Desert locusts still on course for world devastation
A desert locust |
For some time now, the warnings
have been coming, and this latest one is from David Beasley, Executive
Director, World Food Programme.
According to him, it will be
vastly more cost-effective to support the Food and Agriculture Organization to
tackle locusts in East Africa now than to help people in the region after their
crops have been ruined.
“FAO needs $76m to help stop the
locusts,” he said. “Do nothing now and WFP will need up to 15 times that amount
– more than $1bn - to assist people devasted by losing crops and livelihoods.
Preventing a catastrophe in East Africa is a far better investment than
responding to its consequences and impact on the lives of millions across the
region.”
FAO has so far raised $22m out of
the $76m for which it has appealed in order to mount a comprehensive response
to the locust infestation in East Africa.
If left unchecked the devastation
could further threaten the food security of up to 13 million people.
The regional Food Security and Nutrition
Working Group (FSNWG) warned in an update that desert locust swarms are now
multiplying across Somalia, Kenya and Ethiopia and more swarms have also been
observed in Eritrea, Djibouti and northeastern Uganda.
“Looking forward, given
favourable forecast weather conditions, swarms are expected to increase in
areas already affected, as well as spread to neighbouring areas. There’s also a
high risk that they will spread to South Sudan,” said the update from the group
which includes FAO, WFP, the Famine Early Warning Systems Network (FEWS NET)
and the Inter-Governmental Authority on Development (IGAD).
The food security update said
locusts were expected to breed and spread in coming months. It forecast that
the March-April start of the long rains would prompt the locusts to breed anew
and spread even further.
The desert locust is considered
the world’s most dangerous migratory pest. FAO says swarms are the worst in 25
years in Ethiopia and Somalia, and the worst in 70 years in Kenya. A swarm of
one square kilometre can consume the equivalent of crops that could feed 35,000
people for a year.
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