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Contact information:

Nesrine Aly in UK | nesrine.aly@oxfam.org  | +447503989838 

Fatuma Noor, in Nairobi | Fatuma.Noor@oxfam.org | +254 723 944682 

Simon Trépanier, in Italy | Simon.Trepanier@oxfam.org | +39 388 850 9970 

 
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Notes to editors:
  • Download the report -Water-Driven Hunger: How the Climate Crisis Fuels Africa’s Food Emergency
  • Oxfam calculated the 79% rise in hunger based on the number of people facing IPC Phase 3 level and above of acute food insecurity according to the Global Report of Food Crises (GRFC) in 2019 and 2024 across Ethiopia, Kenya, Malawi, Mozambique, Somalia, South Sudan, Zambia and Zimbabwe. This calculation also showed that in Ethiopia, hunger rose by 175%.
  • The number of people across the eight countries without access to clean water is 115.9 million. This was calculated based on FAO’s AQUASTAT Indicator for “% of Total Population with Access to Safe Drinking Water” and the 2021 population figures according to the World Bank's World Development Indicators.
  • All eight countries in the report rank among the 30 most water-insecure nations in the world according to the National Water Security Score of the Global Water Security 2023 Assessment. Additionally, the GRFC 2024 report lists these countries amongst 18 where “climate-related shocks” are the primary driver of food insecurity; and the Hunger Hotspots FAO-WFP early warnings on acute food insecurity November 2024 to May 2025 outlook” report identify them to be of “highest concern” expecting to face climate-related risks worsened by La Niña this year.
  • In Kenya, 136,129 square kilometers of land (23% of the landmass) have transitioned from wetter to drier zones between 1980 and 2020. Source: Shifting climate zones and expanding tropical and arid climate regions across Kenya (1980-2020), published in April 2023.
  • The observed recession of tropical glaciers in East Africa (Tanzania, Kenya, Uganda) since the 18th century is notable. According to a study by Enviornmental Research Climate, Mount Kilimanjaro has lost 91.4% of its glaciers, Mount Kenya has lost 95.8%, and the Ruwenzori Mountains have lost 94.2%.
  • According to Climate and Developemt study  by Sutch et al. (2020), by 2041-2070, maize yield is expected to decline by over 29% in Southern Africa and 32% in East Africa compared to 1971-2020.
  • By the end of November 2024, central and northern Somalia, northeast Kenya, and parts of southern-southeast pastoral areas of Ethiopia had received less than 60 percent of the average seasonal rains (according to WFP), while this year’s March–May rains are already delayed in the same areas. Source: IGAD Climate Prediction and Application Center
  • According to “Flash floods: why are more of them devastating the world’s driest regions? Nature Journal, published 7 March 2023, globally, flash floods have become 20 times more frequent between 2000 and 2022.
  • According to the African Union, approximately US$50 billion annually is required to achieve water security in Africa by 2030. However, current investment range from US$10-US$19 billion is invested each year leaving a funding gap of $11 to $20 billion dollars per year.
  • In Somalia, one failed rainy season could push one million more people into crisis-level hunger, raising the total to 4.4 million—24% of the population.