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			<title>Why North Korea was a global crisis canary</title>
			<link>http://grist.org/article/mother-earths-triple-whammy/</link>
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			<dc:creator>John&nbsp;Feffer</dc:creator>
			<pubDate>Wed, 18 Jun 2008 22:20:57 +0000</pubDate>

					<category><![CDATA[Climate & Energy]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[North Korea]]></category>

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			<description><![CDATA[<p><em>This essay was originally published on <a href="http://www.tomdispatch.com/post/174945">TomDispatch</a> and is reprinted here with Tom's kind permission.</em></p> <p><em>-----</em></p> <p>Gas prices are above $4 a gallon; global food prices surged 39 percent last  year; and an environmental disaster looms as carbon emissions continue  to spiral upward. The global economy appears on the verge of a TKO, a  triple whammy from energy, agriculture, and climate-change trends.  Right now you may be grumbling about the extra bucks you're shelling  out at the pump and the grocery store, but, unless policymakers begin  to address all three of these trends as one major crisis, it could get  a whole lot worse.</p> <p>Just ask the North Koreans.</p> <p>In the 1990s, North Korea was the world's canary. The famine that  killed as much as 10 percent of the North Korean population in those years  was, it turns out, a harbinger of the crisis that now grips the globe  -- though few saw it that way at the time.</p> <p>That small Northeast Asian land, one of the last putatively communist  countries on the planet, faced the same three converging factors as we  do now -- escalating energy prices, reducing  food supplies, and  impending environmental catastrophe. At the time, of course, all the  knowing analysts and pundits dismissed what was happening in that  country as the inevitable breakdown of an archaic economic system  presided over by a crackpot dictator.</p> <p>They were wrong. The collapse of North Korean agriculture in the  1990s was not the result of backwardness. In fact, North Korea boasted  one of the most mechanized agricultures in Asia. Despite claims of  self-sufficiency, the North Koreans were actually heavily dependent on  cheap fuel imports. (Does that already ring a bell?) In their case, the  heavily subsidized energy came from Russia and China, and it helped  keep North Korea's battalion of tractors operating. It also meant that  North Korea was able to go through fertilizer -- a petroleum product -- at  one of the world's highest rates. When the Soviets and Chinese stopped  subsidizing those energy imports in the late 1980s and international  energy rates became the norm for them too, the North Koreans had a  rude awakening.</p><img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=grist.org&#038;blog=5104299&#038;post=24073&#038;subd=grist&#038;ref=&#038;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>

			
									<content:encoded><![CDATA[ <p><em>This essay was originally published on <a href="http://www.tomdispatch.com/post/174945">TomDispatch</a> and is reprinted here with Tom&#8217;s kind permission.</em></p>
<p><em>&#8212;&#8211;</em></p>
<p>Gas prices are above $4 a gallon; global food prices surged 39 percent last  year; and an environmental disaster looms as carbon emissions continue  to spiral upward. The global economy appears on the verge of a TKO, a  triple whammy from energy, agriculture, and climate-change trends.  Right now you may be grumbling about the extra bucks you&#8217;re shelling  out at the pump and the grocery store, but, unless policymakers begin  to address all three of these trends as one major crisis, it could get  a whole lot worse.</p>
<p>Just ask the North Koreans.</p>
<p>In the 1990s, North Korea was the world&#8217;s canary. The famine that  killed as much as 10 percent of the North Korean population in those years  was, it turns out, a harbinger of the crisis that now grips the globe  &#8212; though few saw it that way at the time.</p>
<p>That small Northeast Asian land, one of the last putatively communist  countries on the planet, faced the same three converging factors as we  do now &#8212; escalating energy prices, reducing  food supplies, and  impending environmental catastrophe. At the time, of course, all the  knowing analysts and pundits dismissed what was happening in that  country as the inevitable breakdown of an archaic economic system  presided over by a crackpot dictator.</p>
<p>They were wrong. The collapse of North Korean agriculture in the  1990s was not the result of backwardness. In fact, North Korea boasted  one of the most mechanized agricultures in Asia. Despite claims of  self-sufficiency, the North Koreans were actually heavily dependent on  cheap fuel imports. (Does that already ring a bell?) In their case, the  heavily subsidized energy came from Russia and China, and it helped  keep North Korea&#8217;s battalion of tractors operating. It also meant that  North Korea was able to go through fertilizer &#8212; a petroleum product &#8212; at  one of the world&#8217;s highest rates. When the Soviets and Chinese stopped  subsidizing those energy imports in the late 1980s and international  energy rates became the norm for them too, the North Koreans had a  rude awakening.</p>
<p>Like the globe as a whole, North Korea does not have a great deal of arable land &#8212; it can grow food on only about <a href="http://www.asiasource.org/profiles/ap_mp_03.cfm?countryid=20">14 percent</a> of its territory  (the comparable <a href="https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/fields/2097.html">global figure</a> for arable land is about 13 percent). With heavy applications of fertilizer  and pesticides, North Koreans coaxed a lot of food out of a little  land. By the 1980s, however, the soil was exhausted, and agricultural  production was declining. So spiking energy prices hit an economy  already in crisis. Desperate to grow more food, the North Korean  government instructed farmers to cut down trees, stripping hillsides to  bring more land into cultivation.</p>
<p>Big mistake. When heavy rains hit in 1995, this dragooning of marginal  lands into agricultural production only amplified the national  disaster. The resulting flooding <a href="http://www.gisdevelopment.net/aars/acrs/1997/ts3/ts3006.asp">damaged</a> more than 40 percent of the country&#8217;s rice paddy fields. Torrential rains  washed away topsoil, while rocks and sand, dislodged from hillsides, <a href="http://www.agnet.org/library/eb/475/">ruined</a> low-lying fields. The rigid economic structures in North Korea were  unable to cope with the triple assault of bad weather, soaring energy,  and declining food production. Nor did dictator Kim Jong Il&#8217;s political  decisions make things any better.</p>
<p>But the peculiarities of North Korea&#8217;s political economy did not cause  the devastating famine that followed. Highly centralized planning and  pretensions to self-reliance only made the country prematurely  vulnerable to trends now affecting the rest of the planet.</p>
<p>As with the North Koreans, our dependency on relatively cheap energy to  run our industrialized agriculture and our smokestack industries is now  mixing lethally with food shortages and the beginnings of climate  overload, pushing us all toward the precipice. In the short term, we  face a food crisis and an energy crisis. Over the longer term, this is  certain to expand into a much larger climate crisis. No magic wand,  whether biofuels, genetically modified organisms, or <a href="http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/4006">geoengineering</a>, can make the ogres disappear.</p>
<p>After the attacks of September 11, 2001, &#8220;We are all Americans&#8221; briefly  became a popular expression of solidarity around the world. If we don&#8217;t  devise policy choices that address energy, agriculture, and climate,  while replacing the idolatry of unrestrained growth at the heart of  both capitalist and communist economies, the tagline for the 21st  century may be: &#8220;We are all North Koreans.&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Through a glass darkly</strong></p>
<p>For years, development experts have bemoaned the declining terms of  trade that have kept some developing countries, and most poor farmers,  mired in poverty. With the exception of the first energy crisis era in  the 1970s, between the end of World War II and 2006, food prices never  stopped sinking in relation to manufactured goods. Lower food prices  are generally a boon for consumers. But they are devastating for the  subsistence farmers who make up the <a href="http://www.ifpri.org/pubs/cp/AgMDG.asp">vast majority</a> of the world&#8217;s poor.</p>
<p>However, over the past three years, according to the World Bank, food  prices have increased 83 percent. That may be only an annoyance for wealthy  shoppers, but for the poor, who often devote more than 50 percent  of their  incomes to feeding their families, such staggering rises can be the  difference between life and death.</p>
<p>There are a number of reasons for this recent spike. The price of  oil, now near $140 a barrel, has certainly played a crucial role in  this, both by driving inflation generally and because of its importance  to modern, large-scale agriculture. So has the recent allocation of  ever more agricultural land to biofuel production. U.S. farmers,  responsible for 70 percent  of all world corn exports, now dispatch one-fifth  of their corn to ethanol production, which has had the effect of nearly  doubling the price of corn.</p>
<p>Global warming, too, has had an impact. Drought in Australia and the  eastern United States, severe flooding in China and Bangladesh, rising  ocean levels and fresh water shortages throughout the world are all  thought to be related to climate change, though climate scientists  cannot prove that any given weather anomaly is caused by global  warming.</p>
<p>Climate scientists can be fuzzy this way about causality in the short  term. Paradoxically, however, they often see the future more clearly.  For instance, the top global food policy think-tank, International Food  Policy Research Institute, <a href="http://www.ifpri.org/pubs/fpr/pr18.asp">predicts</a> that global warming will be responsible for a 16 percent  decrease in  agricultural gross domestic product globally by 2020. The Center for  Global Development argues that <a href="http://www.cgdev.org/content/publications/detail/14425/">developing countries</a>,  in particular, will be hit hard by climate change: By 2080, India, its  report argues, will see a staggering 30-40 percent drop in agricultural  production and Senegal will plummet 50 percent.</p>
<p>In the United States, a much-anticipated, Bush-administration-delayed <a href="http://www.climatescience.gov/Library/scientific-assessment/">federal study</a> foresees water shortages, more herbicide-resistant weeds, and more  insect infestations as a result of climbing temperatures. The present  food crisis, concludes Joachim von Braun of the IFPRI, &#8220;foreshadows  what climate change will bring us.&#8221;</p>
<p>The other major driver of food price increases is certainly rising  income levels in key developing countries. With more income, people  can, of course, eat more, and eat higher off the hog &#8212; or, put another  way, they can eat hog in the first place, rather than the lentils or  cassava on which they were subsisting.</p>
<p>Over a decade ago, Lester Brown, the founder of World Watch, suggested that just such a crisis was on the way.  He <a href="http://www.worldwatch.org/node/1074">asked</a> whether the world could possibly produce enough grain to feed a more  prosperous China. Now, growing middle classes in China and India, the  world&#8217;s most populous countries, are, just as he predicted, changing  their eating habits and consuming more meat (and so, indirectly, a  great deal more grain, which is used to feed the animals they are now  cooking).</p>
<p>Lester Brown was ahead of the curve, but there were ample warning  signs of an impending food crisis for those ready to see them. Oil  prices have been steadily increasing since 2004 as a result of rising  demand. They have been helped along greatly by growing chaos in the  Middle East, fed by the Bush administration&#8217;s foolhardy invasion of  Iraq.</p>
<p>Like the North Koreans, we, too, have been trying to squeeze more food  out of a limited amount of land: arable land per capita is <a href="http://www.unep.org/geo/geo2000/english/i5b.htm">declining</a> at a steady rate. Falling water tables and dry rivers  &#8212;  think climate  change again &#8212; have no less surely pointed to a coming crunch for  farmers dependent on irrigation. And don&#8217;t forget: Critics of biofuels  warned <a href="http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/6650743.stm">time</a> and <a href="http://www.foreignaffairs.org/20070501faessay86305/c-ford-runge-benjamin-senauer/how-biofuels-could-starve-the-poor.html">again</a> that there wasn&#8217;t enough elasticity in the food supply to take food out  of the mouths of people in the Global South in order to fill the gas  tanks of the Global North.</p>
<p>Back in the early 1990s, the North Korean leadership failed to grasp  the correlation between rising oil prices, declining food stocks, and  environmental stresses &#8212; and the political pundits and politicians of  the planet conveniently wrote off the resulting catastrophe as uniquely  the fault of the world&#8217;s weirdest country. Instead of taking a timely  hint, wealthier governments simply shrugged off the warnings of  scientists, development professionals, and energy specialists about  future crises.</p>
<p><strong>Responding to riots</strong></p>
<p>There&#8217;s nothing like a food riot, however, to get wealthy governments  to sit up and take notice. Humanitarian organizations and aid officials  may be concerned about people quietly starving to death in remote  locations, but only when world security suddenly seems threatened and  governments totter do rising food prices translate into a full-blown  crisis. Washington, for example, <a href="http://www.usnews.com/articles/news/2008/02/08/the-dangers-from-rising-food-prices.html">woke-up</a> when riots broke out in Egypt, Haiti, and Indonesia, and the militaries in Pakistan and Thailand <a href="http://news.scotsman.com/world/Warning-of-food-riots-.3975494.jp">intervened</a> to protect crops and storage facilities.</p>
<p>In response to the sudden crisis splatting on the global windshield,  the United Nations food aid agency, the World Food Program, called for  $755 million in emergency contributions. Saudi Arabia, its coffers  flooded with oil profits, promptly promised $500 million. The World  Bank then announced that it was increasing its overall support of  global agriculture by $2 billion in 2009, while Washington <a href="http://usunrome.usmission.gov/viewer/article.asp?article=/file2008_06/alia/a8060202.htm&amp;plaintext=1">offered</a> $5 billion in food aid over the next two years.</p>
<p>Such an emergency response may, indeed, be necessary, but it is also  distinctly inadequate. The Director-General of the U.N.&#8217;s Food and  Agricultural Organization, Jacques Diouf, has called for a minimum of <a href="http://www.un.org.ua/en/news/2008-06-04/">$30 billion a year</a> for a global agricultural restructuring. It&#8217;s not at all clear who will  pony up such sums, which, in any case, will be too late for countries  like Haiti whose subsistence farmers needed help before their most  recent growing seasons started. Most importantly, though, as an  approach, it&#8217;s too conventional and, in the long run, bound to fail.</p>
<p>After all, the wealthiest countries continue to show little or no  interest in altering the policies that have contributed so decisively  to the food crisis in the first place. Take the United States. It  &#8220;ties&#8221; &#8212; places restrictions on &#8212; about <a href="http://www.savethechildren.org.uk/en/41_511.htm">70 percent </a> of its aid. That means recipient countries must use that aid to buy  U.S. products, which, of course, will do little to strengthen local  economies. Washington has also <a href="http://www.scidev.net/en/agriculture-and-environment/news/us-plans-cut-to-global-agricultural-research-funds.html">cut</a> its international agricultural research by as much as 75 percent  at a time  when agricultural production is no longer keeping pace with population  increases. Add in the $280 billion farm bill that Congress has just  passed which, unbelievably enough, provides continued subsidies to  &#8220;farmers&#8221; (read: agribusiness) already benefiting enormously from high  food prices. And the European Union, like the United States, is <a href="http://www.forbes.com/markets/feeds/afx/2008/04/14/afx4884949.html">refusing to backtrack</a> on its commitment to boost biofuels produced from grain.</p>
<p>Nor is there much hope for a new Green Revolution. While the campaign  to disseminate modern, industrial agricultural techniques that began in  the 1960s did increase food production, rural poverty in the developing  world remained endemic (which is why the current food crisis is so  devastating to subsistence farmers). Today, a repetition of that  Revolution&#8217;s combo of hybrid seeds, intensive irrigation, and the heavy  application of petroleum-based fertilizers holds little promise.</p>
<p>Water is scarcer. Oil (and thus fertilizer) is considerably <a href="http://www.agbios.com/main.php?action=ShowNewsItem&amp;id=9545">more expensive</a>.  The promised next stage of the Green Revolution, the application of  biotech advances through genetically modified organisms to produce new,  high-yield, insect-resistant crops, generally hasn&#8217;t lived up to its  hype in the developing world.</p>
<p>Yet Western seed companies are <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2008/04/21/business/21crop.html">taking advantage</a> of the crisis to tout this particular high-tech solution. Oddly enough,  all this is depressingly reminiscent of the North Korean leadership&#8217;s  fascination with quick fixes in the 1990s. North Korean leader Kim  Jong-Il, for instance, touted potatoes as a miracle crop, but the True  Potato Seed project sponsored by the U.S. government never panned out.  Giant rabbits produced by a German breeder as a newfangled North Korean  livestock were a <a href="http://www.spiegel.de/international/zeitgeist/0,1518,475218,00.html">dead-end</a>,  probably because the animals themselves consumed as much food as they  ultimately yielded. A variety of high-yield &#8220;supercorn&#8221; hasn&#8217;t yet  revolutionized North Korean agriculture. Neither in North Korea nor in  the world at large has anyone yet figured out a technical shortcut to  permanent cornucopia.</p>
<p><strong>Markets to the rescue?</strong></p>
<p>Perhaps the most conventional approach to the crisis has been to rely  on market mechanisms. Consider the International Food Policy Research  Institute, a product of the Green Revolution and its leading booster,  and its <a href="http://www.ifpri.org/PUBS/ib/foodprices.asp">eight-point plan</a> for solving the crisis. Several of the steps are eminently sensible,  such as expanding humanitarian assistance to food-challenged countries,  reversing biofuel policies, and investing in social programs such as  school feeding programs and health care. In the mix, however, are more  of the same old market mantras. IFPRI recommends, for instance, the  elimination of the export bans which 40 countries, including India and  Indonesia, recently implemented to keep food from flowing out of the  country through trade. And it has tried to revive a dead horse by  urging further World Trade Organization  negotiations to reduce  barriers to global trade in agricultural products.</p>
<p>Pundits and policymakers addressing food problems have called for  the elimination of government regulations and tariffs ever since  England repealed its Corn Laws in the 1840s. In the last quarter  century, the removal of trade restrictions of every sort facilitated  greater agricultural production globally. Free trade helped large  producers grow more and sell it cheaper abroad. But free trade <a href="http://www.oxfam.org/en/policy/briefingpapers/bp101_regional_trade_agreements_0703">hasn&#8217;t helped</a> the rural poor &#8212; or poor countries.</p>
<p>Quite the opposite. The increased concentration of corporate farming  and the dismantling of state programs that sustained the agricultural  sector have <a href="http://www.thenation.com/doc/20080602/bello">driven small farmers</a> out of business all over the planet, while making many of those who  remain ever more dependent on expensive chemical pesticides,  fertilizer, and seeds. For instance, as a result of the North American  Free Trade Agreement, Mexico <a href="http://www.carnegieendowment.org/publications/index.cfm?fa=view&amp;id=1390">lost</a> 1.3 million agricultural jobs, forcing many desperate small farmers to  cross into the United States as migrant workers. Even more strikingly,  the continent of Africa <a href="http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/5271">went</a> from a net exporter of food in the late 1960s to a net importer today  &#8212; thanks to the World Bank and the WTO riding roughshod through the  continent in the same cavalry unit as the four horsemen of the  apocalypse. The Bank&#8217;s &#8220;structural adjustment programs&#8221; and the WTO&#8217;s  &#8220;tariff reductions&#8221; don&#8217;t quite have the ring of war, pestilence,  famine, and death, but they have been just as devastating.</p>
<p>The quest for perfect markets usually conceals a global shell game  in which wealth is redistributed from the many to the few. To even the  playing field that markets constantly tilt in favor of the powerful,  and to direct funds toward environmental sustainability, governments  need to intervene in the economy.</p>
<p>After all, private enterprise is not going to invest in the large-scale  improvement of rural infrastructure &#8212; the capital costs are high and  profit margins far too low. More controversially, developing countries  may need to maintain, or even reestablish, tariffs and subsidies to  protect local producers. Since it is both sold and consumed, food  should be considered a strategic resource, a matter of national  security. It should be left out of trade negotiations in the same way  that the <a href="http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/1335">&#8220;national security exception&#8221;</a> allows governments to subsidize and protect their military industries as they please.</p>
<p><strong>On being canaries</strong></p>
<p>Any response that doesn&#8217;t address all three converging trends &#8212; rising  energy costs, stagnant per-capita agricultural production, and climate  change &#8212; will ultimately fail, just as it did in North Korea in the  early 1990s.</p>
<p>Land, energy, and the biosphere are limited resources. And it&#8217;s not only a peak in oil that we may be approaching. The <a href="http://www.tomdispatch.com/post/2277/michael_klare_on_our_oil_crunch_planet">depletion</a> of oil resources and the urgent need to reduce carbon emissions from their <a href="http://www.tomdispatch.com/post/174930">current levels</a> have at least entered mainstream discussion. Less well known, however, are the problems of peak land and peak water.</p>
<p>The last time food prices shot up, in the 1970s, the U.S. response was  to put more land into agricultural production. This was the infamous  &#8220;fencerow-to-fencerow&#8221; policy of Secretary of Agriculture Earl Butz  that Michael Pollan, author of <em>The Omnivore&#8217;s Dilemma</em>,  has linked to the glut of corn &#8212; and corn syrup &#8212; that has so  profoundly affected global diets. But re-Butzing American agriculture  is no longer an option. &#8220;For the first time in our history, we&#8217;re  pushing up against the edge in terms of quality land,&#8221; <a href="http://www.washingtonindependent.com/view/soaring-food-prices">says Otto Doering</a>, a professor of agricultural economics at Purdue University. &#8220;We&#8217;re in a somewhat fixed box.&#8221;</p>
<p>The same applies to the world at large. Although rainforests are still  being transformed into farming plots and pasture &#8212; only increasing  carbon emissions into the atmosphere &#8212; humanity is reaching the limits  of arable land. Chalk it up to urbanization, climate change-caused  drought, and a loss of soil fertility through the application of too  much fertilizer. Whether forest or farmland, we are losing productive  land at a <a href="http://www.irri.org/prodclock.asp">rate</a> of one hectare every 7.67 seconds. Sure, there&#8217;s some wiggle room in  Africa and Latin America, but bringing this additional land into  cultivation will buy us only a little time &#8212; at the expense of the  overall environment.</p>
<p>The water situation is even more precarious. The world is facing a  declining reserve of fresh water with the depletion of underground  reserves in India, China, Africa, and even the United States. (Say  goodbye to the Midwest&#8217;s mighty Ogallala aquifer, which nourishes  America&#8217;s breadbasket). Aside from the 1.1 billion people who already  lack safe drinking water, according to the U.N., this crisis threatens  farming, which monopolizes 70 percent  of all fresh water.</p>
<p>Global temperature increases will only aggravate the situation. Rising  oceans will inflict death-by-salt on increasing amounts of low-lying  farmland, while drought dries up once fertile farming regions. Any  intensification of the Green Revolution, dependent as it is on chemical  fertilizer and irrigation, is only likely to add to the problem. And <a href="http://www.chathamhouse.org.uk/publications/papers/view/-/id/612/">don&#8217;t count</a> on the oceans to offset the food that will no longer be grown on land.  The catch of wild fish has remained pretty much the same since the  mid-1980s, and fish farming, too, requires land, water, and energy.</p>
<p>In the long run, the only realistic response is a comprehensive  program to address, in tandem, the triple crises of energy, climate,  and land and water resource exhaustion. If policymakers take into  consideration only one, or even two, of the components of this trinity,  they may well end up doing more harm than good. The making of biofuels  from corn, for instance, was an attempt to address the problems of the  cost of energy and the dangers of climate change, but it neglected to  consider the effect on agricultural production &#8212; hence, the  disastrously soaring price of corn. Calls for the next phase of a Green  Revolution, which address agricultural production, are guaranteed to  play havoc with the energy and water crises.</p>
<p>Such partial approaches don&#8217;t work largely because they assume  unlimited resources. The original sin of unrestrained growth can be  found in the economic theologies of both communism <em>and</em> capitalism. In these systems, neither the state nor the market has ever  operated according to ecological principles. Now, we must quickly  explore ways of boosting agricultural production in fundamentally  sustainable ways without, somehow, expanding our carbon footprint.</p>
<p>Certainly organic farming will play a role here. Although Green Revolution guru Norman Borlaug has <a href="http://www.reason.com/news/show/27665.html">dismissed</a> organic agriculture as incapable of feeding the world, an important new  study published by Cambridge University Press shows that organic  systems in developing countries can produce <a href="http://www.organicconsumers.org/articles/article_6657.cfm">80 percent </a>more than conventional farms.</p>
<p>Integrated farming systems that rely on sustainable energy &#8212; solar,  wind, tidal &#8212; will also be critical. No-till agriculture can cut down  on energy use and soil erosion.</p>
<p>While properly wary of snake-oil salesmen, neither can we afford to be  Luddites. New technologies will play a role as well, as long as they  reduce fertilizer and pesticide use, don&#8217;t shackle debt-ridden farmers  to major seed companies, and meet strict consumer safety requirements.</p>
<p>Even if global food prices stabilize this year and <a href="http://www.fao.org/newsroom/en/news/2008/1000845/index.html">projections</a> of a record grain harvest hold, the underlying problems will remain.</p>
<p>So it was with North Korea. With emergency assistance, the country  pulled back from the brink by 2000. In 2008, however, it is again in a <a href="http://www.smh.com.au/news/world/another-disaster-looms-in-north-korea/2008/05/11/1210444244361.html">serious food crisis</a>,  thanks to high energy prices, flooding, and a shortfall in last year&#8217;s  grain harvest. Once again, North Korea is the world&#8217;s canary. As we sit  in the dark in the deep hole that we&#8217;ve dug for ourselves, will we  finally heed its warning?</p>
<p>Copyright 2008 John Feffer</p>
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