• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

fundsforNGOs News

Grants and Resources for Sustainability

  • Subscribe for Free
  • Premium Support
  • Premium Login
  • Premium Sign up
  • Home
  • Grants & Funding
    • Funds for NGOs
      • Agriculture, Food & Nutrition
      • Animals and Wildlife
      • Arts & Culture
      • Children
      • Civil Society
      • Community Development
      • Democracy and Good Governance
      • Economic Development
      • Education
      • Disability
      • Employment and Labor
      • Environment
      • Family Support
      • Healthcare
      • HIV and AIDS
      • Housing & Shelter
      • Humanitarian Relief
      • Human Rights
      • Human Service
      • Information Technology
      • Livelihood Development
      • LGBTQIA2S+
      • Media and Development
      • Narcotics, Drugs and Crime
      • Old Age Care
      • Peace & Conflict Resolution
      • Poverty Alleviation
      • Refugees, Migration & Asylum Seekers
      • Science & Technology
      • Sports & Development
      • Sustainable Development
      • Water, Sanitation & Hygiene (WASH)
      • Women & Gender
      • Youth & Adolescents
    • Donors & Funders
    • Funds for Companies
      • Accounts & Finance
      • Agriculture, Food and Nutrition
      • AI
      • Education
      • Energy
      • Environment
      • Healthcare
      • Innovation
      • Manufacturing
      • Media
      • Research
      • Startups & Early-Stage
      • Sustainable Development
      • Technology
      • Travel & Tourism
      • Women
      • Youth
    • Funds for Individuals
      • All Individuals
      • Artists
      • Disabled Persons
      • LGBTQIA2S+
      • PhD Holders
      • Researchers
      • Scientists
      • Students
      • Women
      • Writers
      • Youths
  • Funds in Your Country
  • Proposal Writing
    • Sample Proposals
    • Agriculture Proposals
    • Business Proposals
    • Child Development Proposals
    • Climate Change & Biodiversity Proposals
    • Community Development Proposals
    • Democracy & Good Governance Proposals
    • Disability Proposals
    • Disaster & Humanitarian Relief Proposals
    • Environment Proposals
    • Education Proposals
    • Healthcare Proposals
    • Housing & Shelter Proposals
    • Human Rights Proposals
    • Livelihood Development Proposals
    • Nutrition & Food Security Proposals
    • Poverty Alleviation Proposals
    • Refugees, Migration & Asylum-Seekers’ Proposals
    • Rural Development Proposals
    • Sustainable Development Proposals
    • Water, Sanitation & Hygiene (WASH) Proposals
    • Women & Gender Proposals
    • Youth Development Proposals
  • Premium
    • Premium Sign-in
    • Premium Grants
    • Premium eBooks
    • Premium Webinars
    • Premium Videos
    • Premium Courses
    • Premium Support
  • NGOs.AI
  • Contact
    • Submit Your Opportunity
    • Learning Lab
    • Q&A
    • News
    • About us
You are here: Home / cat / Yemen Faces Famine After 11 Years of Crisis

Yemen Faces Famine After 11 Years of Crisis

Dated: March 27, 2026

Yemen’s food security outlook remains extremely alarming, with the United Nations warning that severe hunger is likely to persist through 2026 after more than 11 years of crisis. Families across the country continue to face immense uncertainty about how they will secure their next meal, as conflict, economic collapse, and shrinking humanitarian support deepen an already catastrophic situation. Humanitarian experts warn that Yemen remains at serious risk of famine conditions if current trends continue.

According to the latest food security analysis, more than 18 million people in Yemen—nearly half the population—were severely food insecure in February 2026. An estimated 18.3 million people, or about 52 percent of the population, are classified as acutely food insecure and unable to meet their basic food needs without external assistance. This places them in IPC Phase 3 or worse, indicating a level of need that requires urgent humanitarian support. Yemen was also identified earlier in 2026 as one of the most food-insecure countries in the world.

Conditions vary across the country, but the overall outlook remains bleak. In government-controlled areas, recent interventions by the central bank have temporarily strengthened the Yemeni riyal and lowered food prices, offering some short-term relief by making food slightly more affordable. However, these gains are described as fragile and unlikely to provide lasting stability. In other areas, agricultural production prospects remain weak, and the chances of restoring large-scale humanitarian food assistance or broader sector support are considered very low. This means that any additional economic, climatic, or conflict-related shock could quickly push more communities into crisis.

A major driver of worsening hunger is the dramatic decline in humanitarian funding. In 2025, Yemen’s Humanitarian Needs and Response Plan received only 28 percent of the required funding, the lowest level recorded since the crisis escalated in 2015. This severe shortfall forced humanitarian agencies across all sectors to scale back operations. Contributions to the World Food Programme reportedly dropped by more than 70 percent between 2024 and 2025, significantly reducing food assistance for vulnerable households. In some areas, especially those under Sana’a-based authority control, WFP operations have remained suspended since September 2025 due to access constraints, further limiting aid delivery.

These funding cuts have had direct and painful consequences for families. As assistance declines, many households are skipping meals, surviving on poorer-quality food, and exhausting whatever coping mechanisms they have left. Families are increasingly pulling children out of school so they can work, selling off remaining assets, and taking desperate measures just to survive. Humanitarian organizations say that this is not simply a matter of reduced services—it is a shift that is pushing already vulnerable communities deeper into hunger, deprivation, and long-term harm.

Because available aid can no longer meet the scale of need, humanitarian organizations are being forced to prioritize only the most vulnerable households. Assistance is increasingly focused on areas facing the highest levels of food insecurity and on groups considered at greatest risk, including families with children under five, pregnant and breastfeeding women, people with disabilities or chronic illnesses, and those living in active conflict zones or flood-affected areas. Aid agencies stress that these decisions are extremely difficult, as helping one family often means another equally desperate family receives nothing.

The decline in support is being linked partly to donor fatigue, as global humanitarian budgets are stretched by multiple overlapping crises around the world. In Yemen, access restrictions and operational difficulties have also complicated the work of aid agencies and made donor engagement more challenging. As a result, even though humanitarian needs remain severe and well documented, international funding has continued to fall. This combination of donor fatigue and access constraints is creating a dangerous gap between the scale of the crisis and the response available.

If funding does not improve in the coming months, the outlook for Yemen is expected to deteriorate further. Malnutrition rates are likely to rise, especially in already vulnerable areas such as the western coastal governorates. As resources continue to shrink, more families may be pushed into increasingly harmful coping strategies, including taking on unmanageable debt, migrating in search of aid, and resorting to early marriage or child labour as survival mechanisms. These trends threaten not only immediate food security but also the long-term wellbeing and future prospects of millions of children and families.

Despite the severity of the crisis, humanitarian experts stress that famine in Yemen is not inevitable. They argue that the trajectory can still be changed if the international community responds with adequate funding, ensures sustained humanitarian access, and supports efforts to restore livelihoods alongside emergency food assistance. While the window to prevent famine is narrowing, it has not yet closed. The message from aid organizations is clear: urgent action is needed now to stop the crisis from spiraling into an even greater catastrophe.

Overall, Yemen remains one of the world’s most severe hunger emergencies, with millions of people trapped between conflict, economic instability, and collapsing humanitarian support. The current situation reflects both the cumulative toll of more than a decade of crisis and the consequences of declining international assistance at a time of escalating need. Without renewed commitment and rapid intervention, the risk of famine will continue to grow, placing millions more lives in jeopardy.

Related Posts

  • Nutrition North Canada Strengthens Northern Food Security
  • Canada Funds 9 Indigenous Projects to Boost Northern Food Security
  • How Cameroon Is Transforming Its Food Systems at Scale
  • Cameroon Launches CONVERGEFOOD Programme to Transform Food Systems
  • Sweden announces $26M humanitarian aid package for Ukraine

Primary Sidebar

Latest News

Gray Foundation Announces $35 Million Grant for BRCA-Related Cancer Research

Citi Foundation Announces $5 Million Grant to Support Early Savings for Children

Humana Foundation Announces $12.2 Million in Grants to Support Emotional Health Programs

Canada Invests $5.8 Million to Upgrade Wastewater Infrastructure in St. Clements

Austrian Biotech Startup Epitome Therapeutics Secures €4 Million to Advance Gene Expression Platform

AI Data Infrastructure Startup Clairva Raises $500K to Expand Licensed AI Dataset Platform

Mtwara Launches Multi-Stakeholder Forum to Advance Marine Conservation and Blue Economy

European Investment Bank Provides €50 Million Loan to Support Lact’Union’s Growth and Sustainability

PAHO Expands Emergency Health Response After Devastating Earthquakes in Venezuela

PAHO/WHO and Partners Strengthen Efforts to Prevent Violence Against Children in Brazil

African Development Bank Connects Tunisian Businesses to Investment and Procurement Opportunities

African Development Bank and Lake Chad Basin Commission Launch $10 Million Project to Restore Lake Chad

Regional Partners Unite to Boost Financing for Food Systems Transformation Across the IGAD Region

Papua New Guinea Advances Labour Law Reforms Through Social Dialogue

Ireland Announces €1 Million in Humanitarian Aid for Venezuela Earthquake Relief

Burkina Faso’s Economy Shows Strong Resilience as World Bank Calls for Job-Creating Reforms

UNDP and ASRA Partner to Strengthen Global Crisis Risk Anticipation

Community Participatory Audit Launched to Strengthen Public Trust in Solomon Islands

UN Adopts 2026 Political Declaration on HIV/AIDS to Accelerate Global Efforts to End AIDS by 2030

African Development Bank and Shanghai Ocean University Partner to Advance Africa’s Blue Economy

World Bank Approves $750 Million to Support Kenya’s Governance and Social Protection Reforms

World Bank Group Announces New Support to Mobilize Investment for Ukraine’s Recovery

Kyrgyz Republic to Boost Reforms and Job Creation with World Bank Financing Package

World Bank Group Opens Madrid Office to Boost Investment and Job Creation in Emerging Markets

Caribbean Health Leaders Develop Strategies to Address Workforce Shortages and Chronic Diseases

Bangladesh Launches National Portal to Support Entrepreneurs with Finance, Training and Business Services

Gender-Responsive Budgeting Could Transform Skills Development for Women in Bangladesh

Pakistan Launches First Anticipatory Action Strategy to Reduce Climate Disaster Risks

Japan Contributes $1.2 Million to Expand School Meals Program in Somalia

IMF Approves $95.8 Million Program to Support Mauritania’s Economic Reforms

Ethiopia Reaches Preliminary Deal to Restructure $1 Billion Eurobond

AFC Launches $123 Million Agriculture Financing Facility for Togo

UNDP and ASRA Partner to Strengthen Global Crisis Risk Anticipation

Ebola Outbreak Could Push Nearly One Million More People into Poverty, UNDP Warns

GEF Approves $14 Million for Climate Adaptation Projects Across the Pacific

Connectivity Transforms Healthcare Access in Sitangkai, Philippines

Alexander De Croo Calls for Action at Hamburg Sustainability Conference 2026

How Colombia Is Building Its Digital Future Through Youth Innovation

How Technology Can Strengthen Early Warning and Community Resilience in Tanzania

UNDP Warns Middle East Conflict Could Push Fossil Fuel Subsidies Above US$1 Trillion

Funds for NGOs
Funds for Companies
Funds for Media
Funds for Individuals
Sample Proposals

Contact us
Submit a Grant
Advertise, Guest Posting & Backlinks
Fight Fraud against NGOs
About us

Terms of Use
Third-Party Links & Ads
Disclaimers
Copyright Policy
General
Privacy Policy

Premium Sign in
Premium Sign up
Premium Customer Support
Premium Terms of Service

©FUNDSFORNGOS LLC.   fundsforngos.org, fundsforngos.ai, and fundsforngospremium.com domains and their subdomains are the property of FUNDSFORNGOS, LLC 1018, 1060 Broadway, Albany, New York, NY 12204, United States.   Unless otherwise specified, this website is not affiliated with the abovementioned organizations. The material provided here is solely for informational purposes and without any warranty. Visitors are advised to use it at their discretion. Read the full disclaimer here. Privacy Policy. Cookie Policy.