Start Network has today joined a global partnership aiming to make 1 billion people safer. Start Network's role in the partnership has been outlined in our commitments to help millions of people become more resilient to climate-related crises by strengthening early humanitarian financing and action.
In signing the declaration for the UK-backed Risk-informed Early Action Partnership (REAP), the Start Network has made a number of commitments up to 2025, which contribute to the overall targets of the REAP.
The Start Network’s commitments up to 2025 include:
- Reach 5 million more people with timely humanitarian funds, connected to quality risk analysis or effective early action plans, to mitigate the impact of predictable disasters.
- Catalyse a local coalition of civil society actors, with coordinated response plans and pre-positioned financing, enabling them to assume a clearer role within national climate adaptation strategies.
- Lead on collective evidence and learning activities to build the evidence base for early action, and facilitate the exchange of best practice
The Start Network aims to achieve these commitments by expanding its existing humanitarian financing tools, which currently enable timely and early humanitarian action, and connecting them into a framework of national and global financing mechanisms. The aim is for aid charities to have access to a suite of financing mechanisms for different types of crisis, in advance for predictable disasters, or quickly following unexpected crises.
REAP is a new partnership involving the governments of the UK, Egypt, Finland, with the Met Office, the IFRC, Start Network and other partners. The aim of the partnership is to expand early action financing and improve early warning systems and the capacity to act on the risks they identify, to save lives, protect livelihoods and improve the efficiency and effectiveness of responses.
Christina Bennett, Start Network’s incoming CEO said: “Most disasters are predictable. But being unprepared means that we miss the critical opportunities to save lives and build long-term resilience. The Start Network aims to change this by shifting to a proactive rather than a reactive approach, using early humanitarian action and pre-agreed financing. Our commitment to the Risk-informed Early Action Partnership will enable us and other partners to approach this in a coordinated way.”