The UK has announced £12 million in new funding to support
developing countries to better prepare for and respond to
disasters, including those linked to climate change. The funds
will go to the Start Network for rapid responses by charities to
crises like droughts and floods.
A further £8 million will support the Centre for Disaster
Protection to help climate-vulnerable countries deal with crises
such as extreme weather caused by climate change and pandemics.
This forms part of a wider £48 million package of climate support
announced by the Foreign Secretary earlier this year.
Today’s announcement came as the UK’s International Champion on
Adaptation and Resilience for the COP26 Presidency,
spoke at a meeting of the Risk-informed Early Action Partnership
(REAP), urging the international community to support vulnerable
countries to better prepare for and prevent disasters.
The UK’s International Champion on Adaptation and Resilience for
the COP26 Presidency,
said:
As climate-related disasters increase in ferocity and frequency
we must take action to better prepare for and prevent them, to
save lives, protect livelihoods and reduce suffering.
The commitment and ambition demonstrated today, including the
UK’s partnership with the Start Fund, is vital for reaching
REAP’s goal of making 1 billion people safer from disasters by
2025. As we count down to COP26, I look forward to working
together to continue to scale up early action worldwide.
Between 1970 and 2019, almost 80% of disasters worldwide involved
weather, climate and water-related hazards. From these disasters,
70% of deaths occurred in developing countries – with droughts
and floods the deadliest and most costly events.
The severity and frequency of these events is increasing across
the globe as climate change worsens. But with investment,
countries can be better prepared for disasters and reduce their
impacts.
COP26 President-Designate said:
The Risk-Informed Early Action Partnership is aiming to make
one billion people safer from climate disaster by 2025. Today’s
event is important in showing how we need to scale-up and
improve early warning and I am pleased the UK Government has
announced an additional £12m to support these actions in
developing countries to minimise, avert and address loss and
damage.
So, whether through new investments, sharing good practice, or
placing early action at the heart of plans and policies, we
need to work together ahead of COP26 to build a safer, more
resilient world.
The £12 million new UK aid funding is focused on taking early
action to address humanitarian crises and will help local and
frontline responders anticipate and respond swiftly to protect
lives and livelihoods.
Through the Start Network, UK funding will support early action
initiatives, from improved forecasting for heatwaves in Pakistan
to drought in Madagascar, as well as a new global network of hubs
facilitating locally-led responses when disasters do strike.
The announcement follows the G7 Foreign and Development Minsters
meetings in London last week, where G7 countries committed
support to make people safer from climate disasters through early
warning, better preparedness and early action, as well as agreed
actions to scale up the finance needed to help countries adapt to
the impacts of climate change.
In addition to new funding, the UK also announced a package of
technical assistance through:
- A project with REAP to support climate vulnerable countries
in implementing laws, policies and procedures to protect from
future crisis risks;
- Closer working between REAP and the UK-established Adaptation
Research Alliance to fill gaps in evidence for early action;
- Sharing UK social protection expertise to help ensure poverty
reduction programmes are resilient to climate shocks.
- The £12 million in new funding builds on the UK’s ongoing
support for Start Network and their membership of over 50 NGOs to
anticipate and respond rapidly to under-the-radar and
under-funded humanitarian crises around the world. This new
funding will specifically support the network’s rapid response
fund, increasing humanitarian NGO forecasting capabilities,
improving access to finance in anticipation of risks and the
development of a network of hubs to facilitate better coordinated
responses by local humanitarian responders.
- The £8 million funding for the Centre for Disaster Protection
is part of the £48 million package of climate support announced
by the Foreign Secretary in Nairobi on 20 January 2021. The
Centre for Disaster Protection brings countries together with
international development, humanitarian and private sector
organisations to change how the world prepares, pays for and
responds to disasters.
- The UK funds the REAP Secretariat and committed £175 million
to REAP targets in 2019. The UK provides ongoing technical
support from UK experts to design and implement REAP’s plans to
scale up early action worldwide. More information on REAP targets
and members can be found at www.early-action-reap.org