025.

Global food costs have reached a two-year peak, driven by sharp increases in vegetable oils and meat, according to a new United Nations report released Monday. The FAO Food Price Index averaged 130.1 points in July, a 1.6 percent month-on-month climb and its highest since February 2023. The uptick, led by surging prices in palm oil, beef, and lamb, has raised concerns over food security in vulnerable nations and inflationary pressures in major economies.

Vegetable oil prices spark market concerns

The FAO’s Vegetable Oil Price Index jumped 7.1 percent in July — its largest monthly increase since April 2022 — to a three-year high of 166.8. Palm oil, a key global commodity, surged as persistent rains in Malaysia and Indonesia disrupted production, while biofuel demand for soy oil in the Americas drove prices upward. Zero Hedge reported soybean prices rose to $7.1 per pound, the highest since 2008, reflecting tight supplies.

Indonesia’s recent move to require palm oil producers to allocate more output to domestic markets at capped prices further tightened global supply. “Export constraints and volatility in main producing regions are setting the stage for a prolonged price surge,” said an FAO economist, noting the demand from food and energy sectors had made oils “a critical pressure point for inflation.”

Meat prices hit uncharted territory

Global meat prices climbed 1.2 percent in July, hitting a record 127.3 in FAO’s index. Beef and lamb prices led the surge, fueled by robust demand from China and the U.S. Increased imports into Asia and steady U.S. consumption pushed prices higher, even as European pig meat prices dipped due to oversupply. Brazil’s poultry industry, back on track after an avian flu pause, also spurred global market contagion.

The FAO noted China’s role as a major buyer, importing 6 percent more beef than a year ago earlier in 2025, while U.S. droughts threatening feedstock supplies added upward pressure.

Cereals decline, dairy and sugar follow

Not all sectors saw gains. Cereal prices fell 0.8 percent following record wheat harvests in North America and Russia, tempering fears of shortages. Rice also declined due to an ample supply. Dairy prices dropped 0.1 percent due to oversupply in Europe, though cheese remained strong due to Middle Eastern demand. Sugar decreased for a fifth consecutive month as Brazil and India expected strong output.

Historical context: 2008’s shadow returns

This year’s price surge echoes unsettling parallels to 2008, when soybean prices peaked at $7.30 per pound, preceding a global financial crisis. Analysts at Moody’s warned the FAO’s July figures “signal a turning point,” as prices now sit 7.6 percent above their year-ago levels and 43 percent higher than pandemic lows.

“Food inflation doesn’t just impact dinner tables — it threatens political stability,” said Dr. Sarah Brandt, a food security researcher at the Institute for Global Economic Studies. She highlighted that in 2008, wheat prices hitting $350 per metric ton (up from 180 in 2006) sparked riots in 30 countries. Today’s crisis, if unchecked, could repeat such instability, she argued, citing Somalia and Yemen as current hotspots where hunger rates are spiking.

Supply chain vulnerabilities highlighted

Eagle-eyed observers note the report underscores reliance on volatile export corridors. Ukraine’s ongoing sunflower oil supply cuts—its Black Sea exports remain below pre-war levels—continue to pressure prices. Meanwhile, Indonesia’s palm oil policies signal a broader trend of food nationalism, as governments prioritize domestic supply control.

“For national security, this means more than stockpiling,” said Michael Lombari of the Heritage Foundation. “It’s about incentivizing local production.” His organization has urged Congress to expand subsidies for U.S. canola and soy farmers, arguing diversification would shield supply chains.

The FAO report’s emphasis on localized agricultural resilience mirrors Trump-era “Buy American” policies, including new mandates for Pentagon food contracts to favor U.S. producers.

Fragile states face renewed pressure

The UN’s findings are worrying for import-dependent nations, where food inflation historically triggers political unrest. Lebanon, for example, relies on wheat imports from Ukraine and Morocco; its inflation rate surged 141% in early 2025.

World Bank data shows 34 low-income countries now face critical food supply shortages, up from 22 last year. “When prices were this high in 2022, 32 million people tipped into famine. We’re headed there again,” said a spokesperson for the UN World Food Program.

Food volatility threatens global stability

As prices defy year-end calming projections, markets are bracing for a bumpy year ahead. The FAO’s report closes with warnings to policymakers: “Persistent risks such as climate volatility in Southeast Asia and geopolitical conflict underscore that the era of cheap food is over.”

With soybeans flirting with $7.30 per pound and palm oil near 1,500 per ton, experts stress the urgency of reforming global trade policies and building domestic agricultural resilience. “The world can’t afford another 2008,” the Heritage Foundation’s Lombari noted. “This is a wake-up call.”

Read the full article here

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