FUNDS
The Disaster Response Emergency Fund (DREF)
The IFRC’s Disaster Response Emergency Fund
has been channelling life-saving resources to
local responders at community level since 1985.
More than 210 million people in crisis have bene-
fitted from DREF support in that time.
In recent years the
fund has evolved to be more
agile and expanded to include an anticipatory
pillar (one fund, two pillars: Response and
Anticipatory Actions). This allows funding to
be released in anticipation of disaster so that
National Societies can act early – in advance of
the hazard – to mitigate
and reduce the impact
on vulnerable communities, rather than just pre-
paring to respond, when the hazard becomes
a disaster.
The DREF is a demand-driven, flexible, and
cost-effective way for donors and partners to
support local humanitarian action. Donations
to the DREF allow the
IFRC to provide National
Societies with:
•
Direct funding to finance their local responses
to small-to-medium scale disasters when no
emergency appeal will be launched, or when
support from donors is not foreseen.
•
Star t-up loans for wider responses
(Emergency Appeal) where the IFRC and
National Societies
work together to re-
spond to complex medium and large-scale
emergencies. The loan is then automatically
reimbursed to the DREF when the Emergency
Appeal mobilizes 200% of the loan allocated.
•
Direct funding to finance anticipatory action
in advance of predicted hazards,
based on
an agreed emergency plan (i.e., Early Action
Protocols, Simplified Early Action Protocol,
DREF for imminent event) designed to save
lives before a disaster occurs.
In 2022, the DREF supported 91 National
Societies with predictable funding to anticipate
specific hazards, implement early actions and
respond to disasters, allocating 59 million Swiss
francs in total.
The fund supported 154
operations through
loans to Emergency Appeals, and grants to
anticipation and response via DREF operations
that collectively supported National Societies to
reach more than 15 million people. More than
half – 52 per cent – of allocations across both
pillars were for climate-related disasters.
DREF is a highly cost-efficient way to support
local disaster risk
reduction and response work
on the ground. The funds are allocated directly
to the implementing National Society with no
intermediaries. Accountability and oversight are
provided by the IFRC, which manages the fund
on behalf of its membership.
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