The UN Warns the Clock Is Ticking for Global Food Systems as Hormuz Disruption Deepens
The FAO's chief economist said it plainly — the clock is ticking, and crop calendars do not wait for ceasefires.
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Bureau: São Paulo
The FAO's chief economist said it plainly — the clock is ticking, and crop calendars do not wait for ceasefires.
The UN food agency said the quiet part out loud — fertilizer shipments are already delayed and crop yields will follow.
A ceasefire cannot restart turbines that were already dying before the war began — Cuba's grid crisis is structural.