Famine confirmed for first time in Gaza
26.08.2025 07:48 "Agro Perspectiva" (Kyiv) —
More than half a million people in Gaza are trapped in famine, marked by widespread starvation, destitution and preventable deaths, according to a new Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) analysis released today. Famine conditions are projected to spread from Gaza Governorate to Deir Al Balah and Khan Younis Governorates in the coming weeks. The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), UNICEF, the United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) and the World Health Organization (WHO) have collectively and consistently highlighted the extreme urgency for an immediate and full-scale humanitarian response given the escalating hunger-related deaths, rapidly worsening levels of acute malnutrition and plummeting levels of food consumption, with hundreds of thousands of people going days without anything to eat. The agencies reinforced that famine must be stopped at all costs. An immediate ceasefire and end to the conflict is critical to allow unimpeded, large-scale humanitarian response that can save lives. The agencies are also gravely concerned about the threat of an intensified military offensive in Gaza City and any escalation in the conflict, as it would have further devastating consequences for civilians where famine conditions already exist. Many people especially sick and malnourished children, older people and people with disabilities may be unable to evacuate. By the end of September, more than 640,000 people will face Catastrophic levels of food insecurity classified as IPC Phase 5 across the Gaza Strip. An additional 1.14 million people in the territory will be in Emergency (IPC Phase 4) and a further 396,000 people in Crisis (IPC Phase 3) conditions. Conditions in North Gaza are estimated to be as severe or worse than in Gaza City. However, limited data prevented an IPC classification, highlighting the urgent need for access to assess and assist. Rafah was not analyzed given indications that it is largely depopulated. Classifying famine means that the most extreme category is triggered when three critical thresholds extreme food deprivation, acute malnutrition and starvation-related deaths have been breached. The latest analysis now affirms on the basis of reasonable evidence that these criteria have been met. Almost two years of conflict, repeated displacement, and severe restrictions on humanitarian access, compounded by repeated interruptions and impediments to access to food, water, medical aid, support to agriculture, livestock and fisheries and the collapse of health, sanitation, and market systems, have pushed people into starvation. Access to food in Gaza remains severely constrained. In July, the number of households reporting very severe hunger doubled across the territory compared to May and more than tripled in Gaza City. More than one in three people (39 percent) indicated they were going days at a time without eating, and adults regularly skip meals to feed their children. Malnutrition among children in Gaza is accelerating at a catastrophic pace. In July alone, more than 12,000 children were identified as acutely malnourished the highest monthly figure ever recorded and a six-fold increase since the start of the year. Nearly one in four of these children were suffering from severe acute malnutrition (SAM), the deadliest form with both short and long-term impacts. Since the last IPC Analysis in May, the number of children expected to be at severe risk of death from malnutrition by the end of June 2026 has tripled from 14,100 to 43,400. Similarly, for pregnant and breastfeeding women, the number of estimated cases has tripled from 17,000 in May to 55,000 women expected to be suffering from perilous levels of malnutrition by mid-2026. The impact is visible: one in five babies are born prematurely or underweight. The new assessment reports the most severe deterioration since the IPC began analyzing acute food insecurity and acute malnutrition in the Gaza Strip, and it marks the first time a famine has been officially confirmed in the Middle East region. Since July, food and aid supplies entering Gaza increased slightly but remained vastly insufficient, inconsistent and inaccessible compared to the need. Meanwhile, approximately 98 percent of cropland in the territory is damaged or inaccessible decimating the agriculture sector and local food production and nine of ten people have been serially displaced from homes. Cash is critically scarce, aid operations remain severely disrupted, with most UN trucks looted amid growing desperation. Food prices are extremely high and there is not enough fuel and water to cook and medicines and medical supplies. Gaza’s health system has severely deteriorated, access to safe drinking water and sanitation services has been drastically reduced, while multi-drug resistant infections are surging and levels of morbidity including diarrhoea, fever, acute respiratory and skin infections are alarmingly high among children. To enable lifesaving humanitarian operations, the U.N. agencies emphasized the importance of an immediate and sustained ceasefire to stop the killing, allow for the safe release of hostages and permit unimpeded access for a mass influx of assistance to reach people across Gaza. They stressed the urgent need for greater amounts of food aid, along with dramatically improved delivery, distribution and accessibility, as well as shelter, fuel, cooking gas and food production inputs. They emphasized that it is critical to support the rehabilitation of the health system, maintain and revive essential health services, including primary health care, and ensure sustained delivery of health supplies into and across Gaza. The restoration of commercial flows at scale, market systems, essential services, and local food production is also vital if the worst outcomes of the famine are to be avoided. «People in Gaza have exhausted every possible means of survival. Hunger and malnutrition are claiming lives every day, and the destruction of cropland, livestock, greenhouses, fishery and food production systems has made the situation even more dire,» said FAO Director-General QU Dongyu. «Our priority must now be safe and sustained access for large-scale food assistance. Access to food is not a privilege it is a basic human right.» «Famine warnings have been clear for months,» said WFP Executive Director Cindy McCain. «What’s urgently needed now is a surge of aid, safer conditions, and proven distribution systems to reach those most in need wherever they are. Full humanitarian access and a ceasefire now are critical to save lives.» «Famine is now a grim reality for children in Gaza Governorate, and a looming threat in Deir al-Balah and Khan Younis,» said UNICEF Executive Director Catherine Russell. «As we have repeatedly warned, the signs were unmistakable: children with wasted bodies, too weak to cry or eat; babies dying from hunger and preventable disease; parents arriving at clinics with nothing left to feed their children. There is no time to lose. Without an immediate ceasefire and full humanitarian access, famine will spread, and more children will die. Children on the brink of starvation need the special therapeutic feeding that UNICEF provides.» «A ceasefire is an absolute and moral imperative now,» said WHO Director-General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus. «The world has waited too long, watching tragic and unnecessary deaths mount from this man-made famine. Widespread malnutrition means that even common and usually mild diseases like diarrhoea are becoming fatal, especially for children. The health system, run by hungry and exhausted health workers, cannot cope. Gaza must be urgently supplied with food and medicines to save lives and begin the process of reversing malnutrition. Hospitals must be protected so that they can continue treating patients. Aid blockages must end, and peace must be restored, so that healing can begin.» Source FAO
04.03.2026 |
|
 |
 |
|
 |
06:08 |
Fertilizer prices set to spike: What the Iran conflict means for your farm |
03.03.2026 |
|
 |
 |
|
 |
23:39 |
Arla to invest 300 million euros in new Swedish cheese plant |
19.02.2026 |
|
 |
 |
|
 |
10:04 |
Ukraine’s 2025 farm exports fall 9% to 22.7 bln USD, EU remains top market |
10.02.2026 |
|
 |
 |
|
 |
12:49 |
FAO Food Price Index declines in January for fifth consecutive month |
 |
12:18 |
Ukraine poultry producers urge Moldova to hold talks, lift import ban |
02.02.2026 |
|
 |
 |
|
 |
08:29 |
Agriculture ministers and partners commit to integrated global action on water scarcity and competing uses |
 |
06:27 |
FAO strengthens food security across Haiti and the Dominican Republic through emergency agriculture and regional agrifood system protection |
25.01.2026 |
|
 |
 |
|
 |
19:06 |
EBRD and UKRSIBBANK provide US$ 17 million to YEDNIST' GROUP |
23.01.2026 |
|
 |
 |
|
 |
15:07 |
EBRD invests US$ 20 million in Ukrainian-founded learning marketplace leader |
 |
15:05 |
EBRD invests EUR60 million in Amber Dragon Ukraine Infrastructure Fund |
 |
15:03 |
EBRD backs Horizon Capital Catalyst Fund with EUR30 million commitment |
19.01.2026 |
|
 |
 |
|
 |
23:36 |
Cargill Advances Maritime Decarbonisation with Delivery of First Green Methanol Dual-Fuel Vessel |
 |
23:21 |
EU and Mercosur sign historic and ambitious partnership |
14.01.2026 |
|
 |
 |
|
 |
04:04 |
Argentina Cuts Taxes Again, Enhancing Exports |
04.01.2026 |
|
 |
 |
|
 |
08:24 |
Indonesia Robusta coffee production in 2025/26 is forecast to increase - USDA |
 |
05:09 |
Milk Production Continues Growth in 2026 |
30.12.2025 |
|
 |
 |
|
 |
09:21 |
Ukraine harvests 57.6 mln tonnes of grain in 2025 – Economy Ministry |
17.12.2025 |
|
 |
 |
|
 |
08:58 |
Pigmeat pigmeat production on a declining trend |
14.12.2025 |
|
 |
 |
|
 |
20:32 |
France, Germany, Spain, and Italy Lead EU Crop Production in 2024 |
10.12.2025 |
|
 |
 |
|
 |
20:21 |
EBRD and EU support a EUR100 million affordable housing initiative to support Ukraine’s recovery |
06.12.2025 |
|
 |
 |
|
 |
08:31 |
EBRD backs green transport upgrade for Cherkasy, Ukraine |
19.11.2025 |
|
 |
 |
|
 |
06:43 |
Autumn 2025 Economic Forecast shows continued growth despite challenging environment |
 |
05:25 |
Disasters cost global agriculture $3.26 trillion over three decades, FAO report reveals |
 |
05:23 |
Nitrogen management takes a major step forward in Europe. NitroScope project launches in Ghent |
 |
02:57 |
Global sugar trade in 2025/26 forecasted at 65.2 million tonnes – FAO |
 |
02:45 |
Global Wheat Production Set to Reach Record Level in 2025 |
17.11.2025 |
|
 |
 |
|
 |
19:34 |
International support for Ukraine demonstrated through major rail contract |
15.11.2025 |
|
 |
 |
|
 |
16:35 |
EBRD finances new private peak energy generation and storage capacity in Ukraine |
14.11.2025 |
|
 |
 |
|
 |
14:59 |
EBRD supports food and beverage security in Ukraine with EUR11 million loan to Karpaty Mineral Water |
 |
14:57 |
EBRD extends new guarantee to ProCredit Bank Ukraine to unlock extra EUR200 million in lending |
 |
14:51 |
EBRD and IFC co-invest in Dragon Capital’s Rebuild Ukraine Fund |
28.10.2025 |
|
 |
 |
|
 |
08:27 |
Supply of cattle to processing enterprises decreased. Pig supplies increased |
23.10.2025 |
|
 |
 |
|
 |
23:47 |
Commission mobilises ˆ50 million in emergency support to farmers in Bulgaria, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland and Romania |
 |
23:43 |
Commission proposes measures to support generational renewal in agriculture to secure Europe's food, farming and rural future |
17.10.2025 |
|
 |
 |
|
 |
22:05 |
Andrew MacPherson to be appointed CEO of Teys beef processing business |
16.10.2025 |
|
 |
 |
|
 |
17:07 |
FAO marks World Food Day and 80 years of collective action for a better future |
07.10.2025 |
|
 |
 |
|
 |
06:23 |
World Cotton Day. 7 October. Key messages |
 |
06:00 |
Global cotton production is expected to grow by 1.3% annually, primarily driven by yield improvements, reaching 29.5 Mt by 2034 |
05.10.2025 |
|
 |
 |
|
 |
22:03 |
FAO Food Price Index declined slightly in September |
 |
20:22 |
Cereal markets remain well supplied, with a positive outlook for the short term |
28.09.2025 |
|
 |
 |
|
 |
15:31 |
HIGHLIGHTS: EU exports remained stable in the first half of 2025, while import prices increased |
26.09.2025 |
|
 |
 |
|
 |
14:26 |
New FAO report assesses progress towards food and agriculture SDG indicators |
 |
10:49 |
EBRD lowers Ukraine 2025 growth forecast to 2.5 per cent |
 |
07:40 |
Turkey Stone Fruit Exports Forecast to Fall After Spring Frosts |
24.09.2025 |
|
 |
 |
|
 |
14:08 |
EBRD supports Ukraine’s agribusiness sector |
17.09.2025 |
|
 |
 |
|
 |
19:27 |
Sudan: FAO moves to protect 9.4 million livestock in nationwide vaccination campaign |
14.09.2025 |
|
 |
 |
|
 |
11:57 |
Global oilseeds production is raised this month on higher soybean production in Ukraine - USDA |
 |
10:14 |
Global Raspberry Market Under Pressure Amid Weather Extremes, Rising Costs, and Shifting Yields |
13.09.2025 |
|
 |
 |
|
 |
16:18 |
Improved prospects for coarse grains put global cereal production in 2025 forecast at all-time high |
 |
10:30 |
U.S. Corn Exports Forecast at Back-to-Back Records |
Also available:

|