World hunger could double as coronavirus disrupts food supplies

SOUTH AFRICA - Cape Town - 9 April 2020. Day 14 of the National Lockdown. Learners at Trevor Manual Primary school in Fisantekraal near Durbanville wait in line to receive food parcels. Learners were sanitised before entering the school and were asked to stay at least 1.5 meters apart from each other. The school provides 1500 meals a day, which is part of the Emergency School Feeding programme which started around the Western Cape on 8 April 2020. The Western Cape Provincial Treasury approved the allocation of R53 million additional funding for emergency food relief programmes which will run across the Western Cape. R18 million to the Department of Education to initiate a special school feeding programme from 8 April until 20 April, which will target the 485 000 existing school feeding scheme beneficiaries with one takeaway meal a day at approximately 1 000 schools. Picture Henk Kruger/African News Agency (ANA).

SOUTH AFRICA - Cape Town - 9 April 2020. Day 14 of the National Lockdown. Learners at Trevor Manual Primary school in Fisantekraal near Durbanville wait in line to receive food parcels. Learners were sanitised before entering the school and were asked to stay at least 1.5 meters apart from each other. The school provides 1500 meals a day, which is part of the Emergency School Feeding programme which started around the Western Cape on 8 April 2020. The Western Cape Provincial Treasury approved the allocation of R53 million additional funding for emergency food relief programmes which will run across the Western Cape. R18 million to the Department of Education to initiate a special school feeding programme from 8 April until 20 April, which will target the 485 000 existing school feeding scheme beneficiaries with one takeaway meal a day at approximately 1 000 schools. Picture Henk Kruger/African News Agency (ANA).

Published Apr 11, 2020

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INTERNATIONAL - The number of people going hungry around the world could double in just a few months as the coronavirus pandemic wreaks havoc on food supplies and hurts incomes.

That’s according to a group of major food companies, industry bodies and academics, which warned that those suffering from chronic hunger may surge from about 800 million amid mounting food-supply risks. The threat is acute for poor regions like sub-Saharan Africa.

“There could not be a more important time in which to keep trade flows open and predictable,” according to a letter to world leaders signed by Nestle SA, Unilever NV, Danone SA and PepsiCo Inc.

While production is ample, transport and labor disruptions are starting to impact food security in many parts of the world, boosting prices of key staples such as wheat and rice. Plus, job losses from the outbreak are reducing incomes. That’s all prompting governments to restrict various food exports to safeguard domestic supplies.

The letter urged world leaders to maintain open trade and ensure access to nutritious and affordable food to help prevent a global humanitarian crisis. Major food exporters must make it clear that they’ll keep fully supplying international markets, it said. Other proposed measures include supporting the most vulnerable, investing in local production and treating farmers and food workers as part of an essential sector.

The United Nations has also warned that countries should work together to avoid “beggar-thy-neighbor policies” seen during a global food price crisis a decade ago.

The virus could potentially create a severe food security crisis in Africa, the World Bank said in a report. Agricultural output could fall as much as 7% if there are trade restrictions, while food imports may drop at least 13% due to higher transaction costs and reduced demand, it said.

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