In progress at UNHQ

FAO/3633

FAO SAYS SHARPLY HIGHER CEREAL PRICES MAKE SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA'S FOOD SECURITY OUTLOOK PRECARIOUS

29 May 1996


Press Release
FAO/3633


FAO SAYS SHARPLY HIGHER CEREAL PRICES MAKE SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA'S FOOD SECURITY OUTLOOK PRECARIOUS

19960529 NAIROBI, 29 May (FAO) -- A United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) report, released in Nairobi today, calls sub-Saharan Africa's food security outlook "precarious" as global cereal supplies tighten and food said availabilities shrink. Sharp increases in cereal prices on the world market and consequent higher cost cereal imports, coupled with balance- of-payments difficulties in food deficit African countries, will mean that a large proportion of food imports of the region will need to be covered by food aid.

Yet, FAO is forecasting global food aid availability in 1995/1996 at 7.6 million tons, the third consecutive annual decline and the lowest level in 20 years.

According to the report, "There are no signs of an imminent improvement in the food supply situation in the current year in sub-Saharan Africa as a whole. There are currently about 22 million people in the region facing food emergencies of varying intensity."

The report says a combination of unfavourable factors threaten sub- Saharan Africa's progress towards food security, including a 9.5 million ton drop in aggregate cereal production compared to the 1994 level and international cereal prices that have risen by more than 50 per cent over the past year. Reflecting this sharp rise in prices, the cereal import bill for the low-income food-deficit countries of Africa in 1995/1996 is forecast to increase by about $1.4 billion above last year's cost.

The head of FAO's Global Information and Early Warning System, Abdur Rashid, which published the report, said, "Africa's precarious food security could lead to a genuine human tragedy". Already 210 million people in Africa suffer from hunger and undernutrition -- 40 per cent of that continent's population. The World Food Summit, which will convene from 13 to 17 November at FAO headquarters, will be seeking ways to head off this tragedy by finding ways to end such food shortages and guarantee the most basic of human rights: the right to adequate food for all at all times.

"Water has a crucial role to play in African food security", according to Mr. Rashid. "That's why we added a special feature on the crucial need for increased irrigation to improve food production in sub-Saharan Africa."

- 2 - Press Release FAO/3633 29 May 1996

Significant expansion of irrigation in sub-Saharan Africa is urgently needed. Compelling reasons include the overwhelming reliance on highly variable, erratic rainfall; frequent severe droughts; rising population pressure accompanied by declining farm size; falling soil productivity and land degradation; and the existence of substantial, untapped irrigation potential.

Noting "some positive signs," the report says, "The food supply situation is generally satisfactory in western Africa, following good harvests in most Sahelian and coastal countries. Ethiopia, one of the major recipients of international food aid over the last decade, will require smaller quantities of food aid imports in 1996."

Angola, Mozambique and Rwanda are gradually beginning to reap the dividends of peace, and a recent peace agreement in Sierra Leone offers the hope of partial recovery of food production and marking in 1996, it continues.

In southern Africa, the report says "Initial indications are that the subregion's output may be above average and well up on last year's drought- reduced level, on account of an increase in area planted and expected above average yields". South Africa and Zimbabwe may even become self-sufficient in maize once again, possibly generating significant surpluses, according to the report.

In Monrovia, Liberia, the report warns, "The volatile security situation could undermine agricultural production in 1996 and hamper relief operations, which are generally coordinated from Monrovia". Continuing insecurity in some provinces in Burundi and unfavourable weather conditions have reduced the 1996 season food production by 15 per cent below normal.

The report estimates aggregate cereal production in the Horn of Africa in 1995/1996 at 5 per cent below the previous year's harvest. "Reduced crops in Eritrea, Somalia and Sudan more than offset the significant gain in production in Ethiopia. Production also declined in Kenya, but remained above average. Large numbers of vulnerable people and those affected by localized crop failure require continued food assistance throughout 1996", according to the report.

"There are an estimated 9 million people currently facing severe food shortages in eastern Africa, including some 7 million in the Horn of Africa."

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For information media. Not an official record.