participation of 189 National Societies at the IFRC
General Assembly and the Council of Delegates.
Following an extensive consultative process,
the
Supply Chain Review project defined its
strategic objectives for supply chain support to
IFRC programmes and National Societies. The
strategic objectives are:
1. Engaging purchasing power and compe-
tencies Federation-wide all 192 National
Societies, over and above only international
operations.
2. New Fleet Business Model – supply and
demand, fleet management, new sustaina-
ble solutions for the Federation-wide fleet
of close to 200,000 units.
3. Innovative digital platform for all National
Societies and the IFRC, including market-
place, e.stocks management platform,
e.transport, and others. The new strategy
has a strong focus on building National
Society capacity and localization through
innovative unique in the humanitarian sec-
tor digital platforms, greater coordination
in procurement activities, and enhanced
support to domestic programmes pro-
viding greater value for money. Important
strategic directions include an increased
focus on sustainability and greening the
supply chain, increasing support to cash
and voucher programming, and enhancing
fleet management. The ambition of the
strategy is to have best in class, innovative
and cost-efficient Federation-wide Supply
Chain Management.
In February 2022, the IFRC launched a
network-wide unified planning approach in
line with the Agenda for Renewal, which made
significant insights on priority requirements for
country level
data collection . Work was under-
way across 2022 to align IFRC and network-wide
data collection processes, to encourage better
use of data and more streamlined communica-
tion with National Societies. This included the
development of a new validation matrix for the
long-running Federation-wide Databank and
Reporting System (FDRS) in support of the uni-
fied planning process.
In addition, Federation-wide monitoring systems
were developed by FDRS for the Ukraine crisis
response, and for the ECHO PPP initiative, and
additional training was provided for National
Society staff and volunteers in data collection
and monitoring.
The
evaluation of IFRC programmes and opera-
tions remained a critical aspect of transparency
and evaluation across the organization. In the
IFRC context, “evaluation” can also include base-
lines, case studies and research pieces, reviews,
surveys etc.
In 2022, 24 reports were issued on
IFRC’s
Evaluation Databank
. Four of these were carried
out in Africa, five in the Americas, eight in the
Asia Pacific region, one in Europe, two in Middle
East North Africa region, and four at the Global
level. More information on each of these reports
is available
here
.
2022 marked a historic milestone for IFRC: the
closure of the COVID-19 Emergency Appeal.
The biggest Emergency Appeal Federation
Wide that the organization has had in the last
years. The response to the COVID-19 Pandemic
also allowed our organization to promote an