Audio By Carbonatix
About 1.96 million Ghanaians are facing acute food and nutrition insecurity, the latest Food Security Update by the World Bank has revealed.
This represents 6.1% of the total population facing acute food insecurity in West and Central Africa.
Ghana is thus ranked 9th in the region with the highest population facing acute food and nutrition insecurity
According to recent estimates by the Cadre Harmonisé, approximately 34.7 million people (7.8% of the total population) in West and Central Africa were facing acute food and nutrition insecurity as of November 2023.
The breakdown of the 10 most-affected countries according to share of population shows that Sierra Leone is first with 15.2% (1.17 million); Chad second with 12.1% (2.06 million) and Cameroon third with 10.6% (2.94 million).
Burkina Faso came 4th with 9.9% (2.28 million), whilst Nigeria-8.9% (18.47 million), Niger-8.9% (2.3 million) Mauritania-6.3% (171,494) and Togo-6.2% (377,920) came 5th, 6th, 7th and 8th respectively.
The report added that the food and nutrition insecurity situation is expected to worsen in the upcoming lean season (June–August 2024).
Cadre Harmonisé projections indicate that approximately 47 million people (10.5% of the total population) will experience acute food and nutrition insecurity (IPC Phase 3-5) over this period, including 26.5 million people in Nigeria, 3.2 million in Niger, 3.0 million in Burkina Faso, 2.9 million in Chad, 2.5 million in Cameroon, 2.2 million in Ghana, 1.5 million in Sierra Leone, 1.4 million in Mali, and 1.0 million in Côte d'Ivoire.
In the first week of February, Burkina Faso, Mali, and Niger publicly announced their withdrawal from the Economic Community of West African States.
The report added that although the consequences are unclear, the three countries’ exit from the economic bloc could affect intraregional trade and commerce.
Latest Stories
-
Police arrest suspect in murder of Officer at Zebilla
48 seconds -
SUSEC–Abesim and Adomako–Watchman roads set for upgrade in Sunyani
31 minutes -
CDD-Ghana calls for national debate on campaign financing
1 hour -
INTERPOL’s decision on Ofori-Atta: What it means for his U.S. bond hearing and the legal road ahead
1 hour -
Parties can use filing fees to cover delegates’ costs, end vote-buying – Barker-Vormawor
1 hour -
Boxing in Bukom: Five months without the bell
1 hour -
Political parties can end vote-buying by disqualifying offenders – Barker-Vormawor
2 hours -
Ministry of Gender investigates alleged sharing of intimate videos by foreign national
2 hours -
Cocoa must be treated as business, not politics- Nana Aduna II
2 hours -
Barker-Vormawor urges scrutiny of COCOBOD reforms, warns of continued debt burden
3 hours -
Prince Adu-Owusu: Beyond flowers and grand gestures — How do you want to be loved?
3 hours -
Multiple vehicles burnt as fuel tanker explodes on Nsawam-Accra highway
3 hours -
Former COCOBOD administration spent syndicated loans on themselves, not farmers – Inusah Fuseini
3 hours -
Mahama vows to end export of raw mineral ores by 2030, shifts focus to local processing
4 hours -
Mahama meets UN Chief, discusses African security & democracy.
4 hours
