Press Conferences

Press Conference on Current Desert Locust Situation

Press Conference by Dominique Burgeon, Director of Emergencies and Resilience, FAO; Keith Cressman, Senior Locust Forecasting Officer, FAO; and Cyril Ferrand, FAO Resilience team leader for Eastern Africa: on the current desert locust situation and FAO’s response.
d2597917
Categories
Video Length
00:28:26
Production Date
Asset Language
Subject Topical
Geographic Subject
MAMS Id
2597917
Parent Id
2597917
Description

Dominique Burgeon, FAO’s Director of Emergencies and Resilience, said the huge desert locust swarms in 2020, some as wide as 60 kilometres, had not been seen in decades, threatening food security in a region where many were already going hungry.

Surveillance and response led to 1.6 million hectares of land being treated. As a result, more than three million tonnes of cereals, valued at approximately $940 million, were protected: enough to feed 21 million people for a year.

“We can say that huge progress has been made, capacities of the countries have been tremendously augmented…but yet the situation is not over”, he told journalists.

“We have made a huge effort, we are much better prepared, but we should not be complacent. We should not relax.”

Keith Cressman, FAO’s Senior Locust Forecasting Officer, said Cyclone Gati in December brought heavy rains, creating the conditions for new swarms to form in eastern Ethiopia and central Somalia.

Locusts began migrating south to northern Kenya and southern Ethiopia when the waters dried up, as experts had predicted.

“We had forecasted this in October. We had provided early warning to both countries to expect this shortly after mid-December, and that’s indeed what happened”, he said. “And since then, they have been arriving nearly every day.”

The locusts are young now but will mature, and reproduce, in the coming months. FAO anticipates a new generation will emerge in early April, coinciding with seasonal rains and the planting period in Kenya and southern Ethiopia.

Desert locusts are also breeding further north, on Somalia’s coastline on the Gulf of Aden, with new swarms likely to begin forming in late February.

“This is a cause of concern, and this is also why it’s extremely important that the control operations…are not disrupted”, said Mr. Cressman.

For further details please see SOURCE below.
UN NEWS

View moreView less

Download

You need to first accept the terms and conditions before download.

Type Language Format Size
Audio English MP3 Download