Millions displaced; women, girls hit hardest; crises compounded by conflicts, poverty and inequality; $700m average climate-related losses; urgent action needed now
More
than 52 million people in 18 countries across southern, eastern and central
Africa are facing up to crisis levels of hunger as a result of weather
extremes, compounded by poverty and conflict.
Some
areas are facing a second extreme drought in four years and worse than that
sparked by El Nino in 1981.
In
the South, parts of Zimbabwe have had their lowest rainfall since 1981 which
has helped push more than 5.5m people into extreme food insecurity. Zambia’s
rich maize-growing area has been decimated and exports are now banned; 2.3m
people there are food insecure. The situation is worsening including in Angola,
Malawi, Mozambique, Madagascar, Namibia and Zimbabwe. There are reports of
farmer suicides in South Africa.
Drought
has also hit the East and Horn of Africa particularly Ethiopia, Kenya and
Somalia. At the same time, record-breaking temperatures in the Indian Ocean
have dumped ultra-heavy rainfalls into Kenya and South Sudan, causing
flash-flooding especially along major river arteries. South Sudan has declared
a state of emergency with more than 900,000 people hit by floods.
In
Africa extreme weather events have hit many countries already suffering from
ongoing conflict. Across the continent, 7.6 million people were displaced by
conflict in the first six months of 2019, and another 2.6 million by extreme
weather. In the Horn, Ethiopia, Somalia, South Sudan and Sudan have
simultaneously faced over 750 000 people displaced by conflict and 350 000
displaced by extreme weather.
Scientists
have demonstrated how climate change is increasing the frequency or severity of
many extreme weather events. Over the last decade, these 18 African countries
have collectively suffered average annual losses of $700m from climate-related
disasters– and this is without counting the cost of these latest crises, says
Oxfam. However, there has been minimal progress globally in raising funds
specifically to address loss and damage from climate change. Africa contributes
less than 5% of total global emissions but is suffering some of the most severe
impacts of the climate crisis.
Officials
will meet at the African Ministerial Conference on the Environment (AMCEN) in
Durban Nov 11-15 to discuss the future of Africa’s “environmental
sustainability and prosperity”. Oxfam urges ministers to demand that industrial
nations honour their promises to avoid escalating human and financial costs and
to pay for damages.
“We
are witnessing millions of already poor people facing extreme food insecurity
and exhausting their reserves because of compounding climate shocks that hit
already vulnerable communities hardest. They need help urgently. The scale of
the drought devastation across southern Africa is staggering,” said Oxfam’s
Southern Africa Regional Director Nellie Nyang'wa.
“In
western Kenya, the crop harvest is 25% down and in parts of Somalia up to 60%.
Livestock in many rural areas are emaciated and milk production is down. Cereal
prices in some areas have rocketed up to five-year highs, pricing out poorer
people. Nearly 7m people in the region are living just below the catastrophic
hunger line,” said Oxfam’s Horn, East and Central Africa regional director
Lydia Zigomo. “It is a vicious cycle where poor and marginalized communities,
mostly women and girls, are more exposed to the climate crisis and less able to
cope and recover from its harm.”.
Mithika
Mwenda, chief executive of Oxfam’s partner PACJA, said “communities at the
frontline of this climate crisis are overstretched and may be facing potential
annihilation. But local people are doing everything that can to overcome the
challenge. There are unprecedented levels of organization happening where
governments have let local people down.”
“We’re
seeing people trying to cope with shifting seasons and erratic rainfall by
finding new ways to make a living off-farm. Women are coming together to pool
their resources through small internal lending communities, buying food
together, growing sweet potatoes instead of maize – all without outside
support. Local people have the solutions but what they lack is resources,
especially funding.
“Our
leaders should look to support these community solutions to build up people’s
resilience to climate change. For 35 years AMCEN has been a very important
platform with impactful policies that have helped to create awareness of
environmental sustainability. It needs to move away now from policy making to policy
implementation.”
Oxfam
is currently reaching more than 7 million people in ten of the hardest hit
countries with food and water support, and long-term development projects to
help people cope better with climate-related shocks. Oxfam plans to reach 10%
of those most in need in these ten countries and is trying to raise $65m to do
so.
Oxfam
is calling on African ministers at the AMCEN meeting to:
• Insist rich industrialised countries decrease their CO2 emissions in line with the Paris Agreement's goal of limiting global heating to below 1.5C, and honour their commitment to mobilise $100bn a year by 2020 to fund climate change adaptation and mitigation efforts in developing countries;
• Demand governments agree to develop a new funding mechanism for “loss and damage” from climate change at the upcoming UN climate conference (COP25);
• Invest more into universal, high-quality and gender-responsive public services and strengthen tax systems in African countries to close the gap between rich and poor;
• Improve their disaster warning and management systems, and commit to re-greening and agricultural policies that target women and men small-scale farmers;
• Invest in “social accountability” projects that ensures climate finance can reach the communities that need it most, and empowering them in their own decision-making
• Engage women and girls in the planning, design and implementation of early warning systems and climate mitigation and adaptation programs
• Protect people who are forced to move so that they are able to do so in safety, dignity and on their own terms.
• Insist rich industrialised countries decrease their CO2 emissions in line with the Paris Agreement's goal of limiting global heating to below 1.5C, and honour their commitment to mobilise $100bn a year by 2020 to fund climate change adaptation and mitigation efforts in developing countries;
• Demand governments agree to develop a new funding mechanism for “loss and damage” from climate change at the upcoming UN climate conference (COP25);
• Invest more into universal, high-quality and gender-responsive public services and strengthen tax systems in African countries to close the gap between rich and poor;
• Improve their disaster warning and management systems, and commit to re-greening and agricultural policies that target women and men small-scale farmers;
• Invest in “social accountability” projects that ensures climate finance can reach the communities that need it most, and empowering them in their own decision-making
• Engage women and girls in the planning, design and implementation of early warning systems and climate mitigation and adaptation programs
• Protect people who are forced to move so that they are able to do so in safety, dignity and on their own terms.
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