Tuesday, December 8, 2015

Blumberg in the News

BloombergBusiness wrote an article this week titled Pigeons Grow Fat in Egypt as Poor Storage Means Wasted Wheat, exploring the inefficiencies bedeviling food systems in the Middle East and North Africa. and featuring an interview with Blumberg Grain's David Blumberg. An excerpt follows:

As much as half of the wheat the state buys from its farmers is lost each year to pigeons, rodents and thieves scavenging national stockpiles that are often just stacked in rough jute bags open to the elements, said David Blumberg, whose U.S. company is working with the government to modernize and build the Middle East's largest grain-storage network.

"If you ever passed by a landfill and saw all the birds circling above, that's kind of the situation," said Blumberg, chief executive officer of Blumberg Grain, Middle East & Africa, referring to the facilities he's working on replacing. "There is no protective covering."

Wasted grain is a big problem for Egypt, where rising food prices intensified unrest that led to the overthrow of the government during Arab Spring protests in 2011. The country is the world's biggest wheat importer and spends billions of dollars on grain each year for a subsidized bread program to ensure its people can afford food.

The government buys about 40 percent of the country's wheat production each year, but waste isn't limited to the domestic crop. Poor infrastructure, port backlogs and aging storage sites mean a third of imported supply is also lost, said Gilles Mettetal, director of agribusiness at the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development.

To read the full article, click here. For more news and information visit Blumberg Partners.

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