- Sign-up period for conservation program extended
- Report: Kansas farm income more than doubled in 2007
- Wheat growers seek cutters for harvest
- Nebraska wheat forecast down 3 pct from 2007
- Montana reaction to farm bill agreement
- President signs Platte River recovery measure
- 2008 Hard Red Winter Wheat Crop Tour Results
- AFBF Steps in on Food Versus Fuel Debate
- S.Korea says it may seek to rework U.S. beef deal
- Wheat tour finds central-Kansas wheat thriving
- Nelson signs letter backing ethanol requirements
- Big Question Yet To Be Answered
- More Humane Society Video Released
- Schafer Responds to Animal Cruelty Video
- Feingold: Energy Market Oversight Included in Farm Bill
- NFU Pitches Carbon Credit Program to Senate Committee
- Farm Bill Meetings Behind Closed Doors
- National Sorghum Checkoff approved
- South Korean president pledges to suspend imports of US beef if it endangers health
- Subcommittee Looks at Fuel and Food Debate
- NCGA Calls on Congress to Make Stronger Biofuels Commitment, Not Back Away
- Feed Costs Force Cutbacks
- Grassley: Stop Filling Strategic Petroleum Reserve
- Another Meat Recall
- World Watching U.S. Corn Crop
- US Senate expected to boost food aid funds in 2008
- US wants to finish Doha round on Bush's watch-Schwab
- US pork prices hit 10 month high, may rally further
- US Senate Democrats unveil new energy tax plan
- US urged to consider effect of ethanol on the poor
- Homeland Security wins control over foot-and-mouth research
- Company markets DNA-traceable meat technology to retailers
- Livestock Handling Education Materials Available
- Russia OKs Importation of U.S. Livestock
- EU says WTO progress has to happen now
- Immigration Hearing Begun
- Ibach and Olsen Receive CASNR Alumni Awards
- Argentine farmers to halt grain sales until May 15
- UN says 60 pct extra food aid funds secured for 08
- US business presses India for more WTO concessions
- Argentine farm talks stumble on export taxes
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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