
UNICEF: Global Leader in Emergency Response
UNICEF delivers humanitarian relief in response to hundreds of conflict and climate disasters and other emergencies every year — delivering lifesaving support and protection and safeguarding children's rights. Learn more, including how to help.
UNICEF is there before, during and after an emergency to support and protect children
There have been an unprecedented number of humanitarian emergencies unfolding around the world.
Prolonged conflict in Gaza and Israel and Sudan and Ukraine; armed violence and displacement in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Haiti; earthquakes, cyclones and other extreme weather events; catastrophic floods, droughts and disease outbreaks are threatening more of the world's children than ever before.
Children who live in a conflict or disaster zone are more likely to be living in poverty. They are more vulnerable to malnutrition and disease. And they are more likely to be out of school.
UNICEF, a global leader in humanitarian relief, responds to hundreds of emergencies every year — delivering lifesaving relief, safeguarding children's rights and protecting them from harm.
UNICEF leverages existing partnerships to mobilize a rapid response
UNICEF is on the ground before, during and after emergencies strike, working to respond quickly and reach individuals who are most in need.
With program offices in 157 countries, 7 regional offices and global headquarters in eight cities, UNICEF leverages its vast network of partners to mobilize a rapid and efficient response when disaster strikes, reaching even the hardest-to-reach children and families.

UNICEF can deliver emergency supplies anywhere in the world within 72 hours
UNICEF's supply and logistics operation, based in Copenhagen, can deliver emergency supplies anywhere in the world within 72 hours.
Read UNICEF’s Supply Powerhouse: Delivering for the World's Children Since 1962 to learn more.
Rapid response teams often focus on providing safe water, health care and hygiene kits, nutrition and psychosocial support; identifying children who have become separated from caregivers and reuniting them; and establishing child-friendly spaces.
UNICEF also supports recovery and rebuilding, working with governments and communities to strengthen emergency preparedness and increase resilience to future shocks.

UNICEF emergency relief efforts in countries around the world
Below, a look at a few specific emergency situations and crises where UNICEF is making a difference for children:
Child refugee and migrant crisis
A record number of children are displaced worldwide today, forced to flee their homes by armed conflict or gang violence, persecution, extreme poverty, hunger, drought and other threats to their health and safety. UNICEF acts to defend the rights of all vulnerable children on the move and to protect their futures — wherever they are, regardless of citizenship and at every step of their journey.
Climate crisis
UNICEF is responding to the climate crisis in three important ways: working to protect the health, safety, learning and opportunities of children, by adapting the critical social services they rely on and making them more resilient to immediate and expected climate impacts; by preparing children and young people to live in a climate-changed world, by improving their capacities to adapt; and calling on leaders and decision-makers to prioritize youth in climate funding and resources.
Earthquakes
When a powerful earthquake hits, endangering lives and devastating communities, UNICEF will rush emergency supplies to meet urgent needs of affected children and families and otherwise support government-led earthquake relief efforts. UNICEF has helped rebuild communities post-quake for decades, including in Haiti, Mexico and the Philippines.
Extreme weather disasters
When vulnerable communities are threatened by extreme weather — which is happening more and more, all around the world, as a result of climate change — UNICEF is among the first on the ground, often prepositioning supplies and joining local efforts to support and protect displaced children and families.

Food crises
UNICEF and partners are responding to food crises and related malnutrition crises in countries and regions around the world, from Haiti to Sudan to Yemen. Emergency relief measures include providing safe water, identifying and treating children with life-threatening severe acute malnutrition (SAM) with ready-to-use therapeutic food (RUTF) and dispatching mobile health and nutrition teams to areas with the greatest needs, among other lifesaving interventions.
Gaza and Israel conflict
The humanitarian situation for children in Gaza and Israel is dire, with over 1 million children affected. UNICEF continues to call for a sustained ceasefire, the release of all hostages and safe, sustained access to urgently needed supplies and assistance.
UNICEF and partners are working to deliver lifesaving aid to hundreds of thousands of children who remain trapped in a war zone with little or no access to food, water, electricity, medicine or medical care after deadly attacks in Israel gave way to devastating retaliatory air strikes in Gaza
Learn more: Nowhere in Gaza is Safe for Children
Syria crisis
Over a decade of civil conflict, a collapsed economy and devastated health and other critical systems continue to fuel a humanitarian crisis inside Syria. Millions of children remain in need of humanitarian aid and protection inside the country as refugees return from neighboring host countries. UNICEF supports needs in health, nutrition, education and child protection, addressing urgent as well as long-term needs.
Ukraine war
UNICEF is meeting urgent needs of children and families impacted by ongoing war in Ukraine in a number of ways: providing safe water, nutrition, health care and psychosocial support, helping children access education and strengthening child protection inside the country and in refugee-hosting countries.
Yemen crisis
Years of conflict and economic shocks and food insecurity have left millions of children in Yemen in desperate circumstances. UNICEF teams are on the ground screening and treating children for malnutrition; immunizing children to fight disease; improving access to safe water, sanitation and hygiene and strengthening child protection, among other emergency interventions.
Top photo: Supplies are loaded onto a tourist boat for delivery to children and families on Fiji’s northern island of Vanua Levu who were impacted by Tropical Cyclone Yasa. UNICEF works with governments, civil society, NGOs and local partners to speed delivery of urgently needed supplies in the wake of natural disasters and other emergencies. © UNICEF/UN0384349/Stephen/Infinity Images