Saudi Arabia needs to build up its strategic food reserves as a buffer against rising global prices for basic commodities, executives and chamber of commerce officials said on Sunday.
Like other Gulf Arab states the kingdom and top OPEC oil exporter had suffered when international food prices spiked in 2008, forcing up its import bill. It has since sought to lease and buy farmland in developing nations to improve its security of food supplies. The United Nations' food agency (FAO) said earlier this month that food prices hit a record high last month, above 2008 levels when riots broke out in countries as far afield as Egypt, Cameroon and Haiti.
As a means to address these sharp increases the biggest Arab economy should boost reserves for nine basic commodity foods, such as wheat, soya, sugar, barley, oils and rice, said Saad al-Kharif, head of the food security committee at the Riyadh chamber of commerce and industry.
"Strategic storages are needed to secure food supplies and fight price fluctuations," he told reporters, adding that a drought in Latin America was fuelling food prices.
Argentina and Brazil are among some nine countries from which the kingdom imports grains, he said. The government has commissioned a study into setting up such reserves and the chamber wants it to now go ahead and also include the private sector.
"We are encouraging the government. We are trying to encourage them," Kharif said. Such storages could build up reserves for at least six months or longer, said Khalid Al-Rwis, head of the department of agricultural economics at King Saud University in Riyadh.
Saudi Arabia would need by 2015 some 3 million tonnes of wheat and 1.2 million tonnes of rice, he said, citing a recent study of his college.