diff --git a/metadata/signals.csv b/metadata/signals.csv index b268272..cbc4c7a 100644 --- a/metadata/signals.csv +++ b/metadata/signals.csv @@ -2849,3 +2849,4 @@ MLI;Mali;West and Central Africa;True;idmc_displacement_disaster;2024-09-22;High
";http://eepurl.com/i000Bw#MLI;2024-10-09;0.1.14.2 +SOM;Somalia;Southern and Eastern Africa;True;jrc_agricultural_hotspots;2024-09-11;Medium concern;1.0;https://mcusercontent.com/ea3f905d50ea939780139789d/images/c0d932a4-9ec1-b828-1604-12a4302740cb.png;;;;As of September 2024, Somalia's agricultural landscape has experienced mixed results following the just-ended Gu season. While the season's abundant rainfall initially led to positive vegetation conditions and a favorable sorghum yield 30% above the five-year average, subsequent developments have tempered these gains. Factors such as poor distribution of rains, flooding, pest infestations, and insufficient farming inputs significantly impacted southern Somalia's crop production, reducing it by 45% compared to the long-term average. Despite improvements in pasture and water availability, food insecurity remains a pressing concern, with 3.6 million people still in crisis or worse phases, although this is a slight improvement from the previous period. Looking ahead, the projected below-normal rains for the upcoming Deyr season, influenced by La Niña, are likely to exacerbate food insecurity and deteriorate pasture and crop conditions further.;Projected La Niña affects rains, worsening food insecurity, crop conditions.;the JRC-ASAP system;https://data.humdata.org/dataset/asap-hotspots-monthly;https://agricultural-production-hotspots.ec.europa.eu;https://fsnau.org/downloads/Somalia-2024-Post-Gu-IPC-Communication-Report.pdf;"Access the data directly on HDX. Visit the ASAP homepage to access additional data and use the ASAP Warning Explorer to contextualize the situation.";http://eepurl.com/i1hjrI#SOM;2024-10-14;0.1.14.2