Ireland could face food crisis in winter as grain shortage takes hold

ireland
Ireland Could Face Food Crisis In Winter As Grain Shortage Takes Hold
Maynooth University professor of physical geography Peter Thorne said: "Europe with its heatwave is going to inevitably have a huge deficit in production and much of the breadbasket of North America similarly is being baked at the moment." Photo: PA Images
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Kenneth Fox

Extreme weather and Russia's invasion of Ukraine is putting severe strain on global supplies, which could lead to a food crisis in Ireland this winter, according to a climate scientist.

Maynooth University professor of physical geography Peter Thorne, who was a contributing author on the recent UN-backed International Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) reports, said grain stock would be “hugely expensive” during the winter and could affect food for people and animals alike.

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Speaking to the Irish Examiner he said: “Things that worry me right now are India, which has gone from a furnace to effectively a lake with the monsoon that is going to do a number on Indian food production.

"Europe with its heatwave is going to inevitably have a huge deficit in production and much of the breadbasket of North America similarly is being baked at the moment.

"I’d be more worried about the international dimensions and the implications in particular for the feed stock into the winter,” Prof Thorne said.

As Ireland imports almost all its animal feed stock, and if there are shortages of grain and other food sources, the likelihood is that more will be diverted to human consumption, he added.

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“Which means that grain stock will be hugely expensive coming into the winter. I expect human food inflation to be running north of 10 per cent. I have no idea what feed grain stocks or cattle will be running at.

“It’s certainly not going to be simple — there is Russia’s unprovoked aggression in Ukraine, which will impact the growing season, and other breadbasket regions in the Northern Hemisphere are really going to start to pinch later this year.

"We live in a globally connected system, so while what happens on our shores is immediately tangible to us, I’m more worried about what’s happening on shore far from Ireland,” he said.

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