Uh oh, you are using an old web browser that we no longer support. Some of this website's features may not work correctly because of this. Learn about updating to a more modern browser here.

Skip To Content

 

Cyclone Idai a year on: Southern Africa vulnerable to climate shocks 

CONTENT:

MAPUTO: Nearly 100,000 people continue to live in makeshift shelters and are alarmingly vulnerable to future climate shocks -- one year after Cyclone Idai left a trail of destruction across parts of Mozambique, Zimbabwe and Malawi.

International aid agencies Save the Children, CARE International and Oxfam are warning that without more action on climate change globally, it will be impossible to limit the impact of future climate shocks and to increase the ability of the most vulnerable to adapt. The agencies are calling on wealthy countries to take action to reduce the impact of the climate crisis, which is contributing to the increased frequency and severity of climate shocks such as Cyclone Idai.

Cyclone Idai made landfall on 14th March 2019.

Several cyclone resettlement sites in Sofala Province have already been overwhelmed by heavy rains and floods which hit the area in December 2019, with more than 3,676 shelters damaged and nearly 500 completely destroyed in floods. More than 700,000 hectares of crops, including maize, beans and rice, were destroyed by the cyclone, with experts estimating that it cost Mozambique at least USD 141 million in agricultural losses. Efforts to replant the crops have also been hampered by the recent flooding.  

Women and children bore a significant brunt of the disaster, with women and girls reporting a significant increase in their daily chores in the wake of Idai, such as travelling further to find water and firewood. Girls are spending more time caring for the elderly and younger siblings because their mothers have to seek work [Oxfam/SIDA Gender Assessment December 2019]. The ongoing displacement has also created additional risks of children being vulnerable to exploitation, separated from their families, and dropping out of school.

Temperatures have been rising in Southern Africa at twice the global rate as a result of the climate crisis, and many countries have been buffeted by multiple shocks over the past 12 months. Currently 16.7 million people across the region are facing severe food-insecurity due to a combination of cyclones, floods and droughts that have destroyed crops and livelihoods. In Mozambique, it is estimated that nearly two million people face difficulties in accessing food to meet acceptable food needs.

Chance Briggs, Save the Children’s Country Director in Mozambique, said:

“The climate crisis is an intergenerational crisis that affects children now and in the future. Children have contributed the least to the climate crisis, and yet we know that they are paying the highest price. We are calling for increased funding for resilience programming, to reduce the impact of climate change on the most vulnerable children, and ensure their lives and futures are protected.”

Marc Nosbach, CARE International’s Country Director in Mozambique, said:

“The increased occurrences and destructiveness of climate-induced disasters in poorer countries is saddling millions of innocent and vulnerable people with the debt of climate change. The most vulnerable people and countries are being forced to suffer while the world waits for major emitters to do their fair share and halve global CO2 emissions by 2030. The worsening impacts of climate change and more frequent and intense disasters also cause a crippling economic crisis setting back development gains. This must be responded to with greater financial support protecting people from the harmful climate impacts.”

Rotafina Donco, Oxfam’s Country Director in Mozambique, said:

“Storms like Idai are likely to become more destructive and intense as global temperatures rise and the climate crisis escalates. As the climate crisis worsens, governments and aid agencies are struggling to get the right resources to implement speedy and adequate recovery and reconstruction efforts. We need funding for better early warning systems, climate change adaptation and better preparedness of local NGOs given the commitment made towards localization in the humanitarian sector as they are the first responders that tend to reach communities as we saw with Idai.”

ENDS

Notes to Editors:

  • COSACA is an emergency and humanitarian consortium made up of Save the Children, CARE and Oxfam International. COSACA response teams are working in collaboration to respond to Cyclone Idai and Cyclone Kenneth in Sofala, Manica, Tete, Zambezia, and Cabo Delgado provinces.
  • CARE: As part of its humanitarian response to the cyclones, CARE is distributing drought-resistant seeds, which include sorghum, cowpea, ground nuts, pineapple seedlings, maize and millet, to more than 36,000 small scale farmers in regions where crops were destroyed by the storms in Mozambique. CARE is also providing basic training in improved agricultural practices that present benefits to farmers and land along traditional practices. These techniques will help communities combat the effects of climate change going forward.
  • Save the Children: Save the Children is responding to Cyclones Idai and Kenneth in Sofala, Manica, Zambezia and Cabo Delgado. To date, Save the Children has supported over 780,000 people, including over 450,000 children, through Food Security and Livelihood, Education, Shelter, Child Protection, WASH, Health and Nutrition programs. Save the Children is also providing immediate life-saving and life-sustaining assistance to children and families affected by severe food insecurity ,and is still distributing seeds as well as supporting the restoration of the livelihoods of drought and flood-affected people through resilience-building interventions to mitigate the humanitarian impacts of erratic weather.
  • Oxfam: Oxfam continues to respond to resettlement camps and communities in Sofala and Cabo Delgado through the provision of latrines, and clean water through the provision of boreholes and the rehabilitation of the water systems.  It’s also supported farmers and households in the provision of seeds and tools to allow them to resuscitate their livelihood that was affected by the Cyclone and ensuring that response activities provided meets the different needs of women and men the various sites. 

Find out more about our work