Fresh Produce Discussion Blog

Created by The Packer's National Editor Tom Karst

Tuesday, April 15, 2008

Potatoes get second look

As the industry continues to fight to get potatoes in the WIC food package (the latest reported clarification from USDA is that all fresh potatoes - not just white potatoes - will be excluded) - the Drudge Report features this link today of a story about potatoes, so that means many millions of readers will see this Reuters report by Terry Wade about the "humble potato" now being accorded new respect. A few excerpts from the story:

As wheat and rice prices surge, the humble potato -- long derided as a boring tuber prone to making you fat -- is being rediscovered as a nutritious crop that could cheaply feed an increasingly hungry world.

Potatoes, which are native to Peru, can be grown at almost any elevation or climate: from the barren, frigid slopes of the Andes Mountains to the tropical flatlands of Asia. They require very little water, mature in as little as 50 days, and can yield between two and four times more food per hectare than wheat or rice.

"The shocks to the food supply are very real and that means we could potentially be moving into a reality where there is not enough food to feed the world," said Pamela Anderson, director of the International Potato Center in Lima (CIP), a non-profit scientific group researching the potato family to promote food security.

Like others, she says the potato is part of the solution.

The potato has potential as an antidote to hunger caused by higher food prices, a population that is growing by one billion people each decade, climbing costs for fertilizer and diesel, and more cropland being sown for biofuel production.

To focus attention on this, the United Nations named 2008 the International Year of the Potato, calling the vegetable a "hidden treasure".

Governments are also turning to the tuber. Peru's leaders, frustrated by a doubling of wheat prices in the past year, have started a program encouraging bakers to use potato flour to make bread. Potato bread is being given to school children, prisoners and the military, in the hope the trend will catch on.

Supporters say it tastes just as good as wheat bread, but not enough mills are set up to make potato flour.

"We have to change people's eating habits," said Ismael Benavides, Peru's agriculture minister. "People got addicted to wheat when it was cheap."

Even though the potato emerged in Peru 8,000 years ago near Lake Titicaca, Peruvians eat fewer potatoes than people in Europe: Belarus leads the world in potato consumption, with each inhabitant of the eastern European state devouring an average of 376 pounds (171 kg) a year.

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2 Comments:

At April 15, 2008 at 7:09:00 AM CDT , Blogger Big Apple said...

Back-breaking crop to hoe and handle and since it's buried in the soil, always a greater concern for a host of diseases than above ground crops have. One of the better traceable commodities. The industry has been very thoughtful with their PLI and documentation.

 
At April 15, 2008 at 12:10:00 PM CDT , Blogger Greg Johnson said...

Potatoes certainly have a big opportunity in a down economy. The U.S. Potato Board has done a nice job getting the focus back on potato as health food, and it may have to shift that now to potato as value food.

also, nice to see Pamela Anderson has stayed busy, with all the marriages and divorces lately.

 

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