“Somalia’s climate emergency is a hammer blow to millions, combining years of drought with unheard of levels of human suffering and starvation,” Egeland said at the end of a trip to the drought-stricken country.
“I have spoken with farmers who have lost all their livestock and crops. I have met severely malnourished children of families who fled to cities, whose parents are now forced to beg for the daily food and water they need to survive. Donors, including the neighbouring Gulf countries, need to dig deep and fast before the predictions of mass starvation become fatal figures of shame.”
More than 800,000 people have been forced to flee their homes due to drought since the start of last year in Somalia, while the number of people facing crisis hunger levels is expected to rise from less than five million to more than seven million in the coming months.
In a situation not seen in more than 40 years, Somalia is witnessing a historic dry run, with an expected fifth failed rainy season.
A recent NRC assessment representing more than 14,000 people in some of the worst hit areas confirmed the devastating conditions, with two-thirds reporting no regular access to water.
All families surveyed reported they were forced to skip meals in the last week. Two-thirds of households reported having lost between half and all their livestock because of drought. Just over half do not believe they will be able to return to their homes.
Somalia’s drought has contributed to staggering displacement, increasing violent conflicts over water and grazing land, rising costs of basic goods, and the destruction of crops and livestock herds.
About 90 per cent of Somalia’s wheat imports came from Russia and Ukraine. Since the war broke out, the grain supply has been blocked and prices have exploded.
“In spite of the looming famine, Somalia has only seen 28 per cent of its humanitarian needs funded through the UN-sponsored appeal,” Egeland said. “Somalis are on the frontline of the global climate catastrophe, but far too little of the funding promised has been received by the people hardest hit”.
Less than USD500 million has been allocated as humanitarian funding by international donors so far this year, compared to USD1.3 billion in 2017 when Somalia faced similar drought conditions.
Notes for editors:
- NRC has spokespeople available for interview in Somalia and Kenya.
- NRC assessed 1,630 households (representing 14,161 people people) in five of Somalia’s worst hit regions between 12 and 16 June: Banadir (Mogadishu), Bay, Lower Juba, Gedo and Galgaduud. Sixty-seven per cent said they had no regular access to water.
- Photos from drought-impacted areas in Baidoa, and of children receiving treatment for severe malnutrition, are available for free use and distribution here.
- B-roll from drought-impacted areas in Baidoa, and of children receiving treatment for severe malnutrition, are available for free use and distribution here.
- Around 7 million people across Somalia are expected to experience high levels of acute food insecurity between now and September 2022, including more than 213,000 facing catastrophic hunger, unless urgent support is provided.
- The 2022 Gu rainy season in Somalia came to an early end in May, with lower rainfall recorded and little to no rain in June. The northern areas recorded 30 per cent to 60 per cent of the average rainfall, while the central and southern areas received 45 per cent to 75 per cent. This marks a fourth consecutive failed rainy season since late 2020.
- The next rainfall is not expected until mid-October, and long-range forecasts indicate a historic fifth poor rainy season is likely.
- Somalia is ranked second in terms of climate vulnerability, based on 2019 data, according to the University of Notre Dame’s Global Adaptation Initiative
For more information, please contact:
- In Mogadishu: Karl Schembri, Regional Media Adviser, schembri@nrc.no, +252 61 7247867
- NRC’s media hotline in Oslo: media@nrc.no, +47 905 62 329.