Equilibrium & Sustainability

UNICEF launches $10B appeal to fund climate, conflict, catastrophe recovery

Pasika Bagerimana's daughter Mahigwe stands outside a temporary shelter she shares with others who fled fighting, in Nyiragongo, Democratic Republic of Congo, Aug. 31, 2022. Bagerimana, who lost two children to hunger, worries her remaining two children might be next. "Hunger is killing people," she says. Hunger is soaring across parts of Congo's war-torn North Kivu province where the fighting between M23 rebels and government soldiers has been raging since March, according to aid workers, civilians and health workers. (AP Photo/Sam Mednick)

The United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) on Monday launched a $10.3 billion appeal that aims to reach more than 173 million people suffering from the enduring effects of climate-fueled weather events and the coronavirus pandemic. 

The campaign will support more than 110 million children across 155 countries and territories through 2023, according to UNICEF. The countries with the top five appeals are Afghanistan, Ukraine, Syria, the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Ethiopia.

Children across the globe “are facing a deadly mix of crises, from conflict and displacement to disease outbreaks and soaring rates of malnutrition,” UNICEF Executive Director Catherine Russell said in a statement.

“Meanwhile, climate change is making these crises worse and unleashing new ones,” Russell added.

This year began with about 274 million people in need of humanitarian assistance — a demand that grew considerably due to Russia’s war in Ukraine, rising food insecurity and devastating floods that struck Pakistan this summer, according to UNICEF.


The coronavirus pandemic and the ensuing economic disruptions and instability, including the surging cost of fuel and food, is also putting millions of children at risk, the agency stressed.

Meanwhile, the effects of climate change are exacerbating these emergencies, with the number of related disasters tripling in the past three decades, data from UNICEF said.

More than 400 million children reside in areas with high or extremely high water vulnerability, while nearly 37 million children are now displaced, according to the agency.

UNICEF’s 2023 campaign will focus on bringing 8.2 million children treatment for severe acute malnutrition, providing 28 million children with measles vaccinations and getting 63.7 million people access to safe water.

Less than two months ago, a UNICEF report found that nearly all the world’s 2 billion children will be exposed to frequent heat waves by 2050 — a situation that is “threatening their health and wellbeing.”

“The devastating impacts of climate change are an ever-present threat to children,” said Russell, who stressed the need to prioritize climate adaptation and resilience as part of UNICEF’s humanitarian response.

“This will help us to reach children living through today’s crises, while also helping them and their communities prepare for those yet to come,” she added.

The campaign will also serve 23.5 million children, adolescents and caregivers with access to mental health support and help 16.2 million children and women access to gender-based violence risk mitigation.

Also targeted in these efforts are 32 million people in need of with safe channels to report sexual exploitation and 25.7 million children who lack access to education, according to the campaign.