Second wave of locust invasion and floods to shake East Africa economies

A resident scares away desert locusts from a farm in Embu County, central Kenya, on January 25. 2020. PHOTO | GEORGE MUNENE | NATION MEDIA GROUP

What you need to know:

  • Breeding continues in several countries where hopper bands are forming that could lead to new swarms.
  • FAO warns that the new generation of Locust are up to 20 times in size and 400 times stronger thereby posing a food insecurity threat to the East African region.
  • Reports of mature swarms copulating in the interior where floods occurred this week in Yemen.

The East African Community secretariat will set aside emergency funds to turn tides against floods and locusts.

While floods are wreaking havoc across the region, a swarm of locusts is expected to once again invade Kenya through Ethiopia.

This will deal a double blow to food security in a region that is already grappling with widespread economic disruption from the coronavirus pandemic.

“We have convened a meeting of Agriculture Ministers from the EAC to discuss the impact of Covid-19 on agriculture and the impending invasion of locusts in our region,” said Christoph Bazivamo, deputy EAC secretary general in charge of productive and social sector.

This comes in the wake of an announcement by the Food and Agriculture Organisation, warning that a new generation of locusts is set to enter East Africa in June.

FAO’s resilience team leader for Eastern Africa Cyril Ferrand is concerned that the desert locust will eat seedlings and young plants, leaving no chance for crops to mature.

“More swarms of locusts are set to mature in central and northern areas in Kenya with a few laying eggs and hatching starts. We must continue with control measures,” said Mr Ferrand.

“The current situation in East Africa remains extremely alarming as more swarms form and mature in northern and central Kenya and southern Ethiopia. This represents an unprecedented threat to food security and livelihoods because it coincides with the early beginning of the long rains and the current growing season,” warns desert locust situation update report by FAO and dated April 28, 2020.

A new generation of breeding is under way in Kenya where more eggs will hatch and form hopper bands in May, followed by new swarms in late June and July, which coincides with the harvest season in Kenya.

“First, we intend to review measures taken by each EAC partner state and share the best practices to curb the challenge posed by these natural disasters,” he said.

FAO warns that it will be too late to stop the locusts from spreading in less than six months, thereby inviting starvation to millions.

FAO is also concerned that the chemicals used will kill wildlife and damage food supplies.

Despite FAO’s warning, EAC partner states remain unprepared to deal with the threat.

Current solutions have not and will not work, the agency warns, as the sizes of the swarms are too big for aerial spraying. Further, current spraying practices don’t kill everything, leaving bugs in the ground.

Mr Bazivamo disclosed that emergency funds allocated by the East African Legislative Assembly (EALA) will be used in the initial fight against the locusts as the region seeks for more funding support from other international as well as local partners.

Emergency funds

“We intend to use part of the funds set aside by EALA for emergency,” said Mr Bazivamo. The amount will be discussed in the meeting to be held later this week.

The EALA approved the East African Community’s Supplementary Budget of $4.9 million for the financial year ending June, 2020, to fund its additional expenditure for priority projects and programmes that were hitherto unfunded.

Out of the amount, only $1.8 million is to be used for financial sector and development and regionalisation projects. No specific amounts have been allocated for the locust campaign.

At the same time, Lake Victoria Basin countries of Burundi, Rwanda, Uganda, Kenya and Tanzania have been receiving abnormally heavy rainfall since October 2019 causing flooding and water levels rising in the lake.