FAO emergencies and resilience

Western and Central Africa

©FAO/Country: Niger

Western and Central Africa continue to face protracted insecurity and political instability, with conflicts in Central Sahel and the Lake Chad Basin (Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Chad, Mali, the Niger and Nigeria), and persistent armed violence in Central African countries such as in the Central African Republic. The impacts of such challenges are compounded by climate extremes, disease outbreaks and economic crises, including due to the socioeconomic consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic. Extreme poverty in the region has increased and the combined effects of these factors have led to a deterioration of food insecurity and malnutrition, especially in conflict-affected areas. This includes the Democratic Republic of the Congo – still the world’s largest food crisis.

News
News
El Niño is coming. Here is where the risks to agriculture are highest
23/06/2026

FAO experts map where crops and pasturelands are most vulnerable to drought

News
Bracing for El Niño: FAO and WFP launch joint appeal to protect 8.8 million people from extreme weather events
18/06/2026

Scaling up early action in 22 high-risk countries will help safeguard lives, livelihoods and food security

News
New FAO-WFP report warns worsening hunger puts 13 hotspots at significant risk
17/06/2026

Sudan, South Sudan, Yemen and Palestine remain hotspots of highest concern, with Nigeria and Somalia joining the list as acute hunger risks deteriorate...

Publications
Publications
Mali: Emergency and Resilience Plan, 2026–2028 (In French)
11/2025

Mali is facing a complex and protracted humanitarian crisis driven by armed conflict, insecurity, and the impacts of climate shocks.

Publications
Democratic Republic of the Congo: DIEM-Monitoring emergency agriculture support brief
11/2025

This emergency agriculture support brief presents the results of the tenth round of Data in Emergencies Monitoring (DIEM-Monitoring), conducted in the...

Publications
Anticipatory action: Annual report 2024
11/2025

In 2024, acute hunger affected over 295 million people globally, continuing a six-year upward trend driven by conflict, climate extremes and economic...

Multimedia