
Millions of people across some of the world’s most vulnerable regions are expected to face worsening hunger in the months ahead, as conflict, economic pressures and shrinking aid budgets exacerbate long-running crises.
A new Hunger Hotspots Report released by the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) and the World Food Programme (WFP), noted that conflict, economic pressures and shrinking aid budgets exacerbate long-running crises.
The report identified Nigeria and 12 countries and territories where food insecurity is expected to worsen between June and November 2026.
According to the report, Sudan, South Sudan, Yemen and Palestine remain at the highest level of concern, with northeast Nigeria added to that group and Somalia also now in that category.
“Nigeria has entered the highest-risk category after forecasts showed parts of Borno could face catastrophic hunger,” the report stated.
“Sudan, South Sudan, Yemen and Palestine remain the most critical hotspots, while Nigeria and Somalia have moved into the highest-risk category amid growing concerns over famine.”
According to the WFP’s Acting Executive Director Carl Skau, conflict remains the main cause of hunger, affecting 12 of the 13 hotspots.
“Conflict, shocks, and disasters are forcing families to make impossible decisions about who gets to eat and who goes to bed hungry,”
WFP and FAO warned that humanitarian funding continued to decline.
Support for food assistance, emergency farming programmes and nutrition responses in crisis settings dropped by an estimated 59 per cent between 2022 and 2025, the worst in a decade.
At the same time, about 266 million people across these countries are facing severe food insecurity.
“The challenge is whether we act early enough and at the necessary scale,” FAO Deputy Director-General Beth Bechdol said.
FAO noted that emergency support for agriculture remains one of the most effective ways to help families keep producing food and reduce reliance on aid.
The report warns that new crises could make conditions worse.
Jean-Martin Bauer, Director of the World Food Programme’s (WFP) Food Security and Nutrition Analysis Service said intense economic shocks.were compounding food insecurity.
“Economic shocks are compounding food insecurity, and climate change and climate variability are also further intensifying the situation,” Bauer stressed. (NAN)

















