The Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) is scaling up operations in Sudan, where 10.9 million people, 30% of the population, are expected to need lifesaving support – the highest number in the past decade, the United Nations (UN) agency has said.
Food insecurity is soaring in the country, driven by the combined impacts of armed conflict, drought, the Covid-19 pandemic, low production of key staple crops due to infestation by pests and diseases, and economic turmoil.
The “cascading effects” of the conflict in Ukraine could also worsen the situation.
FAO has, therefore, welcomed a US$12 million contribution from the UN Central Emergency Response Fund (CERF) for a new project to provide emergency agriculture and livestock supplies to thousands of farming and pastoral communities in 14 of the most severely affected counties.
“This generous contribution from CERF means that FAO can urgently provide essential agricultural inputs to vulnerable farming households before the main agriculture season starts in June. It will ensure that they can produce enough food to meet their needs for the months to come,” Babagana Ahmadu, FAO Representative to the Sudan, said.
The project will target 900 000 among the most vulnerable farming and pastoralist communities, including internally displaced people, returnees, and refugees.
As two-thirds of Sudan’s population lives in rural areas, FAO said providing smallholder farmers with agricultural support is essential to the humanitarian response.
The project covers both agricultural and livestock assistance, which aims at rapidly reducing dependence on emergency food assistance and provides a basis for medium and longer-term recovery.
Assistance covers the provision of crop, legume and vegetable seeds, donkey ploughs and hand tools, veterinary vaccines and drugs, animal feed, as well as donkey carts and productive livestock.
It also includes provision of cash and the rehabilitation of community assets such as small-scale water infrastructure, pasture and hafirs, or artificial ponds for harvesting rainwater.
FAO said the situation looks grim for millions in Sudan. The war in Ukraine is causing further spikes in food prices, and the country is dependent on wheat imports from the Black Sea region.
Interruption in grain supplies to Sudan will make it more difficult and expensive to import wheat, with current local prices per tonne, costing 180 per cent more when compared with the same period last year.
Additionally, high prices for fertilizers on global markets will also affect imports, and, ultimately, agricultural production.
While the CERF allocation is timely and vital, FAO added that another US$35 million is urgently needed to ensure adequate support for two million vulnerable farming and pastoral households in Sudan.