Global report on food crises: 113 million people in 53 countries experienced acute hunger in 2018
- From
-
Published on
02.04.19
- Impact Area

The world’s humanitarian assistance and spending needs have more than doubled over the past decade, growing by around 127 percent. Around 40 percent of that went to the food and agriculture sectors. Those needs have intensifed over the past few years, as conflict and climate shocks have combined to increase the number of people worldwide who require humanitarian aid to fulfill basic daily food needs. In 2018, an estimated 113 million people across 53 countries experienced levels of acute hunger that required urgent humanitarian assistance, according to the 2019 Global Report on Food Crises, released April 2. While this number is down from the 2017 figure of 124 million people, it remains unacceptably high.
Photo: United Nations
Related news
-
In the field: Listening to Adaptation Pioneers
CGIAR Initiative on Livestock and Climate27.06.24-
Adaptation
Field days are events that bring people together. In this case, adaptation pioneers, other farmers,…
Read more -
-
Supporting sustainable livestock value chains to restore large rangelands
CGIAR Initiative on Livestock and Climate27.06.24-
Adaptation
Rangelands are critical for biodiversity, ecosystem services, and the livelihoods of millions of pas…
Read more -
-
In solidarity with refugees on World Refugee Day
CGIAR Initiative on Fragility, Conflict, and Migration27.06.24-
Climate adaptation & mitigation
-
Gender equality, youth & social inclusion
A week on from World Refugee Day, explore IWMI's work to support refugees and refugee…
Read more -