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Value of Virtual Water in Food: Principles and Virtues








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    Assessment of Food Supply under Water Scarcity Conditions in the NENA Region
    Applying the Food Supply Cost Curve approach (FSCC). Jordan Case Study
    2018
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    The publication underlines the considerable efforts and activities that FAO, through the Regional Initiative on Water Scarcity, is dedicating to support member countries in enhancing policies, governance and best practices related to sustainable allocation of scarce water resources, water productivity, water efficiency, water audit and providing optimal tools for strategic planning. It represents also a pillar for policy building and for policy making as it presents, through a technical approach, the case study of Jordan, a country increasingly affected by water scarcity. Doing so, the publication focuses on three major areas related to agriculture: Gap analysis, rapid water accounting and, food supply cost curve analyses and covers a main role in inspiring policy makers and giving them really specific and technic recoomandations. Doing so, the publication also applies the Food Supply Cost Curve(FSCC) for the Jordanian context through an adopted policy simulation which will end in suggesting to implement several scenarios.
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    Book (stand-alone)
    Why has Africa become a net food importer? - Explaining Africa agricultural and food trade deficits 2011
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    ...High-income countries in Africa had high net food imports per capita, but they did not have problems paying for their large food imports because they had ample sources of foreign currencies. [...] Conversely, low-income countries imported less food per capita, but their agricultural export revenues, or even sometimes, their total merchandise export revenues, could not cover their relatively small food import bills.... .... [[The] stagnation of per capita net food imports c ontrasts the steady and sharp increase in total net food imports [...] and confirms that the population increase played an important role in the increase in Africa’s import demand for food ... Much has been said about domestic production not being able to meet domestic demand fully, but the relatively small shares of net food imports in GDP were signs that domestic food production has played a significant role in feeding the growing African population. Still, the weakness of do mestic production especially for Sub-Saharan Africa lies mainly in its inability to deal with an eventual sustained increase in per capita consumption. Unless food production per capita increases or unless many surplus areas in the continent are connected to the market, any sharp increase in per capita consumption, because of, say, a sudden increase in income or a dramatic change in dietary pattern in the low income will only be met by an increase in food imports.
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    Book (series)
    Food Outlook: Biannual Report on Global Food Markets. October 2016 2016
    From a global perspective, food markets are expected to remain generally well balanced in 2016/17 amid large export availabilities and relatively low and more stable international prices, especially for cereals. The world food import bill is set to dip to a six-year low, while still remaining above the USD 1 trillion mark.

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