DISASTERS AND CRISES Context The IFRC and its member National Societies
observed not only a rise in the number of dis-
asters and crises affecting at-risk communities
across the world in 2022, but an increase in their
intensity and complexity.
This resulted in a corresponding rise in the cost
of response and recovery for systems already
stress-tested by a series of historic crises with
regional or global impacts in recent years. At the
same time, large and small climate-driven disas-
ters continue hit communities across the world.
In Africa, the most common disasters and crises
were droughts, floods, epidemics, population
movement, food insecurity, and tropical storms/
cyclones. Several diseases are resurging, such as
Ebola, cholera, polio, and measles.
In 2022, Sub-Saharan Africa had the highest
prevalence of hunger than any region in the
world. Across the region, an estimated 294
million people were facing severe food inse-
curity, mostly as a result of prolonged drought
and flooding. For example, in 2022, the Horn of
Africa was experiencing one of its most severe
droughts in 40 years.
In the Americas, disasters and crises became
increasingly complex due to a widening gap in
access to basic food baskets, the resurgence of
endemic diseases alongside an unusual increase
in non-communicable diseases, and atypical
hurricane seasons.
The Americas region – a place of highly urban-
ized countries with several mega cities and
with the largest inequality in the world - is also
prone to earthquakes and volcanic eruptions,
hurricanes and floods. Migration from south to
north, including across the deadly Darien jungle,
continued to expose people on the move to risks
including trafficking and abuse.
In Asia Pacific, Category 4 to 5 (5 being the high-
est) land-falling tropical storms have doubled
or tripled in South-East and East Asia. Floods
remain most frequent and devastating in terms
of their impact and, in South-East Asia, droughts
have affected more than 66 million people in the
past 30 years.
The humanitarian situation in Myanmar and Sri
Lanka remained very serious and continued
to deteriorate further in 2022. Concerns over
access to at-risk populations in Myanmar are
certain to continue in 2023. Meanwhile, the
severity of the protracted crisis in Afghanistan
remained very high.