The number of chronically undernourished people dropped by more than 100 million – equivalent to a country the size of the Philippines – according to a report by the United Nations food agency (FAO), the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), and the World Food Programme (WFP).
However, some success stories – such as in Brazil – mask real struggles in countries like Haiti, where large concentrations of undernourished people still remain, the report’s authors pointed out.
“We cannot celebrate yet because we must reach 805 million people without enough food for a healthy and productive life,” WFP executive director Ertharin Cousin said.
Twenty-five developing countries have already met the ambitious goal of halving the absolute number of chronically undernourished people between 1990 and 2015. But there is not enough time for the rest of the world to achieve the same rates by 2015, the report states.
In Zambia (which is 48 percent undernourished), a leading culprit is infrastructure, according to the WFP. Less than 20 percent of the population has access to a durable road.
Asia, meanwhile, has the highest total number of undernourished people, led by India with 191 million. That number, however, has declined by more than 20 million since 1990, even while the country’s population has increased from 383 million to 1.25 billion.
Researchers from the FAO and the WFP note that parts of Africa and Asia are plagued by low income, poor agricultural development, and few social safety nets. In some countries, such as North Korea, the political climate limits trade and food aid.
The FAO issued a food security alert this month for Liberia, Sierra Leone, and Guinea, which were all net cereal importers even before the Ebola outbreak prompted border closures and quarantine zones. The measures contributed to farm labor shortages.
Ongoing conflicts in Syria, South Sudan, and the Central African Republic are preventing humanitarian efforts from helping those affected, Cousin said, adding that the WFP and other agencies need an increase in donations.
Meanwhile, the advance of Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL) fighters in Iraq has caused concern over the availability of wheat there, which the FAO says is the most important food grain for humans.
“We are concerned about the fact that [IS] controls two of the major grain facilities in the country,” Cousin said. “These are very worrying trends, when you have a party that can control the food that is required by the poorest in the country.”
The FAO raised its global cereals output forecast for 2014 earlier this month, partly due to unexpectedly high wheat crops in major producing countries. According to the organization, global food prices hit a near four-year low in August. But this is not necessarily good news for the world’s poor and hungry, in part because farmers earn less from their crops, FAO director general Jose Graziano Da Silva said.
Due to the complexities of collecting data, not every world country is represented in the FAO report. In some of the places most in need, development agencies often find it hard to get food in and data out as a result of civil unrest, natural disasters, or populations living in hard-to-reach rural areas. This includes Burundi, which topped the list in the FAO’s 2013 compilation.
According to Silva, the measurable progress does not necessarily mean that efforts to eliminate world undernourishment have become less challenging.
“Low prices do not ensure that the poorest will get more food,” said the FAO director general. “If there is not...access, low prices will not be enough.”
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