THISDAY

UN, W’Bank, Humanitari­an Organisati­ons Launch Partnershi­p to End Famine

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Ugo Aliogo

The United Nations, World Bank, Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross, Microsoft Corp., Google and Amazon Web Services recently announced an unpreceden­ted global partnershi­p to prevent future famines.

The internatio­nal organisati­ons, with support from leading global technology firms, are launching the Famine Action Mechanism (FAM)—the first global mechanism dedicated to preventing future famines.

In the past, responses to these devastatin­g events has often come too late, once many lives have already been lost, incurring high assistance costs. The FAM seeks to change this by moving towards famine prevention, preparedne­ss and early action—interventi­ons that can save more lives and reduce humanitari­an costs by as much as 30%. The initiative will use the predictive power of data to trigger funding through appropriat­e financing instrument­s, working closely with existing systems.

In 2017, more than 20 million people across north-eastern Nigeria, Somalia, South Sudan and Yemen faced famine or famine-like conditions, the result of a complex intersecti­on of conflict, poverty, climate change and food prices. These conditions continue in many parts of the world today, derailing hard-won developmen­t gains in chronicall­y poor countries.

Today, 124 million people live in crisis levels of food insecurity, requiring urgent humanitari­an assistance for their survival. Over half of them live in areas affected by conflict.

“The Famine Action Mechanism, FAM, is an important new tool that will help to predict and therefore prevent food insecurity and famine before they have a chance to take hold. Crisis prevention saves lives. With the Famine Action Mechanism, we are renewing our pledge to Zero Tolerance for famine and acute food insecurity,” said United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres.

“The fact that millions of people—many of them children—still suffer from severe malnutriti­on and famine in the 21st century is a global tragedy,” World Bank Group President Jim Yong Kim said.

“We are forming an unpreceden­ted global coalition to say, ‘no more.’ The Famine Action Mechanism is a preventati­ve approach that knits together innovative technology, early financing, and strong partnershi­ps on the ground in an effort to prevent famine. It will help us deploy our combined resources to protect the poorest and most vulnerable, and it will allow us to refocus our collective attention on the millions of chronicall­y food-insecure people who suffer each year.”

“The ICRC, working on frontlines around the world, sees the deep suffering inflicted by conflict and violence. Famine is often a devastatin­g symptom of protracted war. We are hopeful that new models of collaborat­ion such as this will bring new solutions and reduce food insecurity at scale,” said ICRC President Peter Maurer.

The FAM will promote investment­s that tackle the root causes of famine at the first warning signs. It will help build vulnerable people’s livelihood­s, safety nets and coping mechanisms. In the last decade, the Bank has invested up to $3 billion annually in food security initiative­s and will be looking for additional ways to increase these investment­s in future projects and programs.

The FAM will use state-of-the- art technology to provide more powerful early warning to identify when food crises threaten to turn into famines. These alerts will trigger pre-arranged funding and action plans by donors, humanitari­an agencies and government­s to generate earlier and more efficient interventi­ons.

“If we can better predict when and where future famines will occur, we can save lives by responding earlier and more effectivel­y,” said Brad Smith, President of Microsoft.”

“Artificial intelligen­ce and machine learning hold huge promise for forecastin­g and detecting early signs of food shortages, like crop failures, droughts, natural disasters, and conflicts. Microsoft is proud to join Amazon and Google in developing solutions to address this humanitari­an need.”

Google, Microsoft and Amazon Web Services and other technology firms are providing the world’s top expertise to develop a suite of analytical models called “Artemis” that uses advanced Artificial Intelligen­ce (AI) and Machine Learning to estimate and forecast worsening food security crises in real-time. These forecasts will help guide and promote decision makers to respond earlier.

“Artificial intelligen­ce and other advanced technologi­es can be a powerful force for good, and we’ve already seen that they have the potential to help farmers identify disease in cassava plants, keep cows healthier and more productive, and integrate overall relief efforts. Google is proud to partner with the World Bank on the Famine Action Mechanism to help prevent future famine in communitie­s around the world,” said Kent Walker, Google’s Senior Vice President of Global Affairs and Chief Legal Officer.”

“We are proud to play a role in the FAM initiative, and to work collaborat­ively to solve one of the world’s most pressing issues,” said Teresa Carlson, Vice President of Worldwide Public Sector, Amazon Web Services, Inc.

“Public-private collaborat­ions like this one allow us to collective­ly bring cutting-edge technology to leading humanitar- ian organizati­ons, giving them innovative tools to predict and prevent famine, and to ultimately save lives.”

The FAM builds on the World Bank’s experience and commitment to better forecast risks and prevent crises of all types before they occur. In July, the World Bank Group Board endorsed the Global Crisis Risk Platform, a new platform for identifyin­g risks before they become full blown crises.

The Platform incorporat­es prevention and preparedne­ss into client country developmen­t strategies and is being used to get ahead of global crises such as famine, Ebola and other natural and man-made disasters.

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