Agriculture

FAO Aims To Provide Livelihood Assistance To Nearly 49 Million People In 2021

11 March 2021 – As the COVID-19 pandemic, conflict and climate-related crises drive acute levels of hunger higher, the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) is seeking $1.1 billion in 2021 to save the lives and livelihoods of some of the world’s most food-insecure people.

In 2021, FAO is aiming to reach more than 48.9 million people who rely on agriculture for their survival and livelihoods through interventions aimed at boosting local food production and nutrition, while strengthening the capacity and resilience of communities to prepare for and cope with crises, as well as providing post-disaster livelihoods support to help people resume production.

Farmer Lochom Ekiru assesses crop damage caused by Desert Locusts in Turkana County, Kenya. | www.brandnewsday.com

According to FAO’s latest data, country after country has recorded new food insecurity figures and the total number of people who experienced acute food insecurity at crisis or worse levels in 2020 is expected to exceed 2019’s high of 135 million people. This year’s Global Report on Food Crises, to be launched by the Global Network against Food Crises in April, will underscore the severity of the situation.

“The shocks of the past year will reverberate long into 2021 and beyond, and we need to urgently scale up actions to avert a worst-case scenario,” said Dominique Burgeon, Director of FAO’s Emergencies and Resilience Division.

Advertisement

Of extreme concern are the estimated 30 million people in Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) Phase 4 or Emergency levels of acute hunger, who are already experiencing excess mortality and the irreversible loss of vital livelihood assets.

Hundreds of thousands of girls, boys, women and men are at extreme risk of acute food insecurity in several countries. Many are living in conflict zones where humanitarian access is restricted or challenging.

“Millions are living on the precipice – one stress or shock away from rapid deterioration. With or without famine declarations, we need to act now,” Burgeon added.

Advertisement

Many depend on agriculture for their lives and livelihoods

Agriculture is critical as nearly four out of five people live in rural areas and rely on some form of agricultural production for their livelihoods. The most severe manifestation of acute hunger remains a largely rural phenomenon so averting famine must therefore begin in rural areas and include large-scale and collective action to save livelihoods and lives.

FAO has already provided critical livelihood support to safeguard the livelihoods of over 24 million people against the socio‑economic impacts of COVID-19. Desert Locust control operations have also had an impact in the Greater Horn of Africa and Yemen where FAO has protected over 3.1 million tonnes of cereal, worth $939 million, enough to feed more than 20.8 million people for a year and protect more than 1.5 million pastoral households.

With FAO’s support, those affected can have the means and the capacity to produce the food needed to stave off acute hunger.

Advertisement

FAO targets assistance to acutely food insecure

FAO’s emergency response in 2021 will focus on providing assistance to highly food-insecure communities in more than 30 countries including the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ethiopia, Somalia, South Sudan, Syria and Yemen.

Yemen is suffering the world’s worst humanitarian crisis as a consequence of conflict and economic collapse. Farmers have also had to deal with Desert Locusts and natural disasters. FAO aims to reach 6.3 million people with high impact interventions combining cash and agricultural livelihoods support and promoting community resilience.

In Syria, 12 million people will benefit from restoring agricultural livelihoods and value chains while in Ethiopia, the Organization aims to assist 6.7 million people facing acute hunger and another 6 million people in South Sudan to improve their food security, resilience and agricultural production.

Advertisement

Recognizing that close monitoring and agility are crucial tools in preventing rapid deterioration, FAO will continue to expand its anticipatory action linked to early warnings in 2021 to protect livelihoods before a disaster.

“We will continue investing in the most vulnerable people and their livelihoods so that they can lead their future recovery and pull themselves out of acute hunger,” said Burgeon.

Facebook Comments
Advertisement
Brand News Day

Recent Posts

How To Create Profitable Ice Cream Business In Nigeria Despite Challenges

Starting an ice cream venture in Nigeria presents strong profit potential for entrepreneurs who can…

4 hours ago

WARC Unveils Multiplier Playbook: The CMO’s Guide To Integrating Brand And Performance Advertising

May 19, 2026 – There is a “say-do gap” in Brand and Performance Advertising: most…

7 hours ago

Nigeria Files N66.4 Billion Tax Fraud Charges Against Saipem Contracting, Directors

The Federal Government of Nigeria has arraigned Saipem Contracting Nigeria Limited and two of its…

10 hours ago

Nigerians Prioritise Mobile Data Over Food As Annual Consumption Hits 5.4 Million Terabytes, Report Reveals

A growing digital dependency is redefining everyday survival in Nigeria, where access to mobile data/mobile…

5 days ago

Global Ranking, Local Identity: How Guinness Conquered Nigeria By Becoming Nigerian

Guinness has ranked Nigeria as its third-largest market worldwide, reinforcing the country’s growing importance to…

2 weeks ago

Stanbic IBTC Reinforces Leadership In Trade Finance At GTR West Africa 2026

Stanbic IBTC Bank, a subsidiary of Stanbic IBTC Holdings and a member of Standard Bank…

2 weeks ago

This website uses cookies.