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Climate change threatens to cut harvests in Uganda's hungriest region

by Daniel Wesangula | Thomson Reuters Foundation
Monday, 20 March 2017 17:04 GMT

A Karamojong tribesman sits as he waits to vote at a polling station during elections in a village near the town of Kaabong in Karamoja region, Uganda February 18, 2016. REUTERS/Goran Tomasevic

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Half of the population of Uganda's remote northeastern Karamoja region depends on food aid

NAIROBI, March 20 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Higher temperatures and more erratic rainfall caused by climate change threaten to cut harvests in the poorest and hungriest region of Uganda that already depends heavily on food handouts, a study showed on Monday.

Half of the population of Uganda's remote northeastern Karamoja region depends on food aid, according to the World Food Programme (WFP), due to high levels of poverty and heavy reliance on rainfed agriculture.

"The rainfall pattern has become more erratic, therefore the farmers cannot plan their planting seasons," Siddharth Krishnaswamy, WFP's chief food security analyst in Uganda, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

"Food security remains elusive."

People often have to beg, sell livestock or burn charcoal to sell when food runs out in the troubled region, which has a history of clan violence.

It would be 20 times cheaper to invest in climate change adaptation than do nothing, which could cost up to $5.9 billion per year by 2025, according to the study by the Ugandan government with the support of the United Nations.

The study recommended greater investment in water harvesting and agroforestry, the cultivation of drought-resistant crops, and giving people information on climate change and its impact.

"The earlier adaptation measures are made the more resilient individuals, communities, organisations and countries will be."

The rainy season in Karamoja is now two months longer than it was 35 years ago, researchers found. But the unpredictability of rains had undermined agricultural production.

Most people in Karamoja, particularly women, were not aware that the climate had changed, the study found.

Those who noticed changes rarely took action to adapt to climate change because they did not know how.

(Reporting by Daniel Wesangula; Editing by Katy Migiro and Ros Russell; Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, women's rights, trafficking, property rights and climate change. Visit http://news.trust.org to see more stories.)

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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