In recent years, the World Food Programme
(WFP) has managed complex emergencies, natural
disasters, epidemics, and pandemics. Emergency
preparedness and response is rooted within WFP
policies and is crosscutting within all levels
of the organization at country, regional, and
global level.
Emergency preparedness refers to a set of
elements that allows us and our partners to be
effective, efficient and timely when crises
erupt. These elements are:
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Early Warning systems.
Derived from evidence-based analyses and
risk assessments for conflict, natural or
economic hazards which may affect current
WFP operations or create new humanitarian
needs, these inform decisions on resource
allocation and operational readiness.
Geographic Information Systems allow us to
visualize information generated, collected
or assembled from various functions within
WFP. Targeted geospatial analyses show the
immediate impact of natural disasters,
focusing on affected populations and
existing assets or ground operations.
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Inter-Agency support and
coordination. Effective coordination among all actors
involved in humanitarian crises clarifies
roles and responsibilities; eliminates
duplication of effort; ensures
complementarity; remedies gaps; and
facilitates information sharing,
collaboration and joint planning.
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Civil-Military Coordination. As military forces are increasingly
deployed in humanitarian settings, the
UN's Inter-Agency guidance on
Civil-Military Coordination provides the
standards for our operational interactions
with national and international
militaries.
Preparedness aside, the emergency response itself remains WFP's area of highest
impact. A range of structures and resources
ensure mobilization, management and
accountability when responding to a crisis. These
include:
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Our skilled emergency
workforce. We promote and strengthen individual
skills at all stages and invest in
opportunities to build the next generation
of emergency responders. We also leverage
external expertise, including our
operational alliances and Standby
Partners.
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Our global supply chain capacity. Our
operational agility and ability to
innovate and expand networks enable us and
our partners to reach vulnerable
communities in some of the most
inaccessible locations, reduce delivery
times and save costs – whether it is food,
cash, or a combination of the two. When
disaster strikes, we deploy operational
experts and provide immediate support
through the United Nations Humanitarian Air
Service, the United Nations Humanitarian Response
Depots network, the Fast Information
Technology and Telecommunications
Emergency and Support Team, and engineering services. WFP provides coordination in
emergencies through the Logistics and
Emergency Telecommunication Clusters,
storing and transporting urgent relief
items to affected populations, and setting
up connectivity in the most remote areas.
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Our Operations Centre at Rome headquarters, OPSCEN,
facilitates communication and coordination
in emergencies. It includes a 24-hour,
seven-days-a-week hotline for the country
and regional directors to report critical
incidents and share information. OPSCEN
also facilitates inter-agency coordination
through connections to the UN information
exchange network, including other UN
operations centres and the Geographic
Information Support team.
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Operational information
management. WFP generates a Common Operational
Picture for itself, partners and donors.
It supports creating timely, consistent
and user-friendly products for WFP
management and external audiences to
assist decision-making; support
fundraising and awareness-raising; help
with broader humanitarian coordination,
and document humanitarian responses'
progress. Quality operational information
management and reporting help WFP be more
efficient and uphold its transparency and
accountability principles.
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Lessons Learned. Fed
by staff involved in emergencies, this
knowledge management function allows us to
gather and store response expertise,
strengthen our capabilities and guide
future interventions. It ensures a more
robust capacity to respond and informed
future interventions.