Your Reading List

South Korea Looks To Expand Overseas Grain Farming

Reading Time: < 1 minute

Published: March 10, 2011

,

South Korea, the world’s fourth-largest grain importer, plans to expand overseas grain production to ensure supply and curb inflation as it faces record-high grain prices.

The Finance Ministry said in a statement March 2 that it would form a task force team with the ministries of Agriculture and Foreign Affairs to prepare measures by the end of the month to expand overseas and domestic production and increase public grain stocks.

“We are hoping more private firms will enter more countries to boost production,” said an official at the Agriculture Ministry who declined to be identified as he was not authorized to speak to the media.

Read Also

Michael Lipsitz picks out a package of hot dogs while grocery shopping at the WalMart in Crossville, Tennessee March 21, 2008.  Food prices are soaring, a wealthier Asia  is demanding better food and farmers can?t keep up. In short, the world is in a food crisis that is in danger of boiling over.    REUTERS/Brian Snyder    (UNITED STATES)

Canada seventh on agri-food influence

Comparison of 19 G20 countries says Canadian agri-food needs investments, processing, action on retail consolidation to realize potential

He said so far about 18 South Korean firms had invested in farms in seven countries, including Russia, Brazil, Cambodia and Laos, although production and imports remained limited.

The Agriculture Ministry said last month that South Korea was looking to build a strategic reserve for non-rice grains such as corn and wheat at 12 per cent of annual consumption, joining similar efforts by other Asian nations worried about high food prices and social unrest.

President Lee Myung-bak in South Korea said earlier in February that the government should set up a national body to secure food resources and mitigate the impact of global food price volatility.

The government said in January it would establish its own grain-trading company in Chicago in the first half of 2011, while planning to purchase a grain elevator at a U.S. production site and acquire a stake in an elevator for grain exports this year.

explore

Stories from our other publications