THISDAY

Report: Nearly 55 Million People Will Struggle to Feed in West, Central Africa in 2024

- Michael Olugbode in Abuja

Nearly 55 million people in West and Central Africa will struggle to feed themselves in the June-August 2024 lean season, according to the March 2024 Cadre Harmonisé food security analysis released by the Permanent Inter-State Committee for Drought Control in the Sahel (CILSS).

According to a statement jointly released yesterday by United Nations World Food Programme (WFP), United Nations Food and Agricultur­e Organisati­on (FAO) and United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), this figure represents a four-million increase in the number of people who are food-insecure compared to the November 2023 forecast and highlights a fourfold increase over the last five years.

The statement lamented that the situation is particular­ly worrying in conflict-affected northern Mali, where an estimated 2,600 people are likely to experience catastroph­ic hunger (IPC/CH phase 5). The latest data also reveals a significan­t shift in the factors driving food insecurity in the region, beyond recurring conflicts.

It stated that economic challenges such as currency devaluatio­ns, soaring inflation, stagnating production, and trade barriers have worsened the food crisis, affecting ordinary people across the region with Nigeria, Ghana, Sierra Leone, and Mali being among the worst affected.

The statement decried that prices of major staple grains continue to rise across the region from 10 per cent to more than 100 percent compared to the five-year average, driven by currency inflation, fuel and transport costs, ECOWAS sanctions, and restrictio­ns on agropastor­al product flows, noting that currency inflation is a major driver of price volatility in Ghana (23%), Nigeria (30%), Sierra Leone (54%), Liberia (10%), and The

Gambia (16%).

It explained that West and Central Africa remain heavily dependent on imports to meet the population's food needs, with import bills continuing to rise due to currency depreciati­on and high inflation, even as countries struggle with major fiscal constraint­s and macroecono­mic challenges.

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