Source: WORLD ECONOMIC FORUM
Africa is facing its worst food crisis in years, as El Nino rages
across the continent; new analysis fromMail & Guardian Africa
collating data from the UN, IRIN, the Famine Early Warning System
Network (FEWS Net) and various news agencies reveals that more than 40
million people in Africa are facing food insecurity – and some, outright
starvation.
The continent needs at least $4.5 billion for emergency relief, but
just a fraction of that has been raised so far, even as analysis from
Oxfam shows that an early response is far cheaper than a late one.
The Horn of Africa – particularly Ethiopia – and much of southern
Africa is in bad straits; and the weather is not the only factor at
play. A country’s ability to cope depends partly on its public finances
and ability to mobilise resources; for some, weakening currencies is
making food imports more expensive, and conflict is making it difficult
to move supplies around.
Still, there are some bright spots, as most of Sahelian West Africa
is enjoying above average rainfall and bumper harvests– a clever
African Union would have found a way to harness these disparities on the
continent. We run down some of the numbers:
Ethiopia
In absolute numbers, Ethiopia is the hardest hit. 10.2 million
Ethiopians need food aid this year, as the country faces its worst
drought in fifty years. Another 7.9 million “chronically food insecure”
people in the Horn of African country of almost 100 million people are
receiving support through a regular safety-net programme already funded
by the government and donors.
Ethiopia needs $1.4 billion of food aid this year to prevent a
potentially catastrophic escalation in chronic malnutrition cases;
400,000 children will probably need supplementary
feeding because of severe acute malnutrition later this year. So far,
aid groups and the Ethiopian authorities have received about half of
that $1.4 billion appeal for emergency funds, Save the Children said.
South Sudan
Nearly a quarter of South Sudan’s population, or 2.8 million
people, urgently needs food aid, and at least 40,000 are on the brink of
catastrophe. The country is in a particularly precarious position,
facing the devastating effects of both drought and conflict..
South Sudan needs $1.3 billion to provide emergency relief this
year, but so far, aid groups have received just 2% of that, says a
recent UN statement.
Southern Africa is also very hard hit,
though the impact in each country has been mixed, influenced not only
by the weather but also the government’s public finances and thus
ability to cope.
Zimbabwe
Drought in Zimbabwe has ruined harvests and left more than a
quarter of the country’s 15 million people lacking secure food supply –
about 3 million people may need food aid this year.
The country needs $1.6 billion to combat hunger, Vice President
Emmerson Mnangagwa said – that’s more than what Ethiopia or even South
Sudan needs, which suggests that the government is well and truly
squeezed.
Of that amount, $717 million is needed to buy grain, with another
$200 million for school feeding programs and almost $140 million to
support livestock farmers, according to a statement distributed on
Tuesday in the capital, Harare.
South Africa
South Africa is also facing scorching heat, with record-high
temperatures last year, and rainfall in 2015 being the lowest in 112
years. Five out of the country’s nine provinces have been declared
drought disaster zones, as crops fail and livestock perish – nearly
800,000 cattle may have to be culled.
South Africa’s government may not be requesting formal assistance
from the international community, and in all likelihood will import
supplies itself to cover its needs. Analysts expect South Africa to
import between 3 million and 4 million tonnes of maize to fill the gap,
but this comes as the country’s currency has fallen to all-time lows
against the US dollar.
Malawi
In Malawi, the 2014/15 cereal harvest was 24% down on the five-year
average. Currently, 2.8 million people are “food insecure” (they lack
access to food that’s sufficient to lead healthy and active lives) out
of a population of 16 million as a result of flooding and drought last
year.
Average maize prices were at a record high in December 2015. The
government’s $146-million Food Insecurity Response Plan is so far 48%
funded.
Angola
Angola’s three southern provinces are being scorched by drought –
Cunene, Huila, and Cuando Cubango. In Cunene, 800,000 people – 72% of
the population – have been hit by crop losses and livestock deaths, with
child malnutrition rates beyond the emergency threshold of 15%.
Nationwide 1.25 million are at risk.
Mozambique
El Niño’s climate impact splits Mozambique in two – in the north
there has been flooding, in the south drought. More than 176,000 people
are in crisis in the provinces of Gaza, Inhambane, Sofala, and Niassa,
until at least the next harvest.
A further 575,000 people are food insecure, especially in Zambézia,
Maputo, and Niassa provinces – a total of 750,000. Around 50,300 people
are receiving food assistance in Gaza and Sofala, IRIN reports.
Swaziland
In Swaziland, more than 201,000 people out of 1.1 million – one
fifth of the population – are food insecure. Maize prices have already
increased 66%.
Madagascar
In Madagascar, nearly 1.9 million people – 8.6% of the population –
were “food insecure” in 2015, with 450,000 of them in crisis. The
drought-hit southern regions of Androy, Anosy, and Atsimo Andrefana are
struggling badly, with 380,000 people – 30% of the population –
affected, reports from IRIN indicate.
DR Congo
In The Democratic Republic of Congo, fighting in the east of the
county worsens DRC’s food insecurity. Orientale, Equateur, South Kivu,
and Katanga provinces are already at emergency levels. An estimated 6.6
million people face food shortages.
The good news
But it’s not all doom and gloom – most of West Africa is in pretty good shape,
having enjoyed average to above-average rainfall and good harvests
thanks to El Nino’s effect on ocean currents in the Gulf of Guinea,
according to reports from FEWS Net.
Senegal, Burkina Faso, Mali, and most of Chad and Niger are on “minimal” alert for food insecurity,
according to FEWS Net classification. Supplies on cereal markets have
improved since the lean season (between June and September) with the
arrival of new crops from ongoing harvests. The seasonal decline in
prices since September is improving household cereal access.
In Liberia, 2015/16 rice production levels were average to above average,
with recent official government reports suggesting that Lofa County, a
surplus rice-producing zone where 2014 farming activities were hindered
by the Ebola outbreak, experienced a bumper harvest this year.
It’s largely the same case for Guinea and most of Sierra Leone,
though insecurity in northeastern Nigeria and neighboring areas of Niger
and Chad is reducing activities and food access despite the ongoing
harvests.
Quick response
For the countries in crisis, a quick and timely response is
crucial. Early response and building resilience interventions, however
varied, are significantly more cost-effective than emergency
interventions for seriously malnourished people, a recent report by Oxfam shows.
A five-country study commissioned by the UK’s Department for
International Development (DFID) in Ethiopia, Kenya, Senegal, Niger,
Mozambique and Malawi estimated that response at four months after a
failed harvest costs $49 per household, whereas response at six months
after harvest costs $1,294 per household.
A similar study in Ethiopia found that early commercial destocking
(selling off animals while they are still healthy) was 137 times cheaper
than waiting until herds are depleted then responding with imported
food aid and restocking.
Still, a perceived risk in responding early is that humanitarian
funds will be released incorrectly to situations that turn out not to be
a disaster.
“National governments and donors are afraid of ‘crying wolf’ by
reacting pre-emptively to forecasts that are subsequently proven to be
incorrect, which presumably leads to funding being misallocated,” the
Oxfam brief says.
But the report states that the shift to early response does not
incur any additional cost compared with late response; in fact, smart
implementation of early response strengthens a community’s resilience.
Don’t wait and see
“Economic concerns over false early response are unwarranted.
Country studies found that, for every early response to a correctly
forecast crisis, early responses could be made 2–6 times to crises that
do not materialise, before the cost of a single late response is met,”
the DFID study concluded, as quoted in the Oxfam brief.
At-risk countries, donors and humanitarian actors must acknowledge
that waiting to see if a situation becomes a large-scale crisis before
committing funding and resources is a false economy, Oxfam urges; a
quick response is a “clear economic win”.
The current El Niño is expected to persist for at least an additional 4-6 months.
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