Global hunger |
* 821 million people now hungry and over 150
million children stunted, putting hunger eradication goal at risk.
New evidence continues to signal that the number
of hungry people in the world is growing, reaching 821 million in 2017 or one
in every nine people, according to The State of Food Security and Nutrition in
the World 2018 released today.
Limited progress is also being made in
addressing the multiple forms of malnutrition, ranging from child stunting to
adult obesity, putting the health of hundreds of millions of people at risk.
Hunger has been on the rise over the past three
years, returning to levels from a decade ago. This reversal in progress sends a
clear warning that more must be done and urgently if the Sustainable
Development Goal of Zero Hunger is to be achieved by 2030.
The situation is worsening in South America and
most regions of Africa, while the decreasing trend in undernourishment that
characterized Asia seems to be slowing down significantly.
The annual UN report found that climate
variability affecting rainfall patterns and agricultural seasons, and climate
extremes such as droughts and floods are among the key drivers behind the rise
in hunger, together with conflict and economic slowdowns.
“The alarming signs of increasing food
insecurity and high levels of different forms of malnutrition are a clear warning
that there is considerable work to be done to make sure we ‘leave no one
behind’ on the road towards achieving the SDG goals on food security and
improved nutrition,” the heads of the UN Food and Agriculture Organization
(FAO), the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), the UN
Children's Fund (UNICEF), the World Food Programme (WFP) and the World Health
Organization (WHO) warned in their joint foreword to the report.
“If we are to achieve a world without hunger and
malnutrition in all its forms by 2030, it is imperative that we accelerate and
scale up actions to strengthen the resilience and adaptive capacity of food
systems and people’s livelihoods in response to climate variability and
extremes,” the leaders said.
The impact of climate variability and extremes
on hunger
Changes in climate are already undermining
production of major crops such as wheat, rice and maize in tropical and
temperate regions and, without building climate resilience, this is expected to
worsen as temperatures increase and become more extreme.
Analysis in the report shows that the prevalence
and number of undernourished people tend to be higher in countries highly
exposed to climate extremes. Undernourishment is higher again when exposure to
climate extremes is compounded by a high proportion of the population depending
on agricultural systems that are highly sensitive to rainfall and temperature
variability.
Temperature anomalies over agricultural cropping
areas continued to be higher than the long-term mean throughout 2011–2016,
leading to more frequent spells of extreme heat in the last five years. The
nature of rainfall seasons is also changing, such as the late or early start of
rainy seasons and the unequal distribution of rainfall within a
season.
The harm to agricultural production contributes
to shortfalls in food availability, with knock-on effects causing food price
hikes and income losses that reduce people’s access to food.
Slow progress on ending all forms of
malnutrition
Poor progress has been made in reducing child stunting,
the report says, with nearly 151 million children aged under five too short for
their age due to malnutrition in 2017, compared to 165 million in 2012.
Globally, Africa and Asia accounted for 39 percent and 55 percent of all
stunted children, respectively.
Prevalence of child wasting remains extremely
high in Asia where almost one in 10 children under five has low weight for
their height, compared to just one in 100 in Latin America and the Caribbean.
The report describes as “shameful” the fact that
one in three women of reproductive age globally is affected by anaemia, which
has significant health and development consequences for both women and their
children. No region has shown a decline in anaemia among women of reproductive
age, and the prevalence in Africa and Asia is nearly three times higher than in
North America.
Rates of exclusive breastfeeding in Africa and
Asia are 1.5 times higher than those in North America where only 26 percent of
infants fewer than six months receive breastmilk exclusively.
The other side of hunger: obesity on the rise
Adult obesity is worsening, and more than one in
eight adults in the world is obese. The problem is most significant in North
America, but Africa and Asia are also experiencing an upward trend, the report
shows.
Undernutrition and obesity coexist in many
countries, and can even be seen side by side in the same household. Poor access
to nutritious food due to its higher cost, the stress of living with food
insecurity, and physiological adaptations to food deprivation help explain why
food-insecure families may have a higher risk of overweight and obesity.
Call for action
The report calls for implementing and scaling up
interventions aimed at guaranteeing access to nutritious foods and breaking the
intergenerational cycle of malnutrition. Policies must pay special attention to
groups who are the most vulnerable to the harmful consequences of poor food
access: infants, children aged under five, school-aged children, adolescent
girls, and women.
At the same time, a sustainable shift must be
made towards nutrition-sensitive agriculture and food systems that can provide
safe and high-quality food for all.
The report also calls for greater efforts to
build climate resilience through policies that promote climate change
adaptation and mitigation, and disaster risk reduction.
Key facts and figures
• Number of hungry people in the world in
2017: 821 million or 1 in every 9 people
• in Asia: 515 million
• in Africa: 256.5 million
• in Latin America and the Caribbean: 39 million
• Children under 5 affected by stunting (low
height-for-age): 150.8 million (22.2%)
• Children under 5 affected by wasting (low
weight-for-height): 50.5 million (7.5%)
• Children under 5 who are overweight (high
weight-for-height): 38.3 million (5.6%)
• Percentage of women of reproductive age
affected by anaemia: 32.8%
• Percentage of infants aged below 6 months who
were exclusively breastfed: 40.7%
• Adults who are obese: 672 million (13% or 1 in
8 adults)
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