Food Security Situation In Ghana
Summary of
Household food security
About 1.2
million people, representing 5 percent of Ghana’s population, are food
insecure. Thirty four percent (34%) of the population are in Upper West
region, followed by Upper East with 15% and Northern region with 10%, amounting
to approximately 453,000 people. Refer to figure 1 (WFP, 2009).
Throughout
the country, about 2 million people are vulnerable to become food insecure.
Their food consumption patterns were barely acceptable at the time of the
survey and can quickly deteriorate following a natural or man-made shock.
About
507,000 (40%) people are vulnerable of becoming food insecure in the rural
areas of Upper West, Upper East and Northern regions. Up to 1.5 million people
vulnerable to food insecurity live in the rural and urban areas of the
remaining seven regions, with the largest share of them in Brong-Ahafo (11%),
in Ashanti (10%), followed by Eastern (8%) and the Volta region (7%).
Months of
inadequate household food
Months of
inadequate household food provisioning has been defined as the time between
stock depletion and the next harvest (Bilinsky and Swindale, 2007). It is
usually used as a measure of food insecurity in a highly subsistence-oriented
area where production is primarily for home consumption and households do not
make significant sales or purchases in the market. Quaye (2008) reported that
most farmer households experience significant degree of food insecurity with
food insecure periods spanning between 3 and 7 months (Fig. 2). Upper East
Region was the worst affected as it experienced the longest food shortage
period of 6 months. The Northern and Upper West regions recorded 5 months of
food inadequacy.
Table1:
Months of Household Food Insecurity in Upper West, Upper East and Northern
Regions of Ghana
(Quaye,
2008)
COPING
MECHANISM
As
indicated above, farmers are not able to produce enough to last throughout the
year and also unable to store enough produce for home consumption throughout
the year. The crucial question is: how are they able to survive? Table
below gives a list of coping strategies adopted by famers during periods of
food insecurity. Other strategies reported to sustain food security in Ghana
include shifting to less expensive and
less
preferred foods, borrowing food or money to buy, purchasing food on credit,
seeking assistance from friends and relatives and purchasing street food
(Nyanteng and Asuming-Brepong, 2003).
Table 2:
Coping strategies adopted during hunger periods
(Quaye ,
2008)
Measures
to ensure food security in the northern region
For the
past years MoFA has embarked on various Food Security programmes in
collaboration with other institutions and NGOs in the Northern Region of Ghana.
The
current Block Farm Programme implemented by MoFA involves all the three regions
in Northern Ghana .
By this
programme improved seeds, fertilizer, weedicide and tractor services are
provided to farmers who pay the total amount involved in kind after
harvesting. There are organized groups who have their farms in one
location (block).
The
Programme was initiated by the Government to address three main
objectives. The objectives include;
v
Support farmers to increase production to ensure food security
v
Generate employment in rural communities especially among the youth.
v
Increase incomes of small farm households.
The target
crops for the programme are Rice, Maize and Soybean and sorghum which are the
main staples for most Ghanaians and hence increase in the production of these
crops offers a sure way of addressing food security issues.
At the end
of the 2009 programme, Maize production increased from 131,859MT in 2008
to 167,842MT in 2009 representing a percentage increase of 27%.
Rice production increased from 105,278MT in 2009 to 142,219MT in
2009 representing an increase of 35% whiles Soybean production increased
from 68,243MT in 2008 to 84,118MT in 2009 representing a
percentage increase of 23%.
MoFA has instituted
the Agricultural Mechanization Services Centres (AMSEC) in the Northern Region
to enhance mechanization services. Individuals, groups and some
institutions have been supported by MoFA to acquire the farming machinery and
equipment to establish these centres.
The
Ministry of Food and Agriculture (MoFA) has also set up National Food Buffer
Stock Company (NAFCO) to ensure food security and to insulate farmers against
losses resulting from anticipated increases in production.
NAFCO
is mandated to manage government’s emergency food security, to purchase,
sell, preserve and distribute food stuff, to mop up excess produce from all
farmers in order to reduce post harvest losses resulting from spoilage due to
poor storage, thereby protecting farm incomes and to facilitate the export of
excess stock.
The UN
World Food Programme is also supporting Ghana especially in Northern Ghana in
many aspect of Food Security. A typical example is their initiative to support
the school feeding programme. This programme provided 100,000 children with
school meals in 2009. Today, WFP is reaching 122,000 children in 304 schools
(Baafi, 2010). The food provides an incentive for children to attend school,
but more importantly, the meals are vital for improving children’s health.
EFFECT OF
CLIMATE CHANGE ON FOOD SECUIRTY
Over the
past 10 years the Northern Region of Ghana has experienced a highly variable
and unpredictable climate. Weather predictions have evaded us on several
occasions. Currently floods and droughts can occur in the same area within
months. This poses a serious threat to food productivity in the Northern Region
where production is mainly rain fed. It is projected that agricultural production
and access to food in many African countries would be severely affected
(UNFCCC, 2007). The northern region of Ghana has started experiencing this
phenomenon and if nothing is done about it, food security would seriously be
affected and the problem of malnutrition would be exacerbated.
Other
possible impact of the climate change on food security in the
region will be decreased yield due to loss of land, uncertainty
about what and when to plant, increase in the number of people at
risk from hunger, decreased fish stock due to increasing temperatures and fall
of net revenues from crops.
Therefore
food security programmes in the region should therefore consider incorporating
climate change adaptation and mitigation aspects in order for farmers to cope with
the prevailing increase in the frequency and intensity droughts and floods.


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