By Joke Falaju, Abuja
To reduce the risk of food shortage for millions, the United Nations
Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) has warned countries to take
immediate actions to minimize disruptions to
supply chains as keeping
global food chains alive is crucial amid COVID-19 crisis.
The UN body said a globally coordinated and coherent response is
needed to prevent this public health crisis from triggering a food
crisis in which people cannot find or afford food.
For now, COVID-19 has not entailed any strain on food security, despite anecdotal reports of crowded supermarket sieges.
While there’s no need for panic – there is enough supply of food in
the world to feed everyone – we must face the challenge: an enormous
risk that food may not be made available where it is needed.
FAO Director-General, QU Dongyu in an op-ed published on the
Organisation’s website worried that restrictions of movement, as well as
basic aversion behaviour by workers, may impede farmers from farming
and food processors (who handle most agricultural products) from
processing, adding that shortage of fertilizers, veterinary medicines
and other input could also affect agricultural production.
He said although uncertainty about food availability can induce
policymakers to implement trade-restrictive measures in order to
safeguard national food security, but “with experience of the 2007-2008
global food price crisis, we know that such measures can only exacerbate
the situation”.
Dongyu warned that export restrictions put in place by exporting
countries to increase food availability domestically could lead to
serious disruptions in the world food market, resulting in price spikes
and increased price volatility.
Stressing the need for countries to learn from our recent past and
not make the same mistakes twice, he said: “In 2007-2008, these
immediate measures proved extremely damaging, especially for low-income
food-deficit countries leading to efforts by humanitarian organizations
to procure supplies for the needy and vulnerable”.
The UN organization warned policymakers to take care to avoid accidentally tightening food-supply conditions.
Mentioning the need for a global response to the global challenge, he
stressed the need for collaborations between governments and the full
gamut of stakeholders.
“We must ensure that food markets are functioning properly and that
information on prices, production, consumption and stocks of food are
available to all in real-time. This approach will reduce uncertainty and
allow producers, consumers, traders and processors to make informed
decisions and to contain unwarranted panic behaviour in global food
markets,” he stated.
Pointing out that the health impacts of the unfolding COVID-19
pandemic on some of the poorest countries are still unknown, he said
that any ensuing food crisis as a result of poor policymaking would be a
humanitarian disaster that we can avert.
“We already have 113 million people experiencing acute hunger; in
sub-Saharan Africa, a quarter of the population is undernourished. Any
disruptions to food supply chains will intensify both human suffering
and the challenge of reducing hunger around the world.”
” We must do everything possible to not let that happen. Prevention
costs less. Global markets are critical for smoothening supply and
demand shocks across countries and regions, and we need to work together
to ensure that disruptions of food supply chains are minimized as much
as possible,” he stated.
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