Current:Home > NewsWorld Hunger Rises with Climate Shocks, Conflict and Economic Slumps -SecureNest Finance
World Hunger Rises with Climate Shocks, Conflict and Economic Slumps
FinLogic FinLogic Quantitative Think Tank Center View
Date:2025-04-09 05:56:22
The combined forces of climate change, conflict and economic stagnation are driving more people around the world into hunger, reversing earlier progress, the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization reported on Monday.
Although the numbers fluctuate as economies rise and fall, conflicts come and go, and climate emergencies intensify and recede, the prevalence of hunger remains stubbornly high. In 2015, rates of hunger began to rise after decades of progress, and while the rates have now stabilized, the overall number of undernourished people is still rising as the population expands.
The FAO estimates that 820 million people suffered from malnourishment, up from 785 million in 2015. Overall, nearly 2 billion people face either moderate or severe food insecurity, meaning they don’t have regular access to nutritious food, the FAO reports.
“Economic shocks are contributing to prolonging and worsening the severity of food crises caused primarily by conflict and climate shocks,” the FAO warns in the new report.
It finds that countries experiencing economic declines or those slow to recover from the 2008-2009 global economic downturn are seeing rising hunger and food insecurity. Those most severely affected are in Africa, Latin America, the Caribbean and Western Asia, but hunger is also increasing in middle-income countries. Of the 77 countries where hunger levels rose, 66 experienced an economic slowdown or downturn between 2011 and 2017.
In previous reports, the FAO explored other primary drivers of hunger, including conflict and climate change. “Overall, it is hard to separate the contribution of each of the three drivers individually to prevalence of undernourishment. This is because economic shocks can directly contribute to undernourishment but also indirectly by exacerbating the effects of conflict and climate shocks,” explained Arif Husain, of the World Food Program, which co-published the new report.
“We do, however, know that in 2018 at least 113 million people experienced acute hunger at crises and emergency levels,” he said. “Conflict was the key driver for 74 million people; followed by climate vulnerability as the main reason for another 29 million people; and economic shocks as the primary driver for 10 million people.”
The report underscores the complex interplay among climate change, conflict and economic stagnation and their combined impact on malnourishment. In drought-ravaged parts of Central America for example, a prolonged drought is stoking higher hunger rates and migration to the region’s cities and northward to the United States.
The report also emphasized the urgent need for addressing the role of climate change in threatening global food production, particularly as the global population soars.
“We need food systems that are sustainable, nutritious, inclusive and efficient,” Gilbert F. Houngbo, president of the UN’s International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), said Monday at UN headquarters in New York, where the report was released. “This means supporting a system that first protects the planet and second provides nutritious and diverse food.”
“It is crystal clear to me that any single project today has to automatically embed a climate change dimension,” Houngbo said. Otherwise, he said, any action you want to take will not be sustainable.
Climate Change Makes It Harder to End Hunger
Monday’s report is the latest this month to emphasize the profound impact of climate change on the ability to sustain the increasing demands of the global diet.
In its latest annual progress report on the 17 Sustainable Development Goals set by global leaders in 2015, the UN said the world was not on track to achieve the first two goals—reducing extreme poverty and ending hunger—largely because of climate change.
“The most urgent area for action is climate change,” UN Under-Secretary-General for Economic and Social Affairs Liu Zhenmin wrote in his introduction to the report.
“If we do not cut record-high greenhouse gas emissions now, global warming is projected to reach 1.5°C in the coming decades,” he wrote. “As we are already seeing, the compounded effects will be catastrophic and irreversible: increasing ocean acidification, coastal erosion, extreme weather conditions, the frequency and severity of natural disasters, continuing land degradation, loss of vital species and the collapse of ecosystems.”
The key to reducing hunger rates will be helping small-scale farmers become more resilient and better equipped to withstand climate-related weather extremes, the report said. But it noted that government spending on agriculture and aid to farmers from member countries of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) has fallen precipitously since the 1980s.
Much of Expected Crop Rise Will Go to Livestock
Last week, the OECD, along with the FAO, published another report showing that agricultural production is expected to rise 15 percent over the next decade, largely because of technological advancements.
Much of the expected increase in crop production will go toward livestock, feeding a growing demand for protein and dairy products, especially from developing countries and China.
That means agriculture’s carbon footprint will continue to be significant, the report says.
The findings also point to another important problem in global food distribution: That while agriculture production is on the rise, adequate nutrition doesn’t always reach people equally.
“Frankly, we already produce over 4 billion tons of food annually, of which a third is wasted,” Husain, of the World Food Program, explained. “Bottom line—we produce more than enough to feed everyone today despite all this waste. Increasing production is good but it won’t solve the hunger problem unless we make food affordable and accessible to all—particularly those living in conflict stricken places around the world.”
ICN reporter Nina Pullano contributed to this report from the UN.
veryGood! (5927)
Related
- Will the 'Yellowstone' finale be the last episode? What we know about Season 6, spinoffs
- Angelina Jolie Shares Rare Insight into Life With Her and Brad Pitt's Kids
- Demi Moore Shakes Off a Nip Slip Like a Pro During Paris Fashion Week
- J. Cole reveals Colin Kaepernick asked Jets GM Joe Douglas for practice squad role
- Where will Elmo go? HBO moves away from 'Sesame Street'
- Jimmy Carter’s 99th birthday celebration moved to Saturday to avoid federal shutdown threat
- A Belgian bishop says the Vatican has for years snubbed pleas to defrock a pedophile ex-colleague
- Germany increases border patrols along migrant ‘smuggling routes’ to Poland and Czech Republic
- Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
- Bahrain rights group says 13 convicted over prison sit-in that authorities say was violent
Ranking
- Tarte Shape Tape Concealer Sells Once Every 4 Seconds: Get 50% Off Before It's Gone
- Over 50,000 Armenians flee enclave as exodus accelerates
- Uber Eats will accept SNAP, EBT for grocery deliveries in 2024
- More than 260,000 toddler books recalled due to choking hazard
- Juan Soto praise of Mets' future a tough sight for Yankees, but World Series goal remains
- A Talking Heads reunion for the return of Stop Making Sense
- Anderson Cooper Details His Late Mom's Bats--t Crazy Idea to Be His Surrogate
- Over 100 masked teens ransack and loot Philadelphia stores leading to several arrests, police say
Recommendation
Federal Spending Freeze Could Have Widespread Impact on Environment, Emergency Management
Crucial for a Clean Energy Economy, the Aluminum Industry’s Carbon Footprint Is Enormous
Find Out When Your Favorite Late Night TV Shows Are Returning Post-Writers Strike
Lebanese military court sentences an Islamic State group official to 160 years in prison
Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
Bahrain says a third soldier has died after an attack this week by Yemeni rebels on the Saudi border
Long COVID has affected nearly 7% of American adults, CDC survey data finds
Climate change and the shift to cleaner energy push Southeast Asia to finally start sharing power