According to the United Nations’ recently published annual State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World report, tens of millions have joined the ranks of the chronically undernourished over the past five years, and countries around the world continue to struggle with multiple forms of malnutrition.
Fraym launched a Localized Food Insecurity Index, a highly detailed targeting tool that maps populations vulnerable to food insecurity. The tool allows food security to be addressed at the hyper-local level of individual communities, instead of a country or regional level.
The geospatial data company uses artificial intelligence and machine learning to map pre-existing vulnerabilities to food insecurity to indicate which areas may experience the most severe destabilising effects of the Covid-19 pandemic.
With the Localized Food Insecurity Index, governments and aid organisations are able to quickly characterise at-risk populations, âzoom inâ on where these people live, understand their communities, anticipate who will experience food shocks and to what degree and make forward-looking plans to address these crises before they become acute.
Applications of the new Localized Food Insecurity Index include:
Illustrating areas at the greatest risk for food shortages to inform humanitarian assistance planning and resource allocation.
Providing critical context and situational awareness for intelligence analysis and operational preparation in these environments.
Modelling the likelihood of unrest or extremist activity as a result of food insecurity to provide critical indications and warnings for priority areas of interest.
Anticipating likely economic consequences of food insecurity, particularly in the context of geopolitical competition.
The World Food Programme estimates Covid-19 could almost double the number of people suffering acute hunger by the end of the year, with the potential to prompt mass migration and political unrest. On the other hand, the State of Food Security and Nutrition world report notes that the hungry are most numerous in Asia, but expanding fastest in Africa.
âGovernments and aid organisations are often missing the local population insight they need to anticipate and meet the acute needs of people who are going to face food shortages.Fraym gives these decision-makers a whole new level of detailed information and predictive insight to tackle current crises around the world,â said Dustin Homer,Director of dolutions.