- Cowdogs In Torrington For National Finals
- Biting the hand that feeds you doesn’t sit well with farmers
- Water dispute likely headed to outside arbitrator
- Nebraska Cattle on Feed down 2 percent
- Gary Phillips Auction Results
- US rejects calls for renegotiating beef export deal with South Korea
- Don't blame funds for commods run-up - CFTC, execs
- Renewable energy tax bill advances in U.S. House
- Senate Approves Farm Bill
- Senators Ask President to Rethink Veto
- Farm Groups Praise Farm Bill Passage
- House Ag Looks Into Dramatic Movements in Commodity Markets
- Stallman Addresses Challenges of Turbulent Futures Markets
- Final Rule on Price Reporting Law Issued
- Biodiesel Tax Incentive Extended
- Farm Bill passes Senate by veto proof margin and is on way the President
- Farm Bill Passes House
- US disappointed by delay in S.Korea beef trade
- Kansas delegation divided on party lines in farm bill vote
- Conference Chair Recognized House Passage
- South Korea Halts Opening of U.S. Beef Imports
- BioPreferred Program Expanded
- Cattlemen urge Farm Bill approval
- Mandatory Price Reporting Gives Producers Transparency, Accuracy
- Nelson supports farm bill
- Reopening NAFTA too risky, ex-Mexican president says
- US farm bill sets income ceiling on crop subsidies
- WTO tells U.S. to cut trade barriers, improve exports
- NCGA Debuts New Food and Fuel Resource Center
- Lula puts Brazil economy ahead of Amazon
- Chronology-Two years of work on U.S. farm bill
- Food crisis requires new green revolution-Congress
- Conservation Districts applaud farm bill passage
- Argentine farmers to stay on strike until May 21
- Argentine farmers extend strike over export tax
- Farmers press offer in Argentine farm strike
- Mexico group warns tortilla prices set to jump
- Ozone. Friend of Bees?
WASHINGTON, May 6 (Reuters) - The World Food Program, facing an unprecedented surge in the price of food it provides to the world's hungry, has secured about 60 percent of the extra funds it needs to cover planned aid donations this year, the head of the United Nations agency said on Tuesday.
"We put out an extra appeal for $755 million and we're about 60 percent of the way there," WFP Executive Director Josette Sheeran said during a speech at a Washington think tank.
Donor nations like Canada, Australia and Britain have stepped up their pledges to help WFP, which aims to help feed the estimated 850 million undernourished people around the world, cope with soaring costs of basic foodstuffs.
Global food prices -- including staples like rice, wheat and corn -- soared an annual 43 percent through March, according to the U.S. government.
The United States, the world's largest donor of food aid, last month released 260,000 tonnes of wheat from an emergency crop trust.
Last week, President George W. Bush announced plans, which must be approved by Congress, to spend an additional $770 million on food aid and agriculture development in the fiscal year beginning Oct. 1.
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