World | food prices UN Chief Urges 50% Boost in Food Production Ban warns of further riots, starvation if high prices aren't contained By Matt Cantor Posted Jun 3, 2008 7:23 AM CDT Copied In this May 7, 2008 file picture, a Cambodian man carries rice at a paddy rice farm in Bekpeang village, Kampong Cham province, about 45 kilometers (28 miles) north of Phnom Penh, Cambodia. (AP Photo/Heng Sinith, File) UN chief Ban Ki-Moon today called for a 50% rise in world food production by 2030 to fight starvation and civil unrest as the population grows. He spoke at the World Food Security conference in Rome, where world leaders are working to address the highest commodity prices in decades. Such high prices have prompted global riots. “The threats are obvious to us all,” Ban said. "Beggar-thy-neighbor food policies cannot work,'' he added. "They only distort markets and force prices even higher.'' Farm aid has been declining for two decades, Bloomberg reports; last year, despite surging food prices, aid from donors such as the US, the European Union, Japan, Switzerland, and Canada dropped 8.4%. Read These Next Husband of the Coldplay 'Kiss Cam' woman breaks his silence. Amy Coney Barrett weighs in a possible third Trump term. Wall Street is getting twitchy over falling lumber prices. It's Rand Paul versus JD Vance: 'Despicable' Report an error