Credit Laura-Louise Fairley, Start Network, Start Fund alert 195 Vietnam

Start Fund marks release of 4th annual report

The Start Fund, which provides rapid humanitarian aid for overlooked crises, is marking the second anniversary of the World Humanitarian Summit by sharing the impact of its 4th year, through its new annual report released today.

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The Start Fund, which provides rapid humanitarian aid for overlooked crises, is marking the second anniversary of the World Humanitarian Summit by sharing the impact of its 4th year, through its new annual report released today.

The Start Fund fills a critical gap in humanitarian financing. It pools funding from donors for immediate release for underfunded small to medium scale crises, spikes in chronic humanitarian crises, and to act in anticipation of impending crises.

In its fourth year alone the Start Fund spent over £8.8 million responding to the unmet needs of 2,050,546 people across 44 crises in 31 countries.

Examples of Start Fund projects implemented in its fourth year (April 2017 to March 2018), include:

The Start Fund also responded to five of the world’s 12 most forgotten crises in 2017. One such response was in the Philippines, where violent clashes began in Marawi in May leaving people in urgent need of assistance. Within days the Start Fund was alerted and a local project selection committee in Manila awarded three agencies a total of £257,721 for immediate response. The Start Fund was faster than any other funding mechanism.

In 2017 the Start Fund also launched the Start Fund Bangladesh – the first national Start Fund – and this was activated three times within its first four months.

Key stats from the Start Fund’s 4th year include:

  • It took on average only 65 hours from crisis alert to the award of funding
  • The number of crises receiving funding in anticipation of crises increased by 67%
  • 30% of projects delivered cash programming
  • 39% of projects were implemented with at least one local partner

 

Ciarán Cannon, T.D. Ireland’s Minister of State for International Development and the Diaspora, said:

“Ireland is proud to have been the first donor to the Start Fund. We are also proud of the Start Fund’s enabling of frontline organisations to deliver aid to overlooked crises quickly and effectively. The Start Network helps to convert the Grand Bargain commitments, made at the World Humanitarian Summit by Ireland and other stakeholders, into real tangible support for the world’s most vulnerable people.”

 

Christos Papaioannou, Head of Funds at Start Network, said:

“All data and evidence show that the Start Fund works. Start Network members and their local partners have provided fast and effective humanitarian aid to over two million people last year. As we will be expanding our network and the humanitarian crises that the Start Fund could fund will likely increase, I can only think of how many more people this highly effective and efficient mechanism has the potential to reach in times of humanitarian emergencies. We want more humanitarian donors to join and invest in this vital global public good.” 

Read more about the Start Fund.

View the interactive Start Fund report online.

Read the Start Fund Annual Report 2017-2018 (short version).

Or read the Start Fund Annual Report 2017-2018 (full PDF).