Humanitarian & Food Aid Can Never be Enough to Manage Cascading Disasters

28/3/21

  The intersection of crisis, climate change and COVID-19 has resulted in a “rapid rise in hunger”, according to United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) Deputy Executive Director Amir Abdullah.

He was speaking at the “Building Food and Water Security in an Era of Climate Shocks” event organised by the UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs (UN DESA). The meeting featured representatives from other UN bodies, farmers’ associations and startups working on water security and agriculture around the world.

Abdullah highlighted the numerous disasters that hit globally last year while the world was in the middle of the pandemic: destructive heat waves, wildfires, floods, storms, and locust outbreaks.

“Humanitarian aid can never be enough to manage these cascading shocks that keep breaking down food systems and pushing people into food and water crises,” he said.

He added that no matter how much improvement is made in food production, it will all be futile unless the issue of water security is addressed.

“We can deliver food assistance but if farmers don't have adequate access to water resources for food production, people will just continue being hungry,” he said. “And if people don't have access to clean water, they can't retain the nutrition they need even if we provide them with food assistance.”

Betty Chinyamunyamu, CEO of the National Smallholder Farmers’ Association of Malawi, said the past decade has witnessed an “onset of weather crises” which have made it extremely difficult for farmers to plan their sales.

“Increased incidences of new pests, diseases and unpredictable weather patterns make it more difficult for farmers to plan their farm enterprises. So when they're not sure whether they are going to have a flood or whether they are going to have drought, it becomes very difficult to engage in initiatives that would otherwise be very rewarding for them,” Chinyamunyamu said. 

“That unpredictability of weather is really making agriculture less profitable for the farmers,” she added.

Cherrie Atilano, CEO and President of AGREA, which works to ensure fair trade in sustainable agriculture in the Philippines, brought up the importance of collaboration between the private and public sector. She pointed to an example that worked in the Philippines at the beginning of the pandemic.

Just a few days after the first lockdown, many farmers were left wondering where to take their produce, as their mobility had suddenly been restricted, she said. At the same time, in Manila, the country’s capital with a population of more than 12 million, people scrambled for groceries as supermarkets shelves were empty.

Her team addressed this by contacting the agriculture ministry asking for farmers’ access to work to be restored so long as they maintained COVID-19 protocols.

Meanwhile, Chinyamunyamu shared the role that digital platforms and innovative technology played during the crisis, especially in giving access to marginalised groups.

The lockdown was especially disruptive for the farmers in Malawi, because it came at a time which was the “only marketing season” for them, she said. Chinyamunyamu explained that farmers were able to address this challenge through innovative approaches, including using digital technology such as mobile phones

Farmers were able to share information with each other on markets, as well as developments about COVID-19 by communicating via mobile phone. This was especially important for marginalised groups because it established an important way to reach vulnerable communities.

“Even though women still have less access than men to mobile phones, if a woman has a mobile phone, it’s theirs — they have control over the usage,” she said. “So if you pass on information to women through mobile phones, that's information that goes directly to them.”

However, concerns remain about what lies ahead.

“In the coming decades, many regions around the world are expected to experience increased water scarcity driven by climate change and exacerbated by increasing competition for water resources,” Abdullah said. 

“The battle for water will be one of the next ‘great challenges,’” he added.

Samir Ibrahim, co-founder of SunCulture, a startup for solar-powered generators and water pumps in Africa, shared his experience working with innovative technology on the continent.

He pointed out that new ways for the allocation of funds was crucial for the sustenance of such projects.

“What is important for the ‘newness’ is not necessarily new technologies,” he said. “What we’ve seen is that emerging markets were solving problems that have been solved in other parts of the world.”

He said that while their company did not invent solar irrigation, it was “the first to commercialise in Africa”.

“While technology is incredibly important, we had to do a lot of innovation on battery storage,” he added.

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All comments [ 20 ]


The free Wind 28/3/21 21:13

For more than 50 years, the World Food Programme (WFP) has provided emergency food assistance, often in conflict, post-conflict or disaster situations.

Socialist Society 28/3/21 21:17

To this day, we continue to assist millions of people displaced, rendered homeless or deprived of basic resources by cataclysmic events, whether man-made or natural, avoidable or not.

Gentle Moon 28/3/21 21:19

Emergency food aid is the dominant humanitarian response to food insecurity precipitated by disasters.

Vietnam Love 28/3/21 21:20

There is a significant literature on food aid effectiveness (e.g., bolstering food security, targeting, modality selection) in various disaster contexts.

Red Star 28/3/21 21:20

There has been no explicit research on the possible effects of emergency food aid on the causal disaster vulnerability of Indigenous food systems.

For A Peace World 28/3/21 21:25

Emergency food aid exacerbates several key determinants of vulnerability such as declining self-efficacy and adaptive capacity, in addition to encouraging unsustainable food system practices.

yobro yobro 28/3/21 21:26

The following factors may contribute to an emergency with food shortages: a rapid or slow-onset natural disaster such as floods, droughts and major storms; armed conflict or civil unrest, which often forcibly displaces many people; a disruption in the distribution of emergency food items to affected populations

Voice of people 28/3/21 21:27

In humanitarian emergencies where there are food shortages, assistance in this regard does not only consist of delivering food to affected populations, but also ensuring that the food that is provided is nutritionally appropriate, addresses context-specific problems, and meets minimum energy, protein and fat requirements for survival and light physical activity.

LawrenceSamuels 28/3/21 21:28

Many factors must be taken into consideration, including supporting local farmers and businesses as much as possible, and ensuring the delivered food reaches the people most in need.

Me Too! 28/3/21 21:28

Even after rations are established for particular emergencies, monitoring mechanisms must also be established to determine their adequacy, given often rapidly changing circumstances in emergencies and the needs of vulnerable sub-groups, such as children, pregnant and lactating women, and elderly people.

John Smith 28/3/21 21:29

After a situation has somewhat stabilized, it is important for agencies to estimate food and nutritional needs in the post-emergency phase.

Duncan 28/3/21 21:30

This process can be quite complex since it involves an analysis of the resources and access particular populations have to meet to their own needs in this regard.

Swift Hoodie 28/3/21 21:30

Like other elements of a humanitarian response, the delivery of nutritionally appropriate food items to populations in need requires coordination between different participating agencies, in order to ensure no work is duplicated and that the priority is focused on meeting the greatest needs of the most vulnerable.

Robinson Jones 28/3/21 21:38

Food aid should be short-term and in response to an emergency such as the one mentioned above.

Herewecome 28/3/21 21:41

Long-term food aid not only is expensive and creates dependency, but it also negatively affects local agricultural production and thus the local economy.

Kevin Evans 28/3/21 21:43

Assistance should shift as soon as possible after a disaster from direct food aid to more long-term development programs that promote food security in affected communities.

Allforcountry 28/3/21 21:45

The impact of these trends deepens the vulnerability of the world’s poorest, most notably their food and nutritional vulnerability. Chronic food insecurity, where insufficient food production or an inability to purchase enough nutritious food leads to sustained and persistent inadequacies in the quantity or quality of food consumed, is a driver of chronic malnutrition.

Jacky Thomas 28/3/21 21:48

Humanitarian food assistance aims to ensure the consumption of sufficient, safe and nutritious food in anticipation of, during, and in the aftermath of a humanitarian crisis, when food consumption would
otherwise be insufficient or inadequate to avert excessive mortality.

Enda Thompson 28/3/21 22:01

Humanitarian food assistance can also be used to protect and strengthen the livelihoods of a crisis-affected population, to prevent or reverse negative coping mechanisms.

Egan 28/3/21 22:06

Humanitarian food assistance operations and food security development interventions should be coordinated (…) pursuing the ultimate objective of self-reliance for victims of food crises.

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