Nigeria 2025 Humanitarian Needs and Response Plan / Annexes

5.4 How to contribute

Contribute to the Humanitarian Response Plan

To see the country’s Humanitarian Needs Overview, Humanitarian Response Plan and monitoring reports, and donate directly to organizations participating in the plan, please visit: www.reliefweb.int/country/nga

The best way to browse HRP projects is on FTS : fts.unocha.org https://fts.unocha.org/countries/1274/summary/2025

Click on each project code to open a page of full project details, including contacts. Use the menu on the right to filter by organization and/or sector.

Contribute through the Central Emergency Response Fund

The Central Emergency Response Fund (CERF) provides rapid initial funding for life-saving actions at the onset of emergencies and for poorly funded, essential humanitarian operations in protracted crises. CERF receives contributions from various donors - mainly governments, but also private companies, foundations, charities, and individuals – which are combined into a single fund. This is used for crises anywhere in the world. Find out more about CERF and how to donate by visiting the CERF

Contribute through the Nigeria Humanitarian Fund

The Nigerian Humanitarian Fund (NHF) is a country- based pooled fund. Such funds are multi-donor humanitarian financing instruments established by the Emergency Relief Coordinator and managed by OCHA at the country level under the leadership of the Humanitarian Coordinator. At the 2016 World Humanitarian Summit and in its follow-up, many donors committed to the goal of channeling 15 percent of funding for HRPs through the respective country-based pooled funds, in recognition of the demonstrated experience that this will enable a more strategic and joined-up use of funding to address priorities, cover critical gaps, and achieve coherent inter- sectoral results.

Find out more about the NHF by visiting: https://www. unocha.org/nhf

About:

About

This document is consolidated by OCHA on behalf of the Humanitarian Country Team and partners. It provides a shared understanding of the crisis, including the most pressing humanitarian need and the estimated number of people who need assistance. It represents a consolidated evidence base and helps inform joint strategic response planning.

The designations employed and the presentation of material in the report do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of the Secretariat of the United Nations concerning the legal status of any country, territory, city or area or of its authorities, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries.