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EUROPE: Preparing to Get at Resources of the Poor
By David Cronin
BRUSSELS - European Union officials are drawing up a new strategy for giving multinational companies greater access to minerals and wood located in poor countries.
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ENERGY-LATIN AMERICA: PDVSA’s Growing Presence
Analysis by Humberto Márquez
CARACAS - Central America, Cuba, the Dominican Republic and islands in the eastern Caribbean are receiving more and more oil from Venezuela, while major refineries are planned in South America - at Pernambuco in northeastern Brazil, and at El Aromo, on Ecuador's Pacific coast.
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BRAZIL: Reform of Global Financial System Needed, Says Minister
By Mario Osava
RIO DE JANEIRO - A new international financial architecture, based on different rules, is a reform that has long been demanded by different sectors and is now "inevitable" in the face of the "universal and systemic crisis" originating in the United States, says Brazilian Finance Minister Guido Mantega.
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ENVIRONMENT: Push for Biofuels Losing Energy
By David Cronin
BRUSSELS - The European Union's only directly elected body has urged that a contentious target for using agricultural crops to meet one-tenth of the bloc's transport demands should be reduced.
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JAPAN: Tainted Rice Scam Shakes Consumer Confidence
By Catherine Makino
TOKYO - Consumer confidence in quality-conscious Japan has been badly shaken by a scandal over contaminated rice that was discovered to have been imported and distributed to restaurants, hospitals, schools and stores.
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ARGENTINA: Soup Kitchens Feel Impact of Rising Food Prices
By Marcela Valente
BUENOS AIRES - "It breaks my heart because I know these kids don't have anything to eat, but I can’t serve any more people," says Estela Esquivel, talking about children who have been turned away at dinnertime from the La Casita de la Virgen soup kitchen in La Cava, a slum neighbourhood on the north side of the Argentine capital.
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DEVELOPMENT: Ending Africa's Food Crisis
By Tarjei Kidd Olsen
OSLO - Africa's food crisis can be alleviated by modernising agriculture and reforming supply chains so that small-scale farmers get cheaper fertiliser and high-yield seeds, experts and officials at a conference in Oslo have argued. But so far, they say, funding is lacking.
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ECONOMY-BRAZIL: Relative Calm Despite Plunge in Shares
By Mario Osava
RIO DE JANEIRO - In spite of the plunging value of shares on the Sao Paulo stock exchange this week due to the financial crisis in the United States, the Brazilian economy is relatively calm, although worse effects are expected in the years to come.
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EUROPE: Transgenic Crops' Days May Be Numbered
By Mario de Queiroz
LISBON - Pressure from the president of the European Commission has not succeeded in advancing the cause of transgenic crops. In spite of the power wielded by the executive organ of the European Union, the bloc’s member countries are gradually discontinuing the use of genetically modified seeds.
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LATIN AMERICA: Food Price Hikes Hit Poor Hard - ECLAC
By Daniela Estrada
SANTIAGO - The countries of Latin America have coped relatively well so far with the rising global food and fuel prices. But the main challenge they face is to focus more attention on the plight of the poor, experts said at a seminar being held in the Chilean capital.
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PERU: Small Towns Face Challenge of Using Windfall Mining Revenues
By Milagros Salazar
LIMA - Peru is enjoying a mining boom. But while some areas lacking in minerals and oil have seen very little of the windfall profits, other districts have taken in so much money that they have only been able to actually use a tiny portion of it.
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OIL-PERU: "The Ashaninka People Will Not Allow These Abuses"
By Milagros Salazar
SATIPO, Peru - "We will not allow the oil company to come in because it will bring pollution and we will suffer," said Medaly Pancho, a member of the Ashaninka community in the central Peruvian province of Junín. "We hunt and fish, we live our peaceful lives, and we don't want that to change."
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TRADE: Old Talks Never Die
By Gustavo Capdevila
GENEVA - "History tells us that multilateral trade negotiations never die, and the current Doha Round is no exception," said economist Carlos Pérez del Castillo, Uruguay’s former permanent representative to the World Trade Organisation (WTO) and chairman of the global body’s General Council in 2003 and 2004.
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MEXICO: Peasants Seek Ways to Block Canadian-Run Mine
By Diego Cevallos*
MEXICO CITY - The Canadian mining corporation Minefinders has explored a rural area of the northern Mexican state of Chihuahua for 14 years. But as it gets ready to begin mining gold and silver there, its plans are threatened by peasant farmers' protests.
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CUBA: Foreign Investors Keen on Sugar Production
By Patricia Grogg
HAVANA - Foreign direct investment in the sugar industry is acceptable to the Cuban government for producing alcohol and other derivatives, but it continues to be a topic that the authorities prefer not to talk about, at least in public, although experts regard it as desirable for the recovery of the industry.
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Food, grains, metals. In a new world of rising prices, commodities are back on the global agenda. But can extractive industries and agriculture help reduce poverty? They have been touted as a tool for development; however, in some cases commodities have flourished in contexts of corruption, conflict and ecological destruction, damaging people's lives and opportunities, while benefiting elites and foreign companies. Growing demand pushes prices up, enabling Africa and Latin America to profit from the formidable expansion of Asian economies. IPS reports on the perspectives and pitfalls of the remarkable upswing.

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WHAT'S BEHIND SOARING COMMODITY PRICES
    by Jose Graziano da Silva
MAY 2008 (IPS) - There are two distinct elements driving the current commodity price increases: one is financial; the other is the hitherto unheard of shift in demand: the expansion of consumption in poor countries, writes Jose Graziano da Silva, regional representative for Latin America and the Caribbean at the UN Food and Agricultural Organisation (FAO).
MAKING HIGH COMMODITY PRICES HELP THE POOREST NATIONS
    by Ali Mchumo
APRIL 2008 (IPS) - Since 2001, the prices of many commodities and other natural resources have soared, providing commodity-dependent developing countries with an opportunity to use the increased revenues to combat poverty and make real economic and social gains, writes Ambassador Ali Mchumo, managing director of the Common Fund for Commodities (CFC).
News in RSS
Q&A: ‘Creating Artificial Glaciers Is Simple, Easy and Replicable’
INDIA: ‘Glacier Man’ Vows to Build More Artificial Glaciers
US-INDIA: State Visit by Singh Could Smooth Bumpy Relations
PERU: Fighting Hunger with Native Crops
RIGHTS-CHAGOS: 'My Navel is Buried There'
GENDER-AFRICA: Some Progress Amidst Continuing Challenges
AFGHANISTAN: Insurgents Infiltrate Security Forces
LEBANON: Migrant Women Dying on the Job
POLITICS: U.N. in Final Push for 2015 Development Goals
CLIMATE CHANGE: Health at Risk
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Global Initiative on Commodities Strategy
Financing Commodity Development - UNCTAD
World Trade Organisation
Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative
All ACP Agricultural Commodities Programme
Oil for Development
Bananas, Oil, and Development
Food and Agriculture Organisation
World Food Programme
Food First
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