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WFP requires US$16.9 billion in 2025 to respond to unrelenting humanitarian needs

WFP/Ali Jadallah. In the photo, kids are receiving and eating rice which they brought from a nearby WFP-supported hot meals kitchen. Kids would wait for hours patiently for this meal. They usually took the food back to the family's tent. Gaza, Palestine.
Hunger is nearing levels that were last seen during the global food crisis sparked by the pandemic.

ROME —The United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) has launched its 2025 Global Outlook, calling for US$16.9 billion to address global food needs and the alarming gap between needs and resources.

WFP's flagship 2025 Global Outlook, launched today, shows that 343 million people across 74 countries are acutely food insecure, a 10 per cent increase from last year and just shy of the record hit during the pandemic. The country contexts in which WFP operates are becoming more complex, making reaching people in need more difficult and costly. 

A stream of global crises driven by escalating and overlapping conflicts, climate extremes and economic shocks has brought hunger to record levels, generating an unrelenting demand for humanitarian assistance. Yet, funding shortfalls in 2024 forced WFP to scale back activities, often leaving some of the most vulnerable behind.

According to the report, an estimated 1.9 million people are on the brink of famine. The number of people facing catastrophic hunger, specifically in Gaza and Sudan, as well as parts of South Sudan, Haiti, and Mali, has reached alarming levels.

"Global humanitarian needs are rising, fuelled by devastating conflicts, more frequent climate disasters, and extensive economic turmoil. Yet funding is failing to keep pace,” said WFP Executive Director Cindy McCain. “At WFP, we are dedicated to achieving a world without hunger. But to get there, we urgently need financial and diplomatic support from the international community: to reverse the rising tide of global needs, and help vulnerable communities build long-term resilience against food insecurity.”

The US$16.9 billion WFP needs to assist 123 million of the hungriest people in 2025 is roughly what the world spends on coffee in just two weeks.

In 2025, WFP will continue prioritising, adapting its responses to each country's specific needs and aligning its capabilities and resources to deliver high-quality programmes.

Regional outlook and priorities 

  • In Asia and the Pacific, where 88 million people struggle under the devastating effects of acute hunger, WFP will require US$2.5 billion to respond to crises and enhance further shock-responsive social protection and anticipatory action initiatives. 

  • With over 170 million acutely insecure people, Sub-SaharanAfrica accounts for 50 percent of WFP’s projected funding needs in 2025. The conflict in Sudan—where famine was confirmed in one location in August—is driving massive displacement with a spillover into neighbouring countries. Conflict is also pushing millions into hunger in the Democratic Republic of Congo and the Sahel, while extreme climate events exacerbated by the El Niño phenomenon are deepening food insecurity across the Southern Africa region. WFP needs US$8.4 billion to support its operations in Sub-Saharan Africa. 

  • The outbreak of hostilities in Lebanon has worsened the already dire situation in the Middle East, North Africa and Eastern Europe region, where conflict is also causing food insecurity in Gaza, Syria, Ukraine and Yemen. The situation in Gaza remains dire: 91 per cent of the population is acutely food-insecure, of whom 16 per cent are in catastrophic conditions. 17.1 million people in Yemen and 12.9 million in Syria are also cutely food-insecure. Across the region, funding shortages are hitting hard on WFP’s operations, and millions feel the sting of reduced food assistance. WFP requires US$ 4.9 billion for its operations. 

  • 40.8 million people in Latin America and the Caribbean are experiencing food insecurity, with 14.2 million being prioritized for WFP assistance. WFP will need US$1.1 billion to support vulnerable populations and scale up interventions to strengthen food systems, climate resilience and social protection.

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Note to the Editor

The WFP 2025 Global Outlook provides an update on global food security in countries where WFP operates and data is available, shares WFP’s operational requirements to assist target populations presented by country, region and focus area, and offers a snapshot of how WFP plans to address hunger in 2025. 

The WFP Global Outlook also features region-specific outlines of food insecurity levels, needs and planned responses for Asia and the Pacific, East Africa, West Africa, Southern Africa, Latin America and the Caribbean, and the Middle East, Northern Africa and Eastern Europe.

Find the WFP 2025 Global Outlook here 

Broadcast quality footage and photos about WFP’s operations are available.

About WFP

The United Nations World Food Programme is the world’s largest humanitarian organisation, saving lives in emergencies and using food assistance to build a pathway to peace, stability and prosperity for people recovering from conflict, disasters and the impact of climate change.

Follow us on X via @wfp_media 

Topics

Food Security

Contact

For more information, please contact (email address: firstname.lastname@wfp.org):

Martin Penner, WFP/ Rome, Mob. +39 345 6142074

Machrine Birungi, WFP/ Rome, Mob, +39 348 1866475

Martin Rentsch, WFP/Berlin, Mob +49 160 99 26 17 30
Nina Valente, WFP/ London, Mob. +44 (0)796 8008 474
Rene McGuffin, WFP/ Washington DC Mob.+1 771 245 4268

Shaza Moghraby, WFP/New York, Mob. + 1 929 289 9867

Frances Kennedy, WFP/ Rome, Mob.+39 346 7600 806