Drought from El Nino causing southern Africa’s worst hunger crisis in decades
The World Food Programme warned it could become a ‘full-scale human catastrophe’.
Months of drought in southern Africa triggered by the El Nino weather phenomenon have had a devastating effect on more than 27 million people and caused the region’s worst hunger crisis in decades, the United Nations’ food agency said on Tuesday.
The World Food Programme (WFP) warned it could become a “full-scale human catastrophe”.
Five countries – Lesotho, Malawi, Namibia, Zambia and Zimbabwe – have declared national disasters over the drought and resultant hunger.
The WFP estimates some 21 million children in southern Africa are now malnourished because crops have failed.
Tens of millions of people in the region rely on small-scale agriculture that is irrigated by rain for their food and to make some money to buy provisions.
Aid agencies warned of a potential disaster late last year as the naturally occurring El Nino led to below-average rainfall across the region, while its impact has been exacerbated by warming temperatures linked to climate change.
“This is the worst food crisis in decades,” WFP spokesman Tomson Phiri said. “October in southern Africa marks the start of the lean season, and each month is expected to be worse than the previous one until harvests next year in March and April.
“Crops have failed, livestock have perished, and children are lucky to receive one meal per day.”
The five countries that declared drought-related disasters have pleaded for international aid, while Angola on the west coast of Africa and Mozambique on the east coast are also “severely affected”, Mr Phiri said, showing the extent to which the drought has swept across the region.
“The situation is dire,” he said.
He added that the WFP needs around 369 million US dollars (£282.6 million) to provide immediate help but has only received a fifth of that amid a shortfall in donations.
The WFP has begun helping with food assistance and other “critical support” at the request of various governments in the region, he said.
Mr Phiri noted southern Africa’s crisis comes at a time of “soaring global needs”, with humanitarian aid also desperately required in Gaza, Sudan and elsewhere.
Other aid agencies have said this drought in southern Africa has been especially harsh, with the United States aid agency Usaid saying in June it was the most severe drought in 100 years during the January to March agricultural season, wiping out swathes of crops and food for millions.
El Nino, a naturally occurring weather phenomenon which warms parts of the central Pacific, has different effects on weather in different parts of the world.
The latest El Nino formed in the middle of last year and ended in June. It was blamed, along with human-caused climate change and overall ocean warmth, for a wild 12 months of heatwaves and extreme weather.
In southern Africa, food prices have risen sharply in many areas affected by the drought, increasing the hardship. The drought has also had other damaging effects.
Zambia has lost much of its electricity and been plunged into hours and sometimes days of power blackouts because it relies heavily on hydroelectric power from the huge Kariba Dam.
The water level of the dam is so low that it can hardly generate any power. Zimbabwe shares the dam and is also experiencing regular power outages.
Authorities in Namibia and Zimbabwe have resorted to killing wildlife, including elephants, to provide meat for hungry people.
Scientists say sub-Saharan Africa is one of the most vulnerable parts of the world to climate change because of a high dependency on rain-fed agriculture and natural resources.
Millions of African livelihoods depend on the climate, while poor countries are unable to finance climate-resilience measures.