Abstract

East Africa experiences chronic food insecurity, with levels varying from year-to-year across the region. Given that much can be done to prevent this level of suffering before it happens, humanitarian agencies monitor early indicators of food insecurity to trigger early action. Forecasts of total seasonal rainfall are one tool used to monitor and anticipate food security outcomes. Factors beyond rainfall, such as conflict, are key determinants of whether lack of rainfall can become a problem. In this paper, we present a quantitative analysis that isolates the value of rainfall information in anticipating food security outcomes across livelihood groups in East Africa. Comparing observed rainfall and temperature with food security classifications, we quantify how much the chance of food insecurity increases when rainfall is low. Results differed dramatically among livelihood groups; pastoralists in East Africa more frequently experience food insecurity than do non-pastoralists, and 12 months of low rainfall greatly increases the chances of “crisis” and “emergency” food security in pastoralist regions. In non-pastoralist regions, the relationship with total rainfall is not as strong. Similar results were obtained for livelihood groups in Kenya and Ethiopia, with slightly differing results in Somalia. Given this, we evaluated the relevance of monitoring and forecasting seasonal total rainfall. Our quantitative results demonstrate that six months of rainfall observations can already indicate a heightened risk of food insecurity, a full six months before conditions deteriorate. Combining rainfall observations with seasonal forecasts can further change the range of possible outcomes to indicate higher or lower risk of food insecurity, but the added value of seasonal forecasts is noticeable only when they show a strong probability of below-normal rainfall.

Highlights

  • Food insecurity is a recurrent crisis in East Africa

  • Food security outcomes for East Africa have been monitored by the Famine Early Warning Systems Network (FEWS NET) since 2009

  • In FEWS NET, food security is classified on a scale from 1 to 5, compatible with the Integrated Phase Classification (IPC) (IPC Global Partners 2012)

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Summary

Introduction

Food insecurity is a recurrent crisis in East Africa. Because impacts happen gradually over many months, humanitarians and government agencies closely monitor warning signs to anticipate impacts. Rainfall is a commonly used early warning indicator because many of the most vulnerable people in the region depend on rainfall for their livelihoods. Forecasts of seasonal rainfall totals are widely disseminated in the region. Some actors rely heavily on these forecasts to anticipate upcoming food security problems, and others disregard them as largely irrelevant given the complexity of food security in the region.

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