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Norwegian government releases 2025 budget proposal

October 7, 2024 | Norway, Education, Agriculture, Gender Equality, Nutritious Food Systems, Maternal, Newborn, and Child Health, Family Planning, WASH & Sanitation, Climate, Global Health | Share this update

On October 7, 2024, the Norwegian government presented its state budget for 2025, which includes an ODA budget of NOK52.9 billion (US$4.8 billion).

This amount remains largely consistent with the 2024 allocation, representing 0.92% of Norway's GNI, below the country’s longstanding target of 1%. Despite this, the government has reaffirmed its commitment to increasing ODA in future years, with the goal of eventually reaching the 1% target.

In presenting the budget, Norway’s Minister of International Development Anne Beathe Tvinnereim highlighted the importance of the 2025 allocations, emphasizing that the government is providing a robust budget designed to address critical global challenges. Beyond targeting immediate needs like poverty reduction and development, the budget also aims to foster trust and strengthen systems capable of addressing long-term challenges.

Key focus areas:

The 2025 development budget places particular emphasis on humanitarian assistance, climate action, business development, multilateral institutions, debt relief and refugee-related expenses in Norway (which will increase by 8%). However, certain areas will see reductions, including:

  • A 22% cut in support for refugees outside of Norway.
  • A 6% reduction in funding for peace efforts.
  • A 3.9% decrease in civil society funding.

Despite some cuts, several areas will receive increased funding:

  • Development assistance to Palestine will increase by NOK280 million (US$26 million).
  • Humanitarian assistance will rise by NOK300 million (US$27 million).
  • Climate adaptation and food security funding will grow by NOK380 million (US$35 million).

Crisis areas:

Ukraine remains Norway's top priority in light of the ongoing conflict with Russia. The Nansen Program for Ukraine will see a significant increase in funding, with the budget rising from NOK75 billion (US$6.8 billion) to NOK134.5 billion (US$12.3 billion). The program's duration has also been extended from 2027-2030.

The budget allocated substantial humanitarian assistance to Gaza, addressing the severe needs resulting from the ongoing conflict. Similarly, additional resources are directed towards Sudan, where escalating hunger and humanitarian crises are pressing concerns.

Global health:

Norway’s 2025 budget emphasizes global health cooperation and preparedness, with a focus on enhancing the world’s ability to prevent, detect, and respond to infectious disease threats and antimicrobial resistance. Key initiatives include:

  • Preventing infectious diseases and reducing child and maternal mortality.
  • Strengthening SRHR.
  • Expanding UHC.
  • Enhancing national healthcare systems, particularly in addressing climate-related health issues, such as the spread of infectious diseases.

While the allocation for health in 2025 stands at NOK3.6 billion (US$327 million), reflecting a NOK103 million (US$9 million) decrease from 2024, this aligns with the government’s prioritization of other areas like humanitarian assistance and climate adaptation. Norway remains committed to long-term global health partnerships, including a reallocated contribution of NOK20 million (US$2 million) to UNAIDS.

Government document - Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs (in Norwegian)Press release - The Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation (in Norwegian)

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Sweden announces US$7.7 million in additional humanitarian assistance to Lebanon

April 20, 2026 | Sweden | Share this update

On April 20, 2026, Sweden announced an additional SEK70 million (US$7.7 million) in humanitarian assistance to Lebanon, bringing Sweden's total targeted humanitarian assistance to Lebanon to SEK135 million (US$14.8 million) in 2026.


The additional funding was provided in light of the continued deterioration of Lebanon's humanitarian situation. Of the new allocation, SEK24 million (US$2.6 million) came from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and SEK46 million (US$5.1 million) from abbr:SIDA. Sweden had previously announced a SEK65 million (US$7.2 million) humanitarian support package on March 14, 2026, the day after the UN launched its emergency humanitarian appeal for Lebanon.


The assistance focuses on the most vulnerable, providing displaced persons with access to collective emergency housing, hot meals, emergency medical care, and psychosocial support. The funding complements Sweden's core support to the International Red Cross Movement and several abbr:UN organizations operating in Lebanon.

Press release - Government of Sweden

Norway announces US$11 million in budgetary support for Palestine

April 20, 2026 | Norway | Share this update

On April 20, 2026, Norway announced NOK100 million (US$11 million) in budget support to Palestine to help maintain basic public services, including education, and ensure the payment of salaries to government employees.


Foreign Minister Espen Barth Eide made the announcement during a meeting with Palestinian Prime Minister Mohammad Mustafa in Brussels, where Eide also chaired a meeting of the Palestine Aid and Liaison Group together with EU High Representative Kaja Kallas. The budget support comes amid an acute economic crisis in Palestine, exacerbated by movement restrictions and violence, which have severely strained public finances and forced drastic cuts to the state budget, leaving public employees including teachers, health workers, and police receiving only partial salaries.


Norway stated that budget support would help provide financial stability and ensure the Palestinian population continued to receive health care and education, while calling on other countries to contribute. Norway's planned support to Palestine, including to Palestinian refugees, will be approximately NOK1 billion (US$110 million) in 2026.

Press release - Norway provides 100 million kroner in budget support to Palestine (in Norwegian)

Sweden announces US$1.7 million to preserve Ukrainian democracy and cultural heritage

April 20, 2026 | Sweden | Share this update

On April 20, 2026, Sweden announced a new support package of SEK15.4 million (US$1.7 million) for 2026–2028 focused on democracy and cultural heritage preservation in Ukraine.


Of the total, SEK8.7 million (US$1.0 million) was allocated for 2026. The democracy support component included SEK3 million (US$330,000) to the National Democratic Institute, SEK900,000 (US$99,000) to the Council of Europe, and SEK1.5 million (US$165,000) to the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe's Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights for 2026. The cultural heritage component included SEK10 million (US$1.1 million) to Gotlands Museum for 2026–2028.


Sweden stated the package built on its long-term efforts to strengthen Ukraine's resilience and democratic development.

Press release - Government of Sweden

Canada announces US$4 million in humanitarian assistance for Cuba

April 17, 2026 | Canada | Share this update

On April 17, 2026, Canada announced CAD5.5 million (US$4 million) in humanitarian assistance to address the ongoing economic and energy crisis in Cuba, with funding allocated to PAHO and WFP


Minister of Foreign Affairs Anita Anand and Secretary of State for International Development Randeep Sarai announced the funding on behalf of Global Affairs Canada. Cuba has faced a deepening humanitarian crisis marked by repeated nationwide power grid failures, prolonged blackouts, and acute fuel shortages, severely disrupting access to food, clean water, and health care.


Of the total, CAD5 million (US$3.6 million) was allocated to PAHO to improve access to essential health services, critical medicines, and medical supplies, as well as to strengthen supply chains and support primary health care facilities and referral hospitals. The remaining CAD500,000 (US$365,000) was allocated to WFP to provide food assistance and support essential logistics and fuel needs for the humanitarian response.

Press release - Government of Canada

Donors commit more than US$800 million to the Global Financing Facility

April 16, 2026 | Germany, Canada, Netherlands, Norway, Global Health | Share this update

On April 16, 2026, the Global Financing Facility for Women, Children and Adolescents announced new funding commitments totaling US$806 million from governments and philanthropic partners to support its TRANSFORM 2030 strategy, a five-year plan to accelerate reductions in preventable maternal and child deaths.


The announcements were made on the sidelines of the World Bank Group-International Monetary Fund Spring Meetings in Washington, DC. The commitments represent more than 80% of the GFF's fundraising goal of US$1 billion by the end of 2026, with additional pledges expected in the coming months.


Commitments announced included:

  • CAD190 million (US$139 million) from the Government of Canada;
  • EUR45 million (US$53 million) from the Government of Germany;
  • US$186 million from the Government of the Netherlands;
  • NOK600 million (US$66 million) from the Government of Norway;
  • US$150 million from the Children's Investment Fund Foundation;
  • US$200 million from the Gates Foundation; and
  • US$15 million from the Laerdal Scale Up Fund.

Philanthropic and private sector commitments included US$250 million for the newly launched Sustainable Commodities Access Program, designed to incentivize countries to expand access to high-quality commodities and address supply chain bottlenecks, and US$15 million for a new innovations challenge program to scale up the Safer Births Bundle of Care in 10 countries.

Press release - Global Financing Facility

Canada announces US$88 million in humanitarian assistance for Sudan

April 15, 2026 | Canada | Share this update

On April 15, 2026, Canada announced more than CAD120 million (US$88 million) in new funding to address the humanitarian crisis in Sudan and neighboring countries, including humanitarian assistance, development funding, and peace and stabilization support.


Secretary of State for International Development Randeep Sarai made the announcement at the International Sudan Conference in Berlin, Germany. Sudan has faced a deepening humanitarian crisis driven by a civil war that began in 2023, resulting in the largest human displacement crisis in the world, widespread sexual violence, famine, and the collapse of basic services.


Canada's contribution included more than CAD94 million (US$69 million) in humanitarian assistance in 2026, delivered through partners to provide emergency food and nutrition, health care, protection, shelter, and water and sanitation to vulnerable people affected by the crisis in Sudan, South Sudan, and Chad.


An additional CAD25 million (US$18 million) was allocated to development assistance, including CAD18 million (US$13 million) to Save the Children Canada to deliver education for more than 60,000 children and protect children from violence, exploitation, and trauma, and CAD7 million (US$5 million) to the UN Population Fund to expand sexual and gender-based violence prevention and response services across Sudan, including in Darfur and Kordofan. Canada also allocated CAD1.25 million (US$912,000) to expand peace and stabilization efforts, including civilian-led initiatives.

Press release - Government of Canada

EU announces US$812 million Global Fund pledge plus further support for global health security

April 7, 2026 | EUI, Global Health | Share this update

At the One Health Summit in Lyon, France, on April 7, 2026, the European Commission announced plans to pledge EUR700 million (US$812 million) to the Global Fund's 8th replenishment, EUR46.5 million (US$54 million) to strengthen health security in Africa and Europe, and EUR50 million (US$58 million) in research and development for AMR and neglected tropical diseases.


Commissioner for International Partnerships Jozef Síkela made the announcements under the scope of the new Global Health Resilience Initiative, announced by President Ursula von der Leyen in the 2025 State of the Union address.


Of the Global Fund pledge, EUR185 million (US$215 million) will be immediately available under the current long-term budget, with country-level grants implemented from 2027 to 2029. Team Europe, comprising the Commission and EU Member States, pledged more than EUR3 billion (US$3.5 billion) in total to the 8th replenishment, representing around one third of all donor contributions since the Global Fund's creation in 2002.


The EUR46.5 million (US$54 million) health security investment aims to strengthen the One Health workforce, AMR surveillance, prevention, and control, and laboratory capacity across Africa over five years, in partnership with the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control, the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention, and other agencies.


Of the EUR50 million (US$58 million) in research and development funding, EUR30 million (US$35 million), managed by KfW, supported the Combating Antibiotic-Resistant Bacteria Biopharmaceutical Accelerator and the Global Antibiotic Research and Development Partnership, while EUR20 million (US$23 million) was contributed to AFD for implementation by DNDi to develop dengue medical treatments.

Press release - European Commission

Canada announces US$37 million across six projects for Ukraine

April 3, 2026 | Canada | Share this update

During an April 3, 2026 visit to Ukraine, Secretary of State for International Development Randeep Sarai announced CAD51 million (US$37 million) in new funding across six projects targeting humanitarian assistance, democratic governance, veterans' support, and EU accession reforms. The projects are as follows:


  • 2026 Humanitarian Assistance (CAD32 million/US$23 million): funding to multiple partners — including the Adventist Development and Relief Agency Canada, Development and Peace – Caritas Canada, HelpAge Canada, the International Medical Corps, the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs and its Country-Based Pooled Fund (Ukraine Humanitarian Fund), the ICRC, the UNHCR, and the WFP — to address urgent humanitarian needs, including emergency health care, shelter, water, sanitation, and food;
  • FAIR-UA: Foundations for Accountable, Inclusive and Resilient Elections (CAD6 million/US$4 million, 2026-2029): support for credible, inclusive post-war elections in Ukraine, including strengthening the Central Election Commission of Ukraine, delivering voter education, countering disinformation, and supporting civil society oversight of electoral processes;
  • Ukraine Ministry of Veterans Affairs Institutional Strengthening (CAD5 million/US$4 million, 2026-2029): capacity-building for the Ministry of Veterans Affairs of Ukraine to coordinate programs and services for veterans and their families;
  • Supporting Inclusive Recovery and EU Accession of Ukraine (CAD5 million/US$4 million, 2026-2031): support for national governance reforms aligned with EU accession requirements and inclusive recovery policies;
  • Mobile Service Delivery for Conflict-Affected Populations in Eastern Ukraine (additional CAD2 million/US$1 million, 2019-2026): additional funding to an existing project, bringing total Canadian support to CAD19 million (US$14 million), to improve access to basic public services for war-affected populations, including women, older persons, people with disabilities, and internally displaced persons; and
  • Supporting Inclusive Grassroots Democracy in Ukraine (additional CAD1 million/US$1 million, 2018-2027): additional funding to an existing project, bringing total Canadian support to CAD13 million (US$9 million), to strengthen grassroots democratic movements and inclusive governance during wartime and into early recovery.
Press release - Government of Canada

Ireland announces largest funding package for Ukraine with US$46 million contribution

April 1, 2026 | Ireland | Share this update

On April 1, 2026, Ireland's Department of Foreign Affairs announced EUR40 million (US$46 million) in humanitarian and development assistance to Ukraine in 2026, Ireland's largest funding package for the country since Russia's invasion in 2022. The latest funding package brings Ireland's 2026 support to Ukraine to EUR65 million (US$74 million.)


The new funding builds upon EUR25 million (US$28 million) announced in February 2026 to repair critical energy infrastructure. The 2026 total of EUR65 million (US$74 million) represents a significant increase on the EUR35 million (US$40 million) provided by Ireland in 2025.


The EUR40 million (US$46 million) package includes EUR26 million (US$29 million) in humanitarian assistance and EUR14 million (US$16 million) in long-term development and peacebuilding support. Additionally, EUR2 million (US$2 million) has been allocated to Moldova to address challenges related to the war in Ukraine. Funding was delivered through UN agencies and the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement, which will provide emergency shelter, medical care, maternal healthcare, and essential support to people in frontline areas and children.


Irish Minister of Foreign Affairs and Trade Helen McEntee made the announcement during an official visit to Ukraine, where she met Ukrainian Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha. Minister of State for International Development and Diaspora Neale Richmond noted that Ukraine would be a priority during Ireland's upcoming EU Presidency.

Press release - Irish Aid

Germany announces US$204 support package for Jordan, Lebanon, and Palestine

March 31, 2026 | Germany | Share this update

On March 31, 2026, German Development Minister Reem Alabali Radovan announced a EUR177 million (US$204 million) support package for Jordan, Lebanon, and the Palestinian Territories.


Alabali Radovan announced the package during a visit to Jordan, citing the impact of the war with Iran on the region, including direct attacks, displacement, rising prices, and closed border crossings. Part of the funding was already earmarked for the region, with the remainder drawn from reallocations within the Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development's budget. The package is allocated as follows:

  • Jordan (EUR50 million/US$58 million): support for Syrian refugees, including teachers' salaries to enable Syrian children to attend school, employment projects in waste and recycling management, and vocational training to support return to Syria and reconstruction;
  • Palestinian Territories (EUR30 million/US$35 million): EUR10 million (US$11.5 million) will be used for additional housing beyond the 1,500 temporary dwellings already financed in Gaza, another EUR10 million (US$11.5 million) will be used to to promote employment in the West Bank, and additional funds for vocational training for young people and local food production; and
  • Lebanon (EUR75 million/US$86 million): support for approximately one million internally displaced persons, including cash-for-work programs and learning materials for children to participate in distance learning.

The Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development also committed EUR22 million (US$25 million) in additional support for a planned seawater desalination plant on the Red Sea.

Press release - Federal Ministry of Economic Cooperation and Development (in German)

Disclaimer

US$ amounts are cited directly from sources; in the absence of an official conversion, they are calculated using the previous week's average of the US Federal Reserve's daily exchange rates.

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