By Tuba Sahin
ANKARA (AA) - Global food prices reached their highest monthly average in January since July 2014 following a steady eight-month rise, the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) said Thursday.
The FAO Food Price Index climbed 4.3%, or 4.7 points, from December 2020, averaging 113.3 points in January.
Strong gains in the sugar, cereals and vegetable oils sub-indices drove the increase, while meat and dairy values were also up, though to a lesser extent.
This figure is a trade-weighted index that tracks the international market prices of five major food commodity groups.
Rising by 8.1% from the previous month, the sugar price index surged the most as robust global import demand spurred concerns about declining availabilities.
The FAO Cereal Price Index in January posted a sharp 7.1% monthly rise, led by international maize prices.
Last month, the vegetable oil price index went up 5.8% to its highest level since May 2012.
In its eighth consecutive monthly rise, the FAO Dairy Price Index climbed to 1.6% during this period.
The FAO Meat Price Index marked an increase for a fourth consecutive month, up 1% from December 2020 due to brisk global imports of poultry meat.