09/16/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 09/16/2025 04:11
The Mid-Year Update of the annual Global Report on Food Crises (GRFC), published today, rings the alarm on catastrophic food insecurity in six countries or territories: Sudan, Gaza, South Sudan, Yemen, Haiti, and Mali.
The Gaza Governorate has been in famine since July, and other areas are projected to fall into famine. In Gaza, more than half a million people were facing starvation in July. In Sudan, famine was first confirmed in August 2024.
In all six countries /territories, the crisis is human-induced, as the ongoing conflicts are the main driver of acute food insecurity. Gaza, South Sudan, and Yemen also have the highest share of their populations suffering from catastrophic food insecurity (IPC Phase 5). This is the most severe level of acute food insecurity according to the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC), a multi-stakeholder initiative informing food crisis response globally.
Households in IPC Phase 5 experience an extreme lack of food even after full employment of coping capacities, and they need urgent humanitarian action to mitigate starvation and acute malnutrition and prevent widespread death.
According to the Mid-Year Update of the GRFC, some areas in South Sudan's Upper Nile state are at risk of famine due to escalating conflict and dire economic conditions.
The report presents other concerning figures about the evolution of acute food insecurity (defined by the IPC as food deprivation that threatens lives and livelihoods, regardless of the causes, context or duration) in food crisis countries:
The mid-year update report identifies three main types of shock, that, when combined with a high proportion of vulnerable populations in food crisis countries, act as the main drivers of acute food insecurity. These shocks are:
The mid-year update of the Global Report on Food Crisis 2025 relies on data from multi-partner initiatives like the Integrated food security Phase Classification(IPC), the Cadre Harmonisé(CH) and other equivalent metrics. The Joint Research Centre (JRC) plays a crucial role in contributing to the production of these data, in providing technical and advisory support to the IPC and the CH frameworks as well as in the Senior Committee responsible for its endorsement.
Additionally, the JRC's Anomaly Hotspots of Agricultural Production (ASAP) offers real-time information feeding into IPC and CH analysis.
Launched by the European Union, the UN's Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) and the World Food Programme (WFP) in 2016, the Global Network against Food Crises seeks to better connect, integrate, and guide existing initiatives, partnerships, programmes and policy processes to address the root causes of food crises.
Since the launch of the first Global Report on Food Crises in 2016 initiated by the JRC, the EU's contribution is based on close coordination among European Commission's services (mainly the Directorates-General for International Partnerships, European Civil Protection and Humanitarian Aid Operations and the JRC) and other partners.
Over the last 7 years the Global Report on Food Crisis has evolved into one of the main multi-partner initiatives under the Global Network against Food Crises and serves as its flagship publication.
The Global Report on Food Crises 2025 and its Mid-Year Update is the result of a joint, consensus-based assessment of food crisis worldwide by 16 partner organisations, coordinated by the Food Security Information Network(FSIN).
Global Report on Food Crises - Mid-Year Update 2025
Global Report on Food Crisis 20205: Global Report on Food Crises (GRFC) 2025
Resources from the Knowledge Centre for Global Food and Nutrition Security: