Skip to content
  • About
  • Partner with Us
  • Advertise with Us
  • Become a Member
  • Log In
Primary Menu
  • Latest
  • GNA Knowledge Hub
  • Topics
  • Regions
    • Americas
    • Africa
    • Australia & Oceania
    • Central Asia
    • East Asia
    • Europe
    • Global
    • Southeast Asia
    • South Asia
    • West Asia
  • News
  • Brief
  • Infographic
  • Video
  • Opinion
  • Grassroots
  • Youth
  • Press Release
  • Corporate Sustainability
  • GNA Knowledge Hub
  • Soft News

Humanitarian Needs Overview 2022: Food Insecurity is Gripping Myanmar

Food insecurity is threatening the longevity of the people of Myanmar. The Humanitarian Needs Overview 2022 is issued to help us understand the urgency.
by Kamil Ghiffary January 27, 2022
A photo by UNICEF of Myanmar children standing firmly, commemorating 70 years delivering for children - Humanitatian Needs Overview Myanmar

Source: UNICEF Myanmar Facebook

The Myanmar coup that happened last year has dethroned Aung San Suu Kyi as their previously elected leader since February 1st, 2021. Since the turmoil, a prolonged crisis left on its people remains uncertain until today, with food insecurity among its younger generation as one of the biggest concerns.

The Myanmar Crisis report book: “Humanitarian Needs Overview: Myanmar” was issued by the UN in December 2021. The overview relay the humanitarian crisis that the people of Myanmar have endured through the lenses of evidence-based statistics.

The report consists of statistical data, risk examination, and continued monitoring for the needs of Myanmar people. Through numbers and insights, Humanitarian Needs Overview (HNO) calls for a global urgency, namely, Humanitarian Response Plan (HRP), to aid Myanmar to counteract the threats and risks for civilians.

The latest UN’s HNO reveals that among the 54 million of Myanmar’s total population, more than 50% live in poverty. However, the nexus of the crisis lies within these numbers: 14.4 million people living in poverty are categorized as people in humanitarian need.

According to the report, the numbers of Myanmar people in different clusters of humanitarian need are as follows:

  • No education (5.4 million)
  • Health problems (2.5 million)
  • Malnutrition (2 million)
  • Improper housing and shelter (1.7 million)
  • Unclean water and sanitation (5.5 million)
  • Food insecurity (13.2 million)

When divided by age, these statistics are worsened, with 5 million children under 18 years old being exposed daily to the humanitarian crisis. The remaining numbers are for adults (8.2 million) and elderly (1.2 million).

The HNO report also suggests that the relentless wave of COVID-19 and the ongoing political and socio-economic turbulence are affecting Myanmar’s domestic food markets. People are expecting a drop in food market prices, but the price projection will remain higher than the standard season.

“Yields are expected to be below normal, partly due to localized dry conditions, but especially due to the disruption of agricultural input markets, further impacting on food security,” explains the HNO report.

Understanding the scope of Myanmar people’s food insecurity, the Humanitarian Country Team (HCT) has adopted a new indicator on their analysis. By applying a vulnerability point of humanitarian need through numbers of people under food insecurity, this new methodology is suggested to be more accurate on the frames of Myanmar’s crisis.

Hence, the Myanmar 2022 HNO report has identified that food insecurity can potentially manifest in extreme malnutrition and life-threatening issues. Among the 5 million children in humanitarian need, 1.3 million children are in dire assistance of humanitarian help.

Editor: Nazalea Kusuma

Join Green Network Asia – An Ecosystem of Shared Value for Sustainable Development.

Learn, share, network, and get involved in our movement to create positive impact for people and the planet through our public education and multi-stakeholder advocacy on sustainability-related issues and sustainable development.

Become a Member Now
Kamil Ghiffary
Website |  + postsBio

Kamil is a Contributing Author at Green Network Asia. He graduated from Universitas Indonesia with a master's degree in International Relations. He is a lecturer of International Affairs at UPN Veteran Jakarta.

  • Kamil Ghiffary
    https://greennetwork.asia/author/kamilghiffary/
    Trash Talking the Urban Waste Management
  • Kamil Ghiffary
    https://greennetwork.asia/author/kamilghiffary/
    Doubled Numbers of Displaced People in Myanmar
  • Kamil Ghiffary
    https://greennetwork.asia/author/kamilghiffary/
    B20 Indonesia for the Global Economy’s Collective Growth
  • Kamil Ghiffary
    https://greennetwork.asia/author/kamilghiffary/
    The Sendai Framework Guides Indonesia’s Disaster Risk Reduction Strategies

Continue Reading

Previous: The Global Schools Launched a Case-Study Guidebook for Education for Sustainable Development
Next: Tiktok & “Green Influencers”: Can They Make an Impact?

Read More Stories

people giving things to to other Beyond Empty Promises: How Hong Kong Can Build Consumer Trust in Sustainability
  • GNA Knowledge Hub
  • Opinion

Beyond Empty Promises: How Hong Kong Can Build Consumer Trust in Sustainability

by Kun Tian October 17, 2025
A plastic water bottle washed up on seashore Looking into Desalination to Tackle the Growing Water Crisis in MENA and Beyond
  • Brief
  • GNA Knowledge Hub

Looking into Desalination to Tackle the Growing Water Crisis in MENA and Beyond

by Ponnila Sampath-Kumar October 17, 2025
a herd of animals standing on top of a snow covered field Supporting Rewilding to Reverse Ecological Crisis
  • GNA Knowledge Hub
  • Soft News

Supporting Rewilding to Reverse Ecological Crisis

by Kresentia Madina October 16, 2025
two eagles on a naked tree branch with a clear blue sky in the background Animating the Environment Through the Indigenous Language of Potawatomi
  • GNA Knowledge Hub
  • Soft News

Animating the Environment Through the Indigenous Language of Potawatomi

by Dina Oktaferia October 15, 2025
people riding horses on river How the Ongi River Movement in Mongolia Protects People and the Planet
  • GNA Knowledge Hub
  • Soft News

How the Ongi River Movement in Mongolia Protects People and the Planet

by Dinda Rahmania October 14, 2025
three fishers on a boat The Plight of Fishermen in Sei Sembilang Village, Banyuasin, Amid Climate Change
  • GNA Knowledge Hub
  • Grassroots

The Plight of Fishermen in Sei Sembilang Village, Banyuasin, Amid Climate Change

by Dinar Try Akbar October 13, 2025

About Us

  • GNA CEO’s Letter
  • GNA In-House Team
  • GNA Author Network
  • GNA Op-ed Article Guidelines
  • GNA Grassroots Report Guidelines
  • GNA Press Release Placement Services
  • GNA Internship Program
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy
© 2021-2025 Green Network Asia