A senior official for the United Nations’ Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), has said that drought in the Horn of Africa has killed more than 1.5 million livestock and drastically cut cereal production.
Recall that the U.N. World Food Program had said on February 8 that drought has left an estimated 13 million people in the Horn of Africa facing severe hunger amid the driest conditions since 1981 and that It is seeking $327 million to look after the urgent needs of 4.5 million people over the next six months.
FAO’s director of emergencies and resilience, Rein Paulsen made this known after she returned from the region, stating that a “very small window” exists for taking urgent action.
“A key is whether the region’s long rains between March and May are good — and whether the agency gets the $130 million it needs until June,” Paulsen said.
While noting that we are most definitely now sitting on the brink of catastrophe, Paulsen said that the short rains in the region, which includes parts of Somalia, Ethiopia and Kenya, were supposed to come between October and December but “were extremely poor.
“And this represents the third consecutive failed rainy season with lower average runs, all of which has a severe impact on vulnerable households,” he said.
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He explained that the result of the drought meant that overall cereal production for the last rainy season in southern Somalia was estimated to be 58% lower than the long-term average, adding that In agricultural areas in marginal coastal zones in Southeastern parts of Kenya, crop production is estimated to be 70% below average.
Paulsen said $130 million in funding is essential now to provide cash for people to buy food until production resumes, to keep livestock alive and to provide drought-resistant seeds for farmers to reap a harvest.
According to him, most places for water that have usually been resilient to climate variability have dried up in Kenya.
“We have a window to the middle of this year — to June, which is a very time-sensitive, narrow window for urgent actions to scale up to prevent a worst-case scenario,” Paulsen said. “Agriculture needs a lot more attention. It’s central to the survival of drought-affected communities.”
During his visit to the African region, Paulsen said: “We saw both livestock and wildlife carcasses by the side of the road as we were driving. We saw animals dying together with their farmers, and the numbers I think are quite shocking.”
He explained that In Kenya alone, 1.4 million livestock died in the final part of last year as a result of drought, and in southern Ethiopia, about 240,000 livestock died as a result of drought, he said.
“It was quite traumatic driving through communities and seeing farmers tending livestock as they were dying by the side of the roads,” he said, adding that livestock are not only crucial to people’s livelihoods, but they provide milk for children.
Story was adapted from StarTribune.