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Conflicts & climate shocks driving food insecurity in Southern Africa

foodmate 2018-09-27
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Persistent conflicts and climate-related shocks are currently driving high levels of severe food insecurity, particularly in Southern African and Near-Eastern countries, which continue to require humanitarian assistance. These were the findings of Crop Prospects and Food Situation, a recent report published by the United Nations’ (UN) Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO).  

“about 39 countries (31 of which are in Africa, seven in Asia and one in the Caribbean [Haiti]) are in need of external food assistance - unchanged from three months ago,” it added. FAO stressed that protracted conflicts, extreme weather events and displacement continue hampering food access for millions of vulnerable people.  

“Civil conflicts and population displacement remain the key drivers of food insecurity in East Africa and the Near-East, wheras dry-weather conditions reduced cereal outputs in Southern Africa,” the report said.    

Lower global cereal production forecast

FAOs latest forecast for global cereal production in 2018 is pegged at 2,587 million tonne, a three-year low and 2.4 per cent below last years record high level.

Cereal production in the 52 low-income food-deficit countries (LIFDCs) is projected this year at around 490 million tonne, about 19 million above the past five-year average.

The unchanged aggregate output reflects weather-reduced outputs in Southern Africa, Central Asia and the Near-East that are foreseen to be offset by production gains in Far-East Asia and East Africa.

Conflicts and displacement take toll on food security

Civil conflicts, often coupled with climate-related extreme events, have taken their toll on food security of vulnerable populations in the Central African Republic, Nigeria, South Sudan, Syria and Yemen, among others.

In Yemen, due to ongoing conflict, an estimated 17.8 million people are food insecure and require urgent humanitarian assistance, a five per cent increase from 2017.

In the Central African Republic, about two million people, or 43 per cent of the total population, are estimated to be in need of urgent assistance for food due to the civil conflicts, several consecutive years of reduced agricultural production and poorly functioning markets, especially for displaced populations, host families and returnees, fueled by violent clashes and inter-communal tensions.   

Dry weather hits cereal production in Southern Africa, Near-East and South America  

Poor rains in Southern Africa at key cropping stages curbed this years cereal production, with the largest reductions reported in Malawi and Zimbabwe.

In Malawi, with this year’s cereal output estimated to be below average, the number of food-insecure people in 2018 could more than double from last year to reach 3.3 million people.  

In Zimbabwe, 2.4 million people are estimated to be food insecure in 2018 as a result of a reduced cereal output and food access constraints stemming from low incomes and liquidity problems of vulnerable households.

The Near-East region has also suffered from insufficient rains that have reduced cereal output, particularly in Afghanistan and Syria.

“In Syria, around 6.5 million people are estimated to be food insecure and another four million people are at risk of food insecurity,” stated the report.      

Dry weather conditions in South America have lowered cereal output in 2018 from last year’s record, particularly for maize. In Central America and the Caribbean, unfavourable rains also curtailed this year’s maize production, except in Mexico.

Cereal harvests rebound in Far-East Asia and East Africa

In Far-East Asia, cereal production in 2018 is forecast to rise, primarily reflecting gains in Bangladesh and India, with the latter seeing a record wheat output this year due to favourable weather conditions.

Similarly, in Bangladesh, beneficial weather supported by prospects of remunerative prices triggered an expansion in paddy plantings that drove up cereal production in 2018, following reduced outputs last year.

Likewise, as a result of beneficial weather, cereal harvests in East Africa are also forecast to rebound from the reduced levels of 2017. However, torrential rains earlier this year, and more recently in August, resulted in floods causing localised crop losses.  

The 39 countries currently in need of external food assistance are Afghanistan, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cabo Verde, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, Congo, Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Djibouti, Eritrea, Eswatini (former Swaziland), Ethiopia, Guinea, Haiti, Iraq, Kenya, Lesotho, Liberia, Libya, Madagascar, Malawi, Mali, Mauritania, Mozambique, Myanmar, Niger, Nigeria, Pakistan, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Somalia, South Sudan, Sudan, Syria, Uganda, Yemen and Zimbabwe.

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