Asia’s top rice producers under pressure as drought hurts crop to increase food security fears
Nearly a decade after a spike in global food prices sent shock waves around the world, Asia’s top rice producers are suffering from a blistering drought that threatens to cut output and boost prices of a staple for half the world’s population.
World rice production is expected to decline for the first time this year since 2010, as failing rains linked to an El Nino weather pattern cut crop yields in Asia’s rice bowl.
A heat wave is sweeping top rice exporter India, while the number two supplier Thailand is facing a second year of drought. Swathes of farmland in Vietnam, the third-biggest supplier, are also parched as irrigation fed by the Mekong river runs dry.
Double-whammy: As El Niño dries up Asia, its stormy sister La Niña looms, threatening floods
The three account for more than 60 per cent of the global rice trade of about 43 million tonnes.
“As of now we haven’t seen a large price reaction to hot and dry weather because we have had such significant surplus stocks in India and Thailand. But that can’t last forever,” said James Fell, an economist at the International Grains Council.