Connect with us

    Hi, what are you looking for?

    News

    UN report says around 733 million people globally faced hunger in 2023

    Global Hunger Index

    United Nations Food and Agricultural Organisation (FAO) has revealed that 733 million people faced hunger in 2023, which is equivalent to one in 11 people globally and one in five in Africa.

    This is contained in a new report, the State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World (SOFI) published on Wednesday.

    Hunger affected one out of every eleven people in the world and one out of five in Africa, with the number rising on that continent.

    The report highlights that access to adequate food remains elusive for billions with around 2.33 billion people globally faced moderate or severe food insecurity in 2023.

    It adds that this number that has not changed significantly since the sharp upturn in 2020, amid the Covid-19 pandemic.

    David Laborde, the Food and Agriculture Organization’s director of agri-food economics, says solving the problem is a political choice, and also depends on “how much money we are ready to put on the table”.

    “Today we produce enough food on this planet to feed everyone. So if we want to solve the position by 2030, it’s technically feasible,” he says.

    The report predicts that if current trends continue, about 582 million people will be “chronically undernourished by 2030″, half of them in Africa.

    Laborde said chronic hunger was a crisis impacting people not only right now because its impact would still be felt in the future.

    “Pregnant women, kids that face malnutrition problem today, will pay the price all of their life. So by not solving the problem today, we are basically impoverishing these countries in the future,” he says.

    The report says food insecurity and malnutrition are worsening due to a combination of factors, including persisting food price inflation that continues to erode economic gains for many people in many countries.

    And major drivers like conflict, climate change, and economic downturns are becoming more frequent and severe.

    These issues, along with underlying factors such as unaffordable healthy diets, unhealthy food environments, and persistent inequality, are now coinciding simultaneously, amplifying their individual effects.

    Achieving the Sustainable Development Goal of Zero Hunger, it says, requires a multi-faceted approach and targeted interventions.

    This includes transforming and strengthening agrifood systems, addressing inequalities, and ensuring affordable and accessible healthy diets for all.

    The UN agencies are calling for increased and more cost-effective financing, with a clear and standardised definition of financing for food security and nutrition.

    Loading

    Spread the love
    Click to comment

    Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

    ad

    You May Also Like

    Business

    President Bola Tinubu has approved a ₦3.3 trillion payment plan to clear verified legacy debts owed to power generation companies, following criticism from Labour...

    Business

    National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) has alerted Nigerians on counterfeit and unregistered Cerelac Mixed Fruits and Wheat products being...

    Tech

    Offset Communications Advisory Ltd has instituted a N50 million suit against Qore Technologies Ltd at the Federal High Court in Lagos over alleged copyright...

    News

    NDLEA operatives have dismantled a cocaine trafficking syndicate in a three-week intelligence-led operation, intercepting consignments hidden in palm kernel extract tins bound for the...