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UN: Conflict and climate threaten to halt progress in global hunger reduction

A U.N. study released on Monday said that the number of hungry people in 2024 fell for a 3rd straight year, falling from an era of COVID spike. Conflict and climate shocks also exacerbated malnutrition throughout much of Africa, and Western Asia.

According to the State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World Report, which was jointly prepared by five U.N. organizations, 673 millions people or 8.2% of the global population will experience hunger in 2024. This is down from 8.5% in the 2023 report.

The report, they said, focused on chronic and long-term issues and did not reflect the full impact of the acute crises caused by specific events or wars including Gaza.

Maximo Torero is the chief economist of the U.N. Food and Agricultural Organization. He said that improved access to food was responsible for the overall decline, but warned that conflict and other issues in places like Africa and the Middle East could undo those gains.

"If the conflict continues to escalate, it is inevitable that vulnerabilities will continue to increase and debt stress will continue to rise," he said on the sidelines a U.N. Food Summit in Ethiopia.

In remarks delivered via video link at the summit, U.N. Secretary General Antonio Guterres stated that conflict continues to drive hunger in Gaza and Sudan. "Hunger feeds future instabilities and undermines peace."

The U.N. report stated that the South American and Southern Asian regions will see the greatest progress in 2024.

In South America, it fell from 4.2% to 3.8% by 2024. In Southern Asia it dropped to 11%, down from 12.2%.

Torero stated that the progress in South America is largely due to better agricultural productivity, social programmes such as school meals and Torero's own words. It was mainly due to the new data that showed more people in Southern Asia had access to healthy food.

In 2024, the overall hunger rate was still higher than 7.5% in 2019, before the COVID pandemic.

In Africa, the picture is quite different. Productivity gains have not kept up with population growth, conflict, extreme weather, and inflation.

Hunger is now more common than 20 years ago. In 2024, one fifth of the population on the continent (307 million) will be chronically malnourished.

The report stated that Africa could have 500 million hungry people by 2030, which is nearly 60% of all the world's hungry.

The report stated that the gap between global food prices inflation and overall inflation reached its peak in January 2023. This will increase the cost of diets, and hit low-income countries the hardest.

It added that the overall adult obesity rate rose from 12% to 16% by 2022.

According to the report, the number of people who cannot afford to eat a healthy meal has dropped by a third in the last five years. The figure was 2.76 billion. (Additional reporting by Aaron Ross from Nairobi and Sybille De La Hamaide from Paris. Editing by Andrew Heavens.)

(source: Reuters)