GLOBAL: New fund promises enhanced aid response

[This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations]


NEW YORK, 14 February (IRIN) - The new United Nations Central Emergency 
Response Fund (CERF), cited by aid officials as one of the most significant 
humanitarian reforms in a decade, looks set to transform the funding of 
international responses to disasters and neglected crises. 

"This is a radical reform. The consequences are much wider than the UN coming 
up with quick responses [to crises]," said Pelle Enarsson, first secretary at 
Sweden's Permanent Mission to the UN in New York. 

"One vision is that, if it worked well, we could have a much larger fund in the 
future. This is a building block for something quite novel and radical, which 
could change humanitarian financing," Enarsson said. With US $40 million 
committed to the CERF, Sweden is the largest contributor after the United 
Kingdom, which has assigned $70 million. 

The fund is intended to enable the UN system to respond rapidly to sudden 
disasters as well as divert life-saving aid to lesser-known crises. It was 
approved by the UN's General Assembly on 15 December, after intense lobbying by 
key donor governments. 

"Achieving consensus in the UN's General Assembly was not guaranteed. Not 
everyone saw the vision," said Enarsson, who had been involved in negotiations. 
Sweden, the UK and other donor governments supporting the fund had to tread 
cautiously and "create a level of comfort in all quarters" before all members 
were prepared to sign off on the new initiative, he said.   

What makes the CERF so attractive to aid officials is its "retroactive 
accountability". This enables the UN to immediately allocate significant 
resources to a crisis without having to first confirm available funding with 
donor governments, which has often delayed responses in the past. 

Mark Bowden, senior policy chief for the UN Office for the Coordination of 
Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) in New York, said the fund represented an 
opportunity for the UN to be more effective. 

"The main features are that it is multilateral, substantial and allows for a 
prompt response and a reallocation of resources to forgotten emergencies. It is 
unique in the sense that responsibility [for allocating resources] lies with 
the emergency relief coordinator," he said. 

Bowden explained there were two elements to the new CERF. Two-thirds of the 
fund would be used for a prompt response to crisis or natural disaster, while 
one-third would be channelled to cover life-saving activities in neglected 
crises. Efforts were underway to create a composite formula that would help 
determine which crises should be assisted, he said. 

There was a danger the fund would be perceived as a new tool for western donors 
only, with other countries having no sense of ownership. While it was still 
early days, there were indications that the CERF had "kindled the interest of 
many other states and received broad support." Bowden expected that some new 
donor countries would join once they saw the fund in place and working. 

Estonia has already committed resources to the CERF. Urmas Paet, minister of 
foreign affairs, said that his Baltic nation had been an active proponent of 
the CERF from its inception and was keen to see real reform of the UN's 
humanitarian system. 

Paet acknowledged that his country may never be a major donor in absolute 
terms, but this did not prevent a "commitment to the resolution of humanitarian 
concerns to the extent that our capacities allow." 

While Estonia has deployed experts as part of the UN's disaster response teams 
for many years, Paet said it was the Indian Ocean tsunami in December 2004 and 
the South Asia earthquake in 2005 that had illustrated the need for strong 
coordination in humanitarian crises. 

"We find it increasingly important to further strengthen the UN's humanitarian 
response capabilities, and the upgraded CERF gives us the opportunity to 
support it," he said. 

So far, key donors have pledged over $185 million of a targeted $500 million. 
Other donors are expected to closely watch how the fund is used and managed in 
the coming months. Whether many will be following Estonia's example remains to 
be seen. 

Swedish diplomat Enarsson said that a level of confidence and trust in the UN 
Secretariat had been established in December. However, future success depended 
on how the fund was implemented. "Rest assured that if it doesn't work, donors 
will not be providing money the year after," he said.
[ENDS]

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