Business Recorder
BANGKOK: More than 30 million people will be pushed back into poverty by the impacts of the Iran war including disruptions to fuel and fertiliser supplies just as farmers are planting crops, UN development chief Alexander De Croo said on Thursday. Fertiliser shortages - worsened by the blocking of cargo vessels through the Strait of Hormuz - have already lowered agricultural productivity, the Administrator of the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) told Reuters . That would likely hit crop yields later this year, the former Belgian prime minister added. “Food insecurity will be at its peak level in a few months - and there is not much that you can do about it,” he said, also listing other fallouts of the crisis including energy shortages and falling remittances. “Even if the war would stop tomorrow, those effects, you already have them, and they will be pushing back more than 30 million people into poverty,” he said. Much of the world’s fertilizer is produced in the Middle East, and one-third of global supplies passes through the Strait of Hormuz, where Iran and the United States are jostling for control. Earlier this month, the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund and the UN World Food Programme warned that the war will drive up food prices, further burdening the world’s most vulnerable populations.
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