In a matter that UN organizations see if it happens, it will expose millions of people to the threat of malnutrition. The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations

(FAO) and the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) have warned of the dire repercussions of disrupted supplies, with the two organizations unanimously agreeing that the Ukrainian crisis will continue to raise global wheat prices in 2022-2023 by more than 19% from pre-crisis levels in case Ukraine loses its full export capacity.

and would even increase to 34% if Russia's exports were cut by half, following which international organizations resurfaced the global food security threat alarming disastrous consequences if the food sheet remained hostage to a conflict between two countries that played a key role in injecting millions of tons of wheat and maize into all countries of the world.

They stopped all exports of wheat to Ukraine and Russia the world's first and fifth largest exporters of wheat.

Although many United Nations organizations and States have warned of the seriousness of successive crises on global food security, steps on the ground are concentrated on securing stocks, so that the high food prices crisis remains unaddressed.

The issue of food security remains a peril, and future prospects will be bleak if the world does not move towards the reality posed by Ukraine's crisis and its repercussions on food security.

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