Latest Documents
Co-creating solutions for biosecurity and broiler business: Insights from Kiambu and Nairobi city counties in Kenya16/08/2021
Food and Nutrition Security Resilience Programme: Multidimensional context analysis in South Sudan 10/08/2021
Food and nutrition security resilience programme in the Sudan: Baseline report10/08/2021
Mali – Analyse des conflits liés à l’exploitation des ressources naturelles08/08/2021
Burkina Faso – Analyse des conflits liés à l’exploitation des ressources naturelles02/08/2021
Connect with us
Desert locust upsurge: Progress report on the response in the Greater Horn of Africa and Yemen | January – April 2020
As part of FAO’s accountability framework, this first quarterly desert locust upsurge progress report sets out the Organization’s immediate response so far and the livelihoods support planned for the coming months in combatting the potential food security fallout of one of the worst locust invasions seen in decades across the Greater Horn of Africa and Yemen.
Thanks to FAO and governments’ response and the generous funding of donors, around 720 000 tonnes of cereal – enough to feed five million people for a year – have been saved across Djibouti, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Kenya, Somalia, South Sudan, the Sudan, Uganda, the United Republic of Tanzania and Yemen. The current situation is particularly alarming given that over 42 million people will face acute food insecurity across the ten countries this year.
While thousands of hectares of treated land are now relatively free from the pest, the threat remains as the first wave of swarms has reproduced and a second wave will transition from hoppers to the young adult stage in June – a critical time when many farmers in East Africa are preparing to harvest their crops. The report is also a timely reminder that FAO’s work continues on the ground despite COVID-19 and other challenges, in order to contain the desert locust upsurge, mitigate its impacts and safeguard food security and livelihoods for some of the world’s most vulnerable people.

