FAO data for March indicates international food prices are up ~1% year-on-year, while Brent crude increased by nearly 58% compared to March 2025.
Retail prices for most food items in India (rice, wheat, pulses, sugar, potato, onion, tomato) remain stable compared to last year.
Edible oil prices in India are up due to higher import costs of crude palm, soyabean, and sunflower oil, with the FAO's vegetable oil sub-index up 13.2% in March 2026.
Indonesia plans to launch a B50 biofuel program in July, blending 50% palm oil-derived fatty acid methyl ester with conventional diesel.
Detailed Insights:
The current situation differs from the 2022 crisis, when the FAO index hit a record high alongside spiking Brent crude prices, and from 2008, which saw a combined oil and food price shock.
Increased biofuel mandates, like Indonesia's B50, contribute to higher vegetable oil prices as palm and soyabean oil are diverted for blending with diesel.
The energy shock impacts the availability of fertilizers and crop protection chemicals, raising concerns for the upcoming planting season and potentially affecting future grain stocks.
A prolonged war combined with a potential El Niño event could worsen the situation, necessitating proactive stock management and open import policies.
Key Concepts Involved:
FAO Food Price Index: A measure of the monthly change in international prices of a basket of food commodities.
Brent Crude: A major global benchmark price for crude oil, used as a reference for pricing other oil varieties.
El Niño: A climate pattern describing the unusual warming of surface waters in the central and eastern tropical Pacific Ocean.