Desert Locust upsurge continues to threaten food security in Horn of Africa & Yemen despite intense efforts
FAO seeks funds for control operations to safeguard agricultural production & livelihoods
16 December 2020, Rome – A new generation of Desert Locust swarms is threatening agricultural & pastoral livelihoods & the food security of millions of people in the Horn of Africa & Yemen despite intense efforts to control the pest throughout 2020, the Food & Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) said today.
With international support & an unprecedented large-scale response campaign coordinated by FAO, more than 1.3 million hectares of locust infestations have been treated in ten countries since January.
Control operations have prevented the loss of an estimated 2.7 million tonnes of cereal, worth nearly $800 million, in countries already hard hit by acute food insecurity & poverty. That is enough to feed 18 million people a year.
However, favourable weather conditions & widespread seasonal rains have caused extensive breeding in eastern Ethiopia & Somalia. This was worsened by Cyclone Gati which brought flooding to northern Somalia last month allowing locust infestations to increase further in the coming months. New locust swarms are already forming & threatening to re-invade northern Kenya & breeding is also underway on both sides of the Red Sea, posing a new threat to Eritrea, Saudi Arabia, the Sudan & Yemen.
“We have achieved much, but the battle against this relentless pest is not yet over,” said the Director-General of FAO, QU Dongyu. “We must not waver. Locusts keep growing day & night & risks are exacerbating food insecurity for vulnerable families across the affected region.”
FAO is assisting governments & other partners with surveillance & coordination, technical advice & the procurement of supplies & equipment but operations must be further scaled up to safeguard food production & prevent worsening food insecurity in the affected countries.
Donors & partners have so far provided nearly $200 million to finance control efforts, allowing FAO & governments to rapidly scale up locust response capacity in a region that has not faced an upsurge of the pest on this scale in generations. Over 1,500 ground survey & control personnel have been trained & 110 vehicle mounted ground sprayers & 20 aircraft are now in action.
FAO is now seeking a further $40 million to increase surveillance & control activities in the most affected countries – Ethiopia, Kenya, Somalia, the Sudan & Yemen – in 2021. More than 35 million people are already acutely food insecure in these five countries & FAO estimates this number could increase by another 3.5 million, if nothing is done to control the latest outbreak.
Rural livelihoods must be protected
FAO is not only working with governments & partners on control operations. The Organization is taking action to safeguard & protect rural livelihoods by providing affected growers with farming packages, veterinary care & feed for vegetation-starved livestock, & cash for families who have lost their crops so that they can cope until their next harvest.
Over 200 000 households have already received livelihood assistance & that number is expected to increase. FAO will assist an additional 98 000 households in early 2021 & is appealing for continuous support, mainly through Humanitarian Response Plans.
Without additional funding, control efforts could slow down or halt from the end of January 2021, potentially allowing the numbers of the crop-devouring pest to surge in some places. Farmers, whose livelihoods have been impacted, require further support & national capacities in monitoring & responding to Desert Locust still need to be strengthened.
Funding has been received from Belgium, Canada, China, Denmark, the European Union, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Norway, Russian Federation, Saudi Arabia, Sweden, Switzerland, United Arab Emirates, United Kingdom, United States of America, the African Development Bank, the Africa Solidarity Trust Fund, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the Louis Dreyfus Foundation, the Mastercard Foundation, the UN’s Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs’ Central Emergency Response Fund (CERF), & the World Bank Group.
Desert Locust monitoring, forecasting & control are at the heart of FAO’s mandate. Its Desert Locust Information Service has been in operation for nearly 50 years. FAO’s well-established field presence, ability to link up authorities from different countries, & expertise in Desert Locust management make it a key player in responding to upsurges like that currently affecting East Africa.
Source:FAO News
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