Saturday, April 25, 2026 - Nigeria and nine other countries now account for two-thirds of people facing acute food insecurity globally, a UN-backed yearly report said Friday, April 24.
The 2026 Global Report on Food Crises, released on Friday by
an alliance of UN agencies, the European Union and partners, found that 266
million people across 47 countries experienced high levels of acute food
insecurity in 2025 – nearly a quarter of the population analysed and almost
double the share recorded in 2016.
“Acute food insecurity today is not just widespread – it is
also persistent and recurring,” said Qu Dongyu, Director-General of the Food
and Agriculture Organization, warning that the crisis has become structural
rather than temporary.
Earlier in January, the UN, through its Office for the
Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs in Nigeria, disclosed that 35 million
Nigerians are at risk of acute hunger this year.
Conflict remained the main driver of acute food insecurity,
according to the Global Report on Food Crises, based on data from the United
Nations, the European Union and humanitarian agencies.
And with conflicts and climate extremes “likely to sustain
or worsen conditions in many countries”, the outlook for 2026 is “bleak”, it
said.
“Acute food insecurity remains highly concentrated (in) 10
countries — Afghanistan, Bangladesh, the Democratic Republic of the Congo,
Myanmar, Nigeria, Pakistan, South Sudan, Sudan, Syrian Arab Republic, and
Yemen,” the report said.
Improvements in some countries, such as Bangladesh and
Syria, were “almost fully offset by notable deteriorations” in Afghanistan,
DRC, Myanmar and Zimbabwe, it said.
For the first time in the report, which is in its 10th
edition, famine was confirmed in two separate contexts — in Gaza and parts of
Sudan — in the same year.
Around 266 million people in 47 countries or territories
experienced high levels of acute food insecurity last year, nearly double the
share recorded in 2016, the report said.
It also warned about the sharp decline in international aid
and said the Middle East war risked aggravating existing crises by increasing
the numbers of displaced in a region already hosting millions of refugees, and
driving up fertiliser costs.
The blocking of the Strait of Hormuz, a key oil supply
route, has sent fertiliser prices soaring since they rely on oil-based
inputs.
“Now we’re in planting season,” Alvaro Lario, head of the
UN’s International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), told AFP.
“So for sure this current food shock — both with the energy
prices going up and also fertilisers going up — I think it’s going to have a
massive impact in terms of production,” Lario said.
He called for more help to small-scale farmers, for example
by investing in water- and climate-resilient crops.
Crises could be eased by farmers producing fertiliser
locally as well as improving soil health so that less of it is needed, he
added.

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