01/21/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 01/21/2026 05:21
The European Commission has announced its initial €1.9 billion humanitarian aid budget for 2026, at a time when 239 million people need assistance and major donors are cutting funding. Commissioner for equality, preparedness and crisis management, Hadja Lahbib, brings this commitment to Davos today, seeking to mobilise private sector finance and innovative solutions that can complement public funding and reach people in need.
Funding humanitarian response worldwide
The EU's humanitarian aid delivers life-saving assistance where it matters most: emergency food and shelter, critical healthcare, protection for the most vulnerable, and support for children's education in crisis zones. As other donors retreat and humanitarian law faces unprecedented strain, the EU maintains its commitment: principled aid that reaches people in need, wherever they are.
The initial €1.9 billion allocation includes:
Additionally, more than €415 million is reserved for responding to sudden-onset emergencies worldwide, and maintaining a strategic supply chain.
Mobilising private sector support in Davos
Closing the gap between record humanitarian needs and available resources requires new approaches. Commissioner Lahbib is in Davos this week to discuss with business leaders and investors how the private sector can bring innovation, scale, and new financing models to humanitarian responses.
Together with the World Economic Forum, she will co-host an event on 'New Alliances in Aid and Development' on 22 January. Her full Davos agenda, including bilateral meetings, is available on her calendar.
Commissioner for Equality, Preparedness and Crisis Management, Hadja Lahbib said:
'The humanitarian system is under unprecedented strain, and public funding alone will not meet the scale of the crisis. Europe is taking action, committing an initial €1.9 billion for 2026. As the largest humanitarian donor, we are taking our political responsibility and leading the global response. That's why I'm in Davos: to mobilise the private sector to think bigger, move faster, and act together. This is a test of solidarity, and Europe is rising to the challenge.'
Background
The EU and its Member States are the leading global humanitarian aid donor. The Commission has been providing humanitarian aid since 1992 in over 110 countries, delivered through humanitarian non-governmental organisations, international organisations (including UN agencies), and specialised agencies in the Member States.
The European Emergency Response Coordination Centre (ERCC) can help any country inside or outside the EU affected by a major disaster upon request from the national authorities or a United Nations body. Operating 24/7, the ERCC ensures rapid deployment of emergency support and acts as a coordination hub between all EU Member States, 10 additional participating states, the affected country, and civil protection and humanitarian aid experts.