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Friday- 08:17, 02/12/2022

FAO will require $1.9 billion to reach 48 million people with life-saving and livelihood assistance

(VAN) Acute food insecurity soars driven by conflicts, extreme weather events, rising food prices.
With less than 4 percent of the of the $51.5 billion required across all appeals for 2023, FAO can provide time-critical livelihoods assistance to almost 50 million most vulnerable people.

With less than 4 percent of the of the $51.5 billion required across all appeals for 2023, FAO can provide time-critical livelihoods assistance to almost 50 million most vulnerable people.

The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) in 2023 is seeking $1.9 billion to save the lives and livelihoods of some of the most severely acute food insecure people, as acute food insecurity continues to escalate globally.

The announcement was made as part of the United Nations’ larger humanitarian appeal launched by the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) at a special event in Geneva today.

With less than 4 percent of the $51.5 billion required across all appeals for 2023, FAO can provide time-critical livelihoods assistance to ensure 48 million people have a steady supply of nutritious food. Through cash, crop and vegetable seed packages, livestock feed, animal health campaigns, improvements to vital infrastructure like irrigation systems and markets, FAO can ensure families and communities in the most remote, conflict-hit areas are able to feed themselves and lay the foundations for resilience to future shocks.

In 2022, FAO’s emergency support to drought-hit communities in the Horn of Africa has protected vital livestock assets, ensuring that 4.4 million children can access milk every day, and has led to the production of over 100 000 tonnes of cereals and provided more than 1.5 million people with cash to purchase food, health care and other essentials.

FAO’s interventions are above-all geared towards meeting the needs and priorities of affected communities who are overwhelmingly farmers, fishers, herders and foresters – allowing them to remain in their homes where it is safe to do so, meet their own needs and lead their own future recovery.

Major drivers of acute food insecurity

Extreme weather events, such as droughts and floods, the outbreak of the war in Ukraine and proliferation of other conflicts, followed by the growing uncertainty around global food and agriculture markets drive acute food insecurity to new highs. As 2022 nears an end, almost one million people face the immediate threat of starvation – almost double the numbers of 2021. Across the world, 222 million people are experiencing high acute food insecurity, almost one in five of whom are struggling to access enough food to survive the day.

In the Horn of Africa alone, struggling with an unprecedented drought - an event not seen in 40 years - between 23 and 26 million people are projected to be in urgent need of humanitarian assistance, and acute food insecurity is expected to continue intensifying by February 2023 due to an anticipated, unprecedented sixth consecutive season of drought.

The cost of food has been steadily rising since the onset of COVID-19, with international food commodity prices already at a ten-year high before the war in Ukraine sent further shockwaves through the system. While prices in international staple foods have recently been decreasing, consumer prices remain high with significant implications for purchasing power and food access among the poorest.

Conflicts and political instability continue to ravage lives and livelihoods across the world, forcing people to flee their homes and abandon their farms, boats, livestock, pushing them into destitution and total reliance on external assistance.

FAO boosts response to crises and emergencies

FAO has stepped up its efforts to reach those most in need throughout 2022 – assisting 30 million people with time-critical support, focusing on rural populations and those for whom agriculture represents their very survival.

In Afghanistan alone, FAO is expecting to reach 9 million people by the end of the year – about half of the rural population experiencing high acute food insecurity. Some 3.6 million people will benefit from the ongoing winter wheat distribution, which will be completed by December.

In Somalia, over $24 million in cash, alongside livelihoods assistance, has been provided to rural communities who are most exposed to famine, while more than 11 million livestock have received feed, water and basic health treatment.

In Ukraine, alongside providing emergency agricultural support to farmers, such as seed potatoes, vegetable seeds and cash assistance, FAO is intensifying efforts to safeguard existing and upcoming harvests and food reserves. FAO has provided massive capacity to store up to 6 million tonnes of grain (about 30 percent of the national need). This assistance is crucial to ensure that grain is properly saved, and farmers are able to sell and export grain when appropriate.

Agriculture in emergencies remains massively underfunded

Agriculture is a frontline humanitarian response and must be considered as such in all humanitarian appeals. Urgent agricultural interventions, especially when combined with cash and food assistance, have enormous impacts on food availability, nutrition and displacement, significantly cutting other humanitarian costs.

For example, at a cost of just $220, the winter wheat packages being distributed in Afghanistan will enable a family to produce enough food to meet their annual cereal needs and leave a surplus for them to sell.

In 2022, FAO received only 43 percent of the funds requested under the Humanitarian Response Plans, yet this conceals an enormous imbalance of funds, with appeals for Afghanistan fully funded while those for Nigeria and the Syrian Arab Republic have barely passed 10 percent of requirements.

Today’s event in Geneva was one of three sequential launches to present the 2023 Global Humanitarian Overview (GHO) followed by events in Addis Ababa in partnership with the African Union and Riyadh in partnership with the King Salman Humanitarian Aid and Relief Centre - KS Relief.

Tr.D

(FAO.org)

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