Science

UN says more worldwide going hungry, blames climate change

The number of hungry people in the world is growing again, in large part due to climate change that is wreaking havoc on crop production in much of the developing world, the United Nations said Tuesday.

South America and Africa showed the worst increase, which reverses previous downward trend

In a 2017 photo, Somali mother Sahra Muse, 32, comforts her malnourished child Ibrahim Ali, 7, on the outskirts of Mogadishu, Somalia. A new UN report says that the number of hungry people facing chronic food deprivation increased to 821 million in 2017 from 804 million in 2016, reversing recent downward trends. (Farah Abdi Warsameh/Associated Press)

The number of hungry people in the world is growing again, in large part due to climate change that is wreaking havoc on crop production in much of the developing world, the United Nations said Tuesday

Major U.N. agencies said in an annual report Tuesday that the number of hungry people facing chronic food deprivation increased to 821 million in 2017 from 804 million in 2016, reversing recent downward trends. South America and Africa showed the worst increase.

"This message today should frighten the world," said David Beasley, head of the World Food Program.

Beasley, a Trump administration nominee, acknowledged that climate change as well as conflict were fuelling the rise in malnutrition globally.

"Climate impact is real," he said, though he demurred when asked whether the cause was man-made.

World Food Program (WFP) Executive Director David Beasley, seen in a file photo, acknowledged that climate change as well as conflict were fuelling the rise in malnutrition globally. (Mark Schiefelbein/Associated Press)

Analysis in the report found that climate variability — extreme droughts and floods — are already undermining production of wheat, rice and maize in tropical and temperate regions, and that the trend is expected to worsen as temperatures increase and become more extreme.

With hunger on the rise for the past three years, the report called for policies to target groups most vulnerable to malnutrition, including infants, children, adolescent girls and women. It called for greater efforts to promote policies that help communities adapt to climate change and build resilience.

Beasley said if the world is failing today with a population at 7.5 billion and all the wealth and technology that is available, "wait until people 30 years from now — when we have 10 billion people, when people in London, in Washington, D.C., and Chicago and Paris — when they don't have enough to eat."

Obesity also on the rise

At the same time as hunger is increasing globally, rates of adult obesity are on the rise, most significantly in North America. Both undernutrition and obesity can exist in the same household, the report said, since poor access to affordable, nutritious food can increase risks for obesity.

A boy carries food aid given by UN's World Food Programme in Raqqa, Syria April 26, 2018. (Aboud Hamam/Reuters)

Svetlana Axelrod, assistant director general for the World Health Organization, said breastfeeding can help early on to prevent obesity. The report found that rates of exclusive breastfeeding are 1.5 times higher in Africa and Asia than in North America, where only a quarter of infants under 6 months are exclusively fed by breast milk.

"Women should breastfeed as long as they can," she said.

Earlier this year, the U.S. faced criticism for opposing a WHO resolution to encourage breastfeeding, with critics accusing the Trump administration of embracing the interests of infant formula manufacturers. President Donald Trump said the administration opposed the resolution because it called for limits on promoting infant formula, not because it objected to breastfeeding.