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Climate
Change Could Increase the Number of Hungry People, FAO Says
FAO
(Rome, May 26, 2005) Climate
change threatens to increase the number of the world's
hungry by reducing the area of land available for farming in
developing countries, FAO said this week in a report
presented to the Committee on World Food Security.
"In some 40 poor, developing
countries, with a combined population of two billion,
including 450 million undernourished people, production
losses due to climate change may drastically increase the
number of undernourished people, severely hindering progress
in combating poverty and food insecurity," the FAO report
said.
The severest impact was likely to be in sub-Saharan African
countries, which are the least able to adapt to climate
change or to compensate for it through increased food
imports. In contrast, industrialized countries on average
stand to make gains in production potential as a result of
climate change, the report said.
In developing countries, climate change may lead to an
increase in lands that are arid and suffering moisture
stress. In Africa, for example, there are 1.1 billion
hectares of land with growing period of less than 120 days.
Climate change could, by 2080, result in an expansion of
this area by 5 - 8 percent, or by about 50 - 90 million
hectares, FAO said.
Sixty-five developing countries, home to more than half the
developing world's total population in 1995, risk losing
about 280 million tons of potential cereal production as a
result of climate change. This loss would have a value of
$56 billion, equivalent to 16 percent of the agricultural
gross domestic product of these countries in 1995.
In the case of Asia, the impact of climate change is mixed:
India stands to lose 125 million tons, equivalent to 18
percent, of its rainfed cereal production; however China's
rainfed cereal production potential of 360 million tons is
expected to increase by 15 percent.
"Climate change not only has an impact on food security, but
is also likely to influence the development and
intensification of animal diseases and plant pests," said
Wulf Killmann, Chairperson of FAO's Interdepartmental
Working Group on Climate Change.
Most pests and diseases act locally but have global
implications, in particular because of modern trade patterns
and human mobility. In a globalizing world, agriculture will
have to adapt to an accelerating stream of new pests and
diseases caused by changing ecological conditions resulting
from climate change, and strongly intensified by increased
international trade and mobility.
"Temperature changes, as well as increased air pollution,
can enhance human disease patterns, as does the spread of
trans-boundary animal diseases with their relationship to
pathogens potentially dangerous to humans. Avian flu is the
most recent example," the report warned.
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