168
Disaggregated by sex:
105
Disaggregated by age:
82
16
.0
M
14
.5
M
14
.2
M
11
.7
M
13
.7
M
12
.9
M
11
.9
M
14
.9
M
16
.5
M
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
2020
2021
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
2020
2021
48%
55%
58%
55%
55%
55%
43%
54%
52%
Percentage of female volunteers
Number of volunteers by year
1%
2%
1%
2%
3%
4%
5%
5%
9%
8%
10%
8%
14%
13%
7%
4%
1%
Age
70–79
60–69
50–59
40–49
30–39
18–29
13–17
6–12
Female
Male
Volunteers by age and sex
260
Annual Report
2022
STAFF
501.6K
people who were contracted by
National Societies for at least three
months in 2021 and were remuner-
ated. Forty reported engaging more
than 1,000 paid staff, representing
96% of the total.
National Societies reporting:
164
Disaggregated by sex:
125
Disaggregated by age:
95
4
53K
4
32
K
4
4
5K
47
5K
4
65K
47
2K
47
9K
47
7K
502
K
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
2020
2021
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
2021
2020
65%
65%
64%
65%
59%
60%
60%
61%
62%
Percentage of female staff
Number of staff by year
Female
Male
0.1%
0.4%
2% 3%
11%
16%
18%
18%
6%
8%
10%
6%
Age
70–79
60–69
50–59
40–49
30–39
18–29
Staff by age and sex
Network perspective
261
NETWORK
National Societies reporting supports links among them, i.e. who provided support and who received
support, helping us map collaborations within the IFRC network, whether financial, human, or
technical.
The chart below shows the aggregation of this information by regions. The left side of the graph con-
tains the “origin” of the support and the right side its “destination”. For example, most of the support
originated by Europe in 2021 (177 links) was directed to the region itself, however, the majority of
the support received by Africa (201 links) came from Europe. The table at the bottom of the page
provides additional details.
Support links between National Societies
Origin
Destination
Number of support links between National Societies
Destination
Europe and
Central Asia
Africa
MENA
Americas
Asia Pacific
O
ri
gi
n
Europe and
Central Asia
177
201
75
81
87
Africa
1
5
0
0
0
MENA
17
3
1
2
10
Americas
13
3
1
40
16
Asia Pacific
21
25
12
7
108
Africa
Americas
Asia Pacific
Europe and
Central Asia
MENA
1%
26%
8%
14%
19%
24%
67%
25%
6%
1%
Africa
Americas
Asia Pacific
Europe and Central Asia
MENA
262
Annual Report
2022
GOVERNANCE
The FDRS collects data about National Societies’ leadership structure. This data is disaggregated
by sex, allowing us to provide an overview of the proportions of males and females among the
leadership of National Societies.
President
Secretary General
Governing board
79%
69%
70%
80%
65%
69%
78%
70%
65%
77%
70%
66%
74%
72%
65%
21%
31%
30%
20%
35%
31%
22%
30%
35%
23%
30%
34%
26%
28%
35%
2018
2017
2019
2020
2021
2018
2017
2019
2020
2021
2018
2017
2019
2020
2021
Female
Male
Network perspective
263
LOCAL UNITS
122K
2K
1
This visual is a choropleth cartogram and each square’s
size is proportional to the country’s population. The
colours represent the number of local units per
National Society. Only 16 National Societies have more
than 1,000 local units – representing 89% of the total.
Nigeria
Ethiopia
Kenya
Colombia
Brazil
Chile
Uganda
Argentina
South
Africa
Niger
Egypt
Türkiye
Italy
Algeria
Mali
Mexico
Senegal
Haiti
Ghana
Russia
France
Germany
Ukraine
Iraq
Syria
Saudi
Arabia
Yemen
190.3K
264
Annual Report
2022
122K
2K
1
Africa
8.0K
Americas
4.0K
Asia Pacific
154.6K
Middle East and
North Africa
8.2K
Europe and
Central Asia
15.5K
China
India
Indonesia
Philippines
Vietnam
Bangladesh
Pakistan
Myanmar
Nepal
Thailand
Network perspective
265
EXPENDITURE
INCOME
36.4B
CHF
Documents
The FDRS also collects key doc-
uments from National Societies
(annual reports, strategic plans
and audited finanical statements)
on an annual basis. The availability
of these may depend on internal
processes of National Societies,
which might not coincide with the
FDRS data collection cycle and
thus can be reported in following
years. In 2020, the FDRS received:
117
annual reports
124
strategic plans
103
financial statements
(of which
74
were audited)
The
Everyone Counts
report contains data collected from our network of 192 National Societies, an
annual process undertaken since 2012. Over the past nine years, this has enabled us to establish a
unique database on the IFRC’s humanitarian capacity, resources and activities worldwide.
View the
Everyone Counts Report
here
.
40.3B
CHF
266
Annual Report
2022
NATIONAL SOCIETIES
WORKING INTERNATIONALLY
National Societies support one another in a num-
ber of ways. This can include financial resources
or goods, as well as personnel, expertise and
technical guidance. Some National Societies
provide this support remotely, while some have
offices in other countries where their support
is needed on a regular and enduring basis. The
information below has been provided on a vol-
untary basis by some National Societies in the
IFRC network. While it is not exhaustive, it does
show the breadth of this support. It is a sample of
what you can find on the IFRC’s Federation-Wide
Databank and Reporting System (FDRS). For
more information, please visit this interactive
platform where the information provided below
can be viewed in a variety of ways, including
by country.
51.94M
People reached
CHF 411.6M
Total expenditure
19
National Societies reporting
131
Countries of implementation
Implementing countries information
There are more than 131 implementing countries. The below is only a small sample of the interactive
data available on the IFRC’s FDRS website available here
https://data.ifrc.org/fdrs/
.
Niger
Syrian Arab Republic
Ukraine
Climate and environmental crises
0.07M
-
-
Evolving crises and disasters activities
3.57M
5.40M
38.17M
Health
2.60M
8.25M
10.45M
Migration and identity
1.02M
37.75M
0.18M
Values, power and inclusion
0.97M
-
-
WASH
0.28M
8.93M
5.61M
Network perspective
267
National Societies providing support
National Society
Number of countries with
PNS staff presence out of
total supported countries
Expenditure
(CHF millions)
People reached
(millions)
French Red Cross
20/22
80.4
10.1
German Red Cross
29/45
73.5
3.2
Turkish Red Crescent Society
17/56
61.3
10.7
Norwegian Red Cross
15/18
46.8
10.2
Spanish Red Cross
24/31
26.5
6.7
British Red Cross
9/22
21.4
3.6
Belgian Red Cross
11/12
20.3
3.9
Austrian Red Cross
9/18
20.2
-
Swedish Red Cross
12/16
19.0
0.7
American Red Cross
7/23
11.8
-
Finnish Red Cross
12/18
9.3
0.7
The Canadian Red Cross Society
6/14
7.7
1.1
The Republic of Korea National
Red Cross
3/9
4.6
0.1
Italian Red Cross
8/31
2.4
0.3
Irish Red Cross Society
0/6
2.2
0.001
Australian Red Cross
0/9
2.2
-
Japanese Red Cross Society
6/7
1.8
0.2
The Netherlands Red Cross
10/10
-
0.4
Red Cross of Monaco
1/4
0.1
0.001
People reached by thematic area
20.91M
1.90M
2.63M
0.27M
14.43M
8.17M
Values,
protection
and
inclusion
Migration
and
identity
WASH
Health
Climate
and
environment
Evolving
disasters
and crises
People reached by region
Africa
MENA
Americas
Europe
Asia
Pacific
12.3M
8.5M
3.3M
2.6M
25.1M
268
Annual Report
2022
RED CROSS RED CRESCENT
REFERENCE CENTRES
Global Reference Centres
Red Cross Red Crescent
Climate Centre
Hosted by the Netherlands Red Cross
climatecentre.org
Marking our 20th anniversary in 2022, we
continued to support the Red Cross and Red
Crescent in reducing climate risks in line with
commitments in the Movement ambitions and
the climate charter.
The centre provided operational advice to all
seven early action protocols activated world-
wide during the year, addressing a variety of
climate-related hazards.
Our work at the nexus of climate and health
rapidly expanded: we prioritized health in antic-
ipatory action through two feasibility studies in
Yemen and Cox’s Bazar, and we updated and
expanded the health module in the Climate
Training Kit.
We contributed to academic papers on early
action, weather forecasts in conflict contexts,
anticipatory action, and impact-based forecast-
ing, as well as ten attribution studies.
We developed several new tools as part of our
ongoing support to the German Red Cross,
including a checklist for the integration of
forecast-based action and social protection.
Our social media audience continued to grow
apace in 2022, and we are now adding 25 Twitter
followers a week on average; we published just
over 120 online news stories, covering all aspects
of the humanitarian impacts of climate change.
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