Market uncertainty lifts global meat prices in 2025 - FAO

FAO cites geopolitics, animal disease and shifting demand

calendar icon 20 January 2026
clock icon 1 minute read

Market uncertainty due to geopolitical tensions and animal disease outbreaks were among factors pushing up meat prices in 2025, the UN Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) said in a report published 9 January.
 
According to the report, bovine and ovine prices were higher compared to the previous year, while pig and poultry prices declined. 
 
The FAO's Food Price Index – a benchmark for global food commodity prices – fell in December, as lower dairy, meat and vegetable oil quotations offset higher prices for cereals and sugar.
 
Global agrifood systems continue to impose "hidden costs" equal to 10% of global gross domestic product, cautioned David Laborde, director of FAO's Agrifood Economics Division, in an article published by the International Institute for Sustainable Development.
 
In a separate commentary for the Forum on Trade, Environment, and the SDGs, Caroline Dommen argued that a new approach to food and agricultural trade was needed.

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