London, 22nd August – Climate activists, anti-poverty campaigners and celebrity chefs are among those calling for an emergency meeting of world leaders on the global food crisis at the United Nations General Assembly in New York next month.

With 735 million people going hungry, 122 million more than in 2019–before the COVID pandemic, the ‘Elephant in the Room’ campaign, launched today, says the food crisis is being overlooked by world leaders, with devastating consequences.

An open letter to world leaders, signed by supporters including climate activist Vanessa Nakate, award-winning farming advocate Wangari Kuria, musician and philanthropist Octopizzo, SDG Advocate Richard Curtis, and US celebrity chef Andrew Zimmern, says:

“You know there is a global food crisis. You are ignoring it in your budgets. You do not address it enough with the media. It is not high on your agenda for the G20, UNGA or COP28. And so it remains an elephant in the room.

“As leaders, you have allowed this emergency to unfold. The solutions to end the food crisis exist. It is your responsibility to lead the world out of disasters, not compound them.”  

The global food crisis is caused by a combination of conflict, climate change, rising food prices and the punishing debt burdens faced by many poorer countries, 21 of which now face catastrophic levels of debt distress and food insecurity. An emergency high-level meeting at the UN General Assembly is needed. This would mean heads of state coming together to discuss the crisis and its solutions, and committing to action, the campaigners said. 

Admitting the scope of the problem is the first step towards solving it, said Rev. Eugene Cho, president and CEO of the U.S.-based Christian anti-hunger organization Bread for the World. “Several countries, including the U.S., have acknowledged there is a problem and taken steps to address it. That is a good start.  But it’s not enough to get us out of the crisis. The global food and malnutrition crisis is a climate crisis, a conflict crisis, and a rising costs crisis: it demands a powerful and unified global response.”

A quarter of a billion people face severe  hunger (acute food insecurity) the highest recorded in recent years. 3 billion people can’t afford a healthy, nutritious diet.

This year’s United Nations appeals for emergency assistance are only just over a quarter funded, much lower than for the last global food crisis in 2008, and yet there are twice as many additional people going hungry compared to 2008 levels.

“There is nothing inevitable about children dying because they don’t have enough to eat, just as there is nothing inevitable about families in rich countries queuing for food banks,” said climate activist,  Vanessa Nakate,  “There is nothing inevitable about a food system that cannot withstand shocks from climate change or conflict. There is enough food in the world for everyone.”

“During the last major global food crisis, following the 2008 economic crash, we saw world leaders coming together at the G8 summit in L’Aquila, Italy, to make bold commitments,” said David McNair, Executive Director for Policy at the One Campaign “This year, as we live through a so-called ‘polycrisis’, the food crisis seems to be getting lost, a victim of a siloed approach to tackling the world’s problems.”

Action to tackle the global food crisis should focus on three key elements, the campaign said: saving lives, building the resilience of affected communities to withstand climate and food price shocks, and securing the future by reform of the global food system to make it more sustainable and equitable.

Solutions world leaders should progress at an emergency meeting include: 

  • Fully funding the UN’s $55bn humanitarian appeals and doubling climate adaptation funding for lower income countries, while also cancelling their debts and reforming the multilateral financial system to unlock vital funds. 
  • Investing in the smallholder farmers, health workers and communities on the frontlines of the food crisis, including through social protection programmes.
  • Fixing the broken global food system by supporting more sustainable farming, diversifying crops, improving nutrition and access to a healthy diet, and reducing food waste.


These measures would break the cycle of crisis and could
save the world billions at the same time, campaigners said.

The Elephant in the Room campaign has been launched by Hungry for Action, a campaign  supported by over 40 organisations including Save the Children, the ONE Campaign and Global Citizen and is coordinated by the SDG2 Advocacy Hub.

 

Notes to editors:

For more information and interviews contact: Helen Palmer on hpalmer@webershandwick.com or +44 7912 242394

The open letter to world leaders can be viewed here:

The Elephant in the Room

Follow the Elephant in the Room campaign on: @HungryForAct on Twitter and @HungryforAction on Instagram

Data referenced in the release is quoted from a number of sources including


About Hungry for Action

The Hungry for Action campaign brings together NGOs, advocacy groups, campaigners and civil society from across the world, to urge policy makers to act now to avert famine and deliver bold, long-lasting and coordinated solutions to fix a broken food system.

 

Signatories to the open letter:

Bettina Campolucci Bordi

Chef & Author

 

Bobby Chinn

Chef, Restaurateur, TV Presenter, Author

 

Rev. Eugene Cho

President/CEO, Bread for the World

 

Richard Curtis
UN SDG Advocate, Screenwriter, Producer and Film Director

 

Cherrie De Erit Atilano

Founding Farmer/President & CEO, AGREA

 

Anahita Dhondy

Chef & Author

 

Jamie Drummond

Founder, Sharing Strategies, Co-Founder ONE.org

 

Jim Emerson

CEO, The Power of Nutrition

 

Monika Froehler

CEO, Ban Ki-Moon Centre for Global Citizens

 

Gwen Hines

CEO, Save the Children UK

 

Mike Khunga

Nutritionist and Public Health expert – the University of Leeds

 

Abigael Kima

Founder and Producer, Hali Hewa Podcast

 

Wangari Kuria

Founder and CEO, Farmer on Fire Ltd. 2023 Global Citizen Prize Winner.

 

Wanjira Mathai

Managing Director, Africa and Global Partnerships, World Resources Institute

 

Dr. Mithika M. J. Mwenda

Executive Director, Pan African Climate Justice Alliance

 

Wawira Njiru

Founder and Executive Director, Food for Education

 

Octopizzo
Performing Artist & Founder Octopizzo Foundation

 

Lorna Maseko

Celebrity Chef and Cookbook Author, Director of Bophelo Foundation

 

David McNair

Visiting Scholar, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and Executive Director, the ONE Campaign

 

Father Alex Muyebe

Executive Director, Jesuit Centre for Theological Reflection

 

Amanda Namayi

Youth Advocate for Climate Action & Zero Hunger

 

Vanessa Nakate

Climate Activist

 

Paul Newnham

Director, SDG2 Advocacy Hub

 

Elizabeth Nsimadala

President, Eastern Africa Farmers Federation

 

Rev. Adam Russell Taylor

President, Sojourners 

 

Dr. Gunhild Stordalen

Founder and Executive Chair, EAT 

 

Niki Webster

Chef & Author

 

Andrew Zimmern

Chef, Passport Hospitality, UN WFP, Nature Conservancy, IRC

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