Current:Home > reviews2.7 million Zimbabweans need food aid as El Nino compounds a drought crisis, UN food program says -Pinnacle Profit Strategies
2.7 million Zimbabweans need food aid as El Nino compounds a drought crisis, UN food program says
View
Date:2025-04-17 23:25:11
HARARE, Zimbabwe (AP) — The U.N. World Food Program said Wednesday that it was working with Zimbabwe’s government and aid agencies to provide food to 2.7 million rural people in the country as the El Nino weather phenomenon contributes to a drought crisis in southern Africa.
Food shortages putting nearly 20% of Zimbabwe’s population at risk of hunger have been caused by poor harvests in drought-ravaged areas where people rely on small-scale farming to eat. El Nino is expected to compound that by causing below-average rainfall again this year, said Francesca Erdelmann, WFP country director for Zimbabwe.
El Nino is a natural and recurring weather phenomenon that warms parts of the Pacific, affecting weather patterns around the world. It has different impacts in different regions.
When rains fail or come late, it has a significant impact, Erdelmann told a news conference.
January to March is referred to as the lean season in Zimbabwe, when rural households run out of food while waiting for the next harvest.
More than 60% of Zimbabwe’s 15 million people live in rural areas. Their life is increasingly affected by a cycle of drought and floods aggravated by climate change.
Dry spells are becoming longer and more severe. For decades, Zimbabwe’s rainy season reliably ran from October to March. It has become erratic in recent years, sometimes starting only in December and ending sooner.
Once an exporter of food, Zimbabwe has relied heavily on assistance from donors to feed its people in recent years. Agricultural production also fell sharply after the seizures of white-owned farms under former President Robert Mugabe starting in 2000 but had begun to recover.
The United States Agency for International Development, the U.S. government’s foreign aid agency, has estimated through its Famine Early Warning Systems Network that 20 million people in southern Africa will need food relief between January and March. Many people in the areas of highest concern such as Zimbabwe, southern Malawi, parts of Mozambique and southern Madagascar will be unable to feed themselves into early 2025 due to El Nino, USAID said.
Erdelmann said WFP had received a donation of $11 million from USAID.
Zimbabwe’s government says the country has grain reserves to last until October, but it has acknowledged that many people who failed to harvest enough grain and are too poor to buy food from markets are in dire need of assistance.
Staple food prices are spiking across the region, USAID said, further impacting people’s ability to feed themselves.
Zimbabwe has already acknowledged feeling the effects of El Nino in other sectors after 100 elephants died in a drought-stricken wildlife park late last year.
___
AP Africa news: https://apnews.com/hub/africa
veryGood! (53352)
Related
- 2025 'Doomsday Clock': This is how close we are to self
- Scott Disick Spends Time With His and Kourtney Kardashian's Kids After Her Pregnancy News
- 3 dead, multiple people hurt in Greyhound bus crash on Illinois interstate highway ramp
- Can bots discriminate? It's a big question as companies use AI for hiring
- FACT FOCUS: Inspector general’s Jan. 6 report misrepresented as proof of FBI setup
- Hollywood actors agree to federal mediation with strike threat looming
- The Senate's Ticketmaster hearing featured plenty of Taylor Swift puns and protesters
- H&R Block and other tax-prep firms shared consumer data with Meta, lawmakers say
- Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
- U.S. files second antitrust suit against Google's ad empire, seeks to break it up
Ranking
- As Trump Enters Office, a Ripe Oil and Gas Target Appears: An Alabama National Forest
- Indicators of the Week: tips, eggs and whisky
- A recession might be coming. Here's what it could look like
- A big bank's big mistake, explained
- McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
- Inside Clean Energy: 6 Things Michael Moore’s ‘Planet of the Humans’ Gets Wrong
- For a Climate-Concerned President and a Hostile Senate, One Technology May Provide Common Ground
- How Dying Forests and a Swedish Teenager Helped Revive Germany’s Clean Energy Revolution
Recommendation
Taylor Swift Eras Archive site launches on singer's 35th birthday. What is it?
Kourtney Kardashian Has a Rockin' Family Night Out at Travis Barker's Concert After Pregnancy Reveal
As the Climate Crisis Grows, a Movement Gathers to Make ‘Ecocide’ an International Crime Against the Environment
Want a balanced federal budget? It'll cost you.
The Grammy nominee you need to hear: Esperanza Spalding
Hollywood actors agree to federal mediation with strike threat looming
Rihanna Has Love on the Brain After A$AP Rocky Shares New Photos of Their Baby Boy RZA
Russia has amassed a shadow fleet to ship its oil around sanctions