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Food And Water Insecurity Create Risk For Businesses
Political and financial instability stay a feature of the company landscape as a result of the recession, according to Aon Risk Services, the global risk management and insurance brokerage business of Aon Corporation. The business launched its 17th annual political risk map earlier this year.
Food and Water Insecurity
The 2010 map introduces new indices looking at food, agricultural commodity and water supplies.
Sam Wilkin, associate director of the consultancy practice at Oxford Analytica, explains: “For the past 20 years, global population growth has outpaced growth in agricultural output. A run up in world food prices in 2007 and 2008 led to dramatic geopolitical events, from food riots in India, to worker unrest in Cambodia. Last month the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations warned that global food costs could quickly rise once more.
“With global warming changing regional climates and weather patterns and driving demand for bio-fuels, the world faces unprecedented food and water risks. Aon and Oxford Analytica have developed a pair of forward looking indices analysing global food and water insecurity.”
There are two new icons on Aon’s 2010 risk map: food and water insecurity. They have been applied to the 30 most ‘high risk’ countries – that is those countries potentially facing the most severe food and water insecurity in the medium to long term. These are all developing countries, mostly in Africa, which is in keeping with the conventional wisdom that the impacts of climate alter will rebound hardest on the countries least responsible for global warming.
Global Agricultural Commodity Supply
The agricultural commodity supply risk index provides a supply-side view, identifying the internationally-traded agricultural commodities at greatest risk of a supply shock — and thus a sudden global cost spike.
Numerous of the world’s most productive agricultural regions are expected to see a decline in productivity if temperatures rise.
“Cocoa tops the 2010 Agricultural Commodity Supply Risk Index by some margin, as a lot more than 75 percent of global production is concentrated in four countries at significant risk of supply disruption,” said Wilkin. “These threats to cocoa supplies include political instability, natural disaster, and water supply insecurity.”
Now and Then
The food and water insecurity indices are not meant to be alarmist, according to Roger Schwartz, senior vice president of Aon Trade Credit. “They are forward-looking assessments developed to be an ‘early warning’. While the increasing supply-side pressures of global warming are more of a lengthy-term problem, there are far more immediate concerns.
“We are already seeing instances of countries that can’t produce enough of particular foods, and in these financially hard times can not afford to import these food supplies. This locations localized pressures on a country’s social balance and can lead to the sort of geopolitical events we saw in 2007/8.
“With the prospect of actual economic recovery over the next year or so, we are likely to see increased demand for food and water globally. With current supply-side problems becoming experienced in some areas, this will only add to the existing pressures.”
Much more data about the political risk map can be discovered on the web at www.aon.com.







