
The World Bank has said drought may hit some parts of Africa, including Nigeria, between now and 2015.
In a report entitled: ‘Africa’s Pulse’,
which was released in Abuja on Monday, the World Bank listed the other
African countries that might experience the first wave of drought in the
period as Ghana, Cameroun, Cote d’Ivoire, Ethiopia, Kenya, Senegal and
Tanzania.
The report also painted a scenario of
what could happen to agriculture and food prices in the affected
countries in the event of the predicted drought.
It stated, “In Africa, droughts are
recurrent events, with adverse effects on local communities and the
ecosystem. In a region where the majority of people depend on farming or
raising animals, droughts inevitably have very negative consequences.
“The first wave would hit Cameroon, Cote
d’Ivoire, Ethiopia, Ghana, Kenya, Nigeria, Senegal, Tanzania and Uganda
over 2013–15, and the second wave of drought would hit all the
remaining countries in the region over 2016–18.
“In line with previous studies, drought
is modelled as a temporary shock to productivity in agriculture.
Consistent with similar historical shocks, a level of productivity shock
is chosen that would reduce agricultural output initially by around 10
per cent compared to the pre-shock level.”
It added, “Subsequently, productivity
recovers to its pre-shock level over the next two years. Following the
drop in agricultural output, prices of agricultural produce and food
increase much faster than the equivalent baseline numbers.
“For Ethiopia, Nigeria, or Zambia, the
initial shock results in an increase in agricultural and food prices by
an additional 15 per cent. Imports of food products increase
significantly to replace domestic output. Households will bear the
burden of higher food prices.
“Even though wages of unskilled workers
rise, the increase in income is slower than that of food prices. Since
food expenditures constitute a high share of household budgets, without
government or international intervention, real consumption would
decrease substantially.”
However, Director of Weather
Forecasting, Nigeria Metrological Agency, Mr. Ifeanyi Nnodu, told our
correspondent that the agency had not received any such signal, adding
that it did not forecast weather for a three-year period.
“I have not seen the report. However,
our weather forecasting is for one year period. We have released that of
2013 and we are working on that of 2014,” he said.
The report stated that following the
global financial crisis and recurring climatic volatility on the
continent, a growing number of African countries were setting up social
safety nets to protect the health and livelihoods of the poor and
vulnerable people during periods of adversity.
It noted that the safety nets could
protect families from the worst effects of crises and also contribute to
growth as well by allowing people to raise their incomes.
According to the report, buoyed by
rising private investment in the region and remittances now worth $33bn a
year supporting household incomes, Gross Domestic Product growth in
Africa will continue to rise and pick up to 5.3 per cent in 2014 and 5.5
per cent in 2015.
Strong government investments and higher
production in the mineral resources, agriculture and service sectors
are supporting the bulk of the economic growth, it said.
The report noted that as Africa’s growth
rates continued to surge with the region becoming increasingly a magnet
for investment and tourism, while poverty and inequality remained
unacceptably high and the pace of reduction unacceptably slow.
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