联合国粮农 22小时前
FAO Food Price Index increases in April
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联合国粮农组织报告显示,4月份全球食品商品价格基准指数上涨,主要受谷物、肉类和奶制品价格上涨推动。粮农组织食品价格指数为128.3点,环比上涨1.0%,同比上涨7.6%。谷物价格指数上涨1.2%,其中小麦价格小幅上涨,大米价格因需求强劲而上涨,玉米价格因美国库存紧张而上涨。肉类价格指数上涨3.2%,猪肉领涨。奶制品价格指数上涨2.4%,黄油价格创历史新高。植物油价格指数下跌2.3%,但仍高于去年同期。食糖价格指数下跌3.5%。粮农组织还发布了新的《谷物供需简报》,对2024年和2025年的谷物生产和消费情况进行了预测。

🌾 粮农组织食品价格指数4月上涨,主要受谷物、肉类和奶制品价格上涨推动。其中,谷物价格指数上涨1.2%,肉类价格指数上涨3.2%,奶制品价格指数上涨2.4%。

🍚 全球小麦价格小幅上涨,主要受到俄罗斯联邦出口供应收紧的影响;大米价格上涨,则源于对香米品种的强劲需求;美国玉米价格上涨,是季节性库存紧张所致。

🐄 肉类方面,猪肉价格领涨,牛肉价格也走强,尤其是在澳大利亚和巴西,原因是全球进口需求稳定,出口供应有限。奶制品方面,国际黄油价格创下历史新高,主要是由于欧洲库存下降。

📉 与此同时,植物油价格指数有所下降,主要原因是东南亚主要生产国棕榈油产量季节性增加。食糖价格指数也出现下跌,这主要源于对全球经济前景不确定性以及对饮料和食品加工行业需求潜在影响的担忧。

Rome –

The benchmark measure of world food commodity prices increased in April, driven by higher quotations for major cereals, meat and dairy products, the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO)

reported

on Friday.

The

FAO Food Price Index

, which tracks monthly changes in the international prices of a set of globally traded food commodities, averaged 128.3 points in April, up 1.0 percent from March and 7.6 percent from the same month last year.

The FAO Cereal Price Index increased by 1.2 percent from March. Global wheat prices edged up slightly, supported by tightening exportable supplies in the Russian Federation, while the FAO All Rice Price Index rose on stronger demand for fragrant varieties. International maize prices rose due to seasonally tighter stock levels in the United States of America. Currency fluctuations influenced price movements in world markets, while tariff policy adjustments raised market uncertainty.

The FAO Meat Price Index was up 3.2 percent in April compared to March, with quotations rising across all meat categories, led by those for pig meat. Bovine meat prices also firmed, particularly in Australia and Brazil, amid steady global import demand and limited export availabilities.

The FAO Dairy Price Index increased by 2.4 percent in April from the previous month to stand as much as 22.9 percent higher than a year earlier. The rise was led by international butter prices, which hit a new all-time high due to declining inventories in Europe.

By contrast, the FAO Vegetable Oil Price Index declined by 2.3 percent, though it remained 20.7 percent higher than its year-ago level. Palm oil prices fell markedly due to seasonally higher outputs in major Southeast Asian producing countries, while global soy and rapeseed oil prices rose on the back of strong global import demand. Sunflower oil prices remained largely stable.

The FAO Sugar Price Index also dropped by 3.5 percent from March, largely due to concerns over the uncertain global economic outlook and its potential impact on the demand from the beverage and food processing sectors, which together account for the bulk of global sugar consumption.

More details are available

here

.

Cereal supply and demand in the year ahead

FAO also released a new

Cereal Supply and Demand Brief

on Friday, with revised estimates for 2024 and fresh insights on cropping conditions and prospects for 2025.


FAO’s latest forecast for 2025 wheat production is pegged at 795 million tonnes, on par with the previous year. Prospects point to a record output in Asia, buoyed by India and Pakistan, improved conditions in southern Europe and North Africa, along with stable production in Canada and the Russian Federation. However, rainfall deficits in northern Europe and the Near East and drought concerns in the United States of America are weighing on the overall prospects.

Harvesting of the 2025 coarse grain crops is beginning in the southern hemisphere, with maize output expected to increase in Brazil and South Africa. In the northern hemisphere, early expectations point to a 5 percent expansion in coarse grain plantings in the United States of America.

Meanwhile, FAO has slightly revised downward its estimate for global cereal production in 2024 to 4 848 million tonnes, even as global rice output in 2024/25 will likely expand by 1.5 percent to reach record high of 543.6 million tonnes.

FAO’s new forecast for world cereal utilization in 2024/25 stands at 2 870 million tonnes, a 1.0 percent increase over the 2023/24 level, driven by expectations of higher feed use of maize in China and the Russian Federation, along with increased rice consumption in various African countries.

World cereal stocks are now predicted to decline by 1.9 percent to 868.2 million tonnes by the close of the 2025 seasons, driving down FAO’s forecast for the world cereal stocks-to-use ratio in 2024/25 to 29.9 percent – still considered to be in a comfortable buffer zone .

FAO has slightly reduced its forecast for world cereal trade in 2024/25 to 478.6 million tonnes, which would mark a 6.8 percent contraction from 2023/24 and the lowest level since 2019/20. Global trade in coarse grains is forecast to contract even faster, due largely to lower demand from China and smaller exportable maize supplies in Brazil. International trade in rice is now seen increasing by 1.2 percent to a new record high of 60.4 million tonnes.

More details are available 

here

.

The Agricultural Market Information System (

AMIS

), hosted by FAO, also published its monthly

Market Monitor

on Friday. In addition to the regular market analysis, the new issue includes a feature article examining fertilizer markets and global trade, which have been impacted by a host of geopolitical factors in recent years and are poised to face increased uncertainty due to the evolving trade policy landscape.

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食品价格指数 粮农组织 谷物 肉类 奶制品
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