UN Appeals for $47 Billion in Humanitarian Aid for 2025
The UN warns that global crises, including conflicts and climate disasters, will leave millions without critical assistance due to funding shortfalls.
- The United Nations has requested $47.4 billion to provide humanitarian aid to 190 million of the 305 million people projected to need assistance in 2025.
- UN humanitarian chief Tom Fletcher described the situation as a 'perfect storm' of conflicts, climate crises, and inequality, disproportionately affecting the most vulnerable populations.
- Funding shortages in 2024 resulted in drastic cuts to food, water, and sanitation aid in crisis zones like Syria and Yemen, with only 43% of the year's $50 billion appeal met.
- The UN highlighted donor fatigue as a key challenge, with fears that the incoming U.S. administration under Donald Trump could further reduce international aid contributions.
- Humanitarian workers face increasing dangers, with 2024 already the deadliest year on record for aid personnel, as conflicts and climate-induced disasters continue to escalate globally.