FEWS Net or famine alert!

At the Gharb Al Matta displacement site, in Kassala (Sudan), the World Food Programme is conducting a two-day distribution – February 2025 – Photo: OCHA ©Giles Clarke.

The Famine Early Warning Systems Network (FEWS NET) was created in 1985 by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID).

It was born in a context marked by severe famines, with a clear objective: to develop tools capable of understanding, analyzing, and anticipating food insecurity phenomena.

Forty years later, FEWS NET has become a pioneering actor and a global reference in the analysis of food crises. Its central role is to provide decision-makers and humanitarian organizations with reliable information, enabling the prevention of famines and the rapid adaptation of responses.

To do this, the network collects and analyzes a wide range of data—climatic, agricultural, economic, and nutritional—which it organizes through a rigorous methodology called scenario development. This forward-looking approach unfolds in eight successive steps :

  1. Define the scenario parameters: specify the period and geographical area studied.
  2. Describe and classify the current food situation: establish a reference diagnosis.
  3. Develop key assumptions: anticipate the evolution of major factors (climate, markets, conflicts, etc.).
  4. Analyze the impact on household income sources.
  5. Analyze the impact on household food sources.
  6. Describe and classify projected food security at the household level.
  7. Describe and classify projected food security at the area level.
  8. Identify events that could alter the scenario (climatic shocks, political instability, epidemics, etc.).

Thanks to this approach, FEWS NET is able to produce reliable estimates up to six months, or even a year in advance, integrating multiple factors: climatic and weather conditions, conflicts, markets, agricultural production, and trade.

These analyses are published in the form of reports, vulnerability maps, and projections, which support policy-makers and help humanitarian actors on the ground implement targeted interventions.

In 2025, the network celebrates its 40th anniversary, confirming its crucial role in the fight against global food insecurity.

GAZA :

The FEWS NET report of August 22, 2025, is an essential tool for assessing the severity of the food crisis in the Gaza Strip and anticipating its evolution. It relies on the international IPC (Integrated Food Security Phase Classification) scale, which classifies food insecurity into five phases. Phase 5, corresponding to famine, is characterized by the combination of three indicators: extreme hunger, acute malnutrition, and high mortality. According to the report, this phase is already observed in the Gaza governorate, and probably in North Gaza, where populations have crossed all critical thresholds.

UNICEF ©Mohammed Nateel – A child waits in line to receive water in Gaza.

Situation in North Gaza (~1.06 million people)

In this region, the food crisis is worsened by 22 months of conflict, massive displacements, and the near-total destruction of essential infrastructure. Surveys indicate that 28 to 36% of households are experiencing catastrophic hunger, exceeding the famine threshold. Levels of acute malnutrition among children have crossed the critical 15% threshold, with admissions to treatment centers more than doubling between June and July 2025. Mortality related to hunger and disease is also considered likely to be above the IPC Phase 5 threshold (≥2 deaths per 10,000 people/day). Food aid entry remains extremely limited, bakeries are closed, and community kitchens reach only 10% of the population, leaving hundreds of thousands of people without regular access to food.

Situation in South Gaza (~1.04 million people)

The governorates of Deir al-Balah, Khan Younis, and Rafah are experiencing a situation close to famine, worsened by repeated displacements of over a million people, the collapse of livelihoods, and limited access to food resources. Between May and July 2025, extreme hunger tripled in Deir al-Balah and increased by 50% in Khan Younis, while 22 to 33% of households are in a critical food situation. More than 700 deaths related to food aid were recorded in July, including 390 in the south. Food prices have skyrocketed, with flour costing 200–300 NIS/kg, a 5,000% increase compared to the pre-conflict period. Acute malnutrition among children has doubled since May, reaching up to 12% in some areas. Access to water, sanitation, and healthcare has nearly collapsed, with only six hospitals operational and medical stocks largely depleted. According to projections, mortality related to hunger and disease is expected to cross the IPC Phase 5 threshold by the end of September 2025.

Perspectives :

The FEWS NET report for August confirms that famine is already effective in North Gaza and was imminent in the south. The three criteria of Phase 5—extreme hunger, acute malnutrition, and mortality—are reached or about to be reached in several governorates. Without massive, regular, and secure humanitarian intervention, including food, safe water, and medical care, large-scale human losses are inevitable. The scale of the crisis underscores the urgency of strengthening humanitarian access and coordinating a response to prevent widespread health and food collapse.

©IPC – Projection of the malnutrition situation in the Gaza Strip between July 1, 2025, and September 30, 2025

News :

Since the publication of the report in August, the situation has taken a new dimension. In September, the United Nations Commission of Inquiry, created in 2021 by the Human Rights Council, concluded that a genocide is underway in the Gaza Strip, committed by Israel. According to the Commission, Israel is responsible for four of the five constituent acts of genocide, as defined by the 1948 Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide. Among them is the intentional subjection of a group to conditions of existence calculated to bring about its physical destruction, in whole or in part. The famine, orchestrated by Israeli authorities through the blockade of access to food and nutrition, directly illustrates this category.

Funding :

The return of FEWS NET, the world’s leading early warning system for famine, raises as much hope as questions. Suspended for nearly a year due to USAID budget cuts and the reorientation of American foreign aid priorities, this system left a critical gap in the collection and analysis of food security data, depriving humanitarian actors of an essential tool to anticipate and respond to crises. Its redeployment, alongside the Integrated Phase Classification (IPC), should strengthen the detection and forecasting of famine situations in fragile contexts such as Gaza, Sudan, or Haiti.

However, while FEWS NET provides real-time technical expertise and independent projections, its effectiveness remains conditioned on the ability of international aid to be deployed concretely. Yet, in a context of massive cuts to humanitarian funding, both in the United States and globally, the central question remains: even with precise and early diagnosis, will vital resources reach the populations most at risk ?

©PAM – In the western desert town of Dinsoor, drought victims rush to receive food distributed by the United Nations World Food Programme.

Esther de Montchalin

Esther de Montchalin is a master’s student in Political Science, specializing in Development and Humanitarian Action, at Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne. She is currently the assistant to the founder of Solidarités International and Défis Humanitaires, Mr. Alain Boinet.

Particularly interested in global health issues, access to water, and the fight against malnutrition, she dedicates her research to major contemporary humanitarian challenges and the difficulties faced by vulnerable populations in crisis contexts.

The Challenge of Humanitarian “Reinvention”

2025, Khiam, Lebanon ©PUI

While a federal appellate court validated on August 13 the budget cuts imposed by the Trump administration on international aid[1], it is worth reflecting on the underlying dynamics of this historical reversal, beyond its immediate—and often devastating—consequences for the most vulnerable populations on the planet.

The humanitarian sector is likely experiencing the most existential crisis in its history, and this observation is no longer really in doubt. Indeed, studies and analyses have multiplied in recent months, attempting to warn and convince, through countless articles, of the foreseeable risks and devastating effects of the budget cuts announced by the main funders of international aid. Among these, the freezing and then elimination of more than 80% of U.S. aid, culminating in the dismantling of USAID[2], represents a true catastrophe for the millions of people who relied on the programs previously supported by the U.S. agency for their survival. A modeling study published in early July by The Lancet estimates that the proposed budget reductions could lead to the deaths of 14 million people, including more than 4.5 million children[3]. “They risk abruptly halting—or even reversing—two decades of progress in the health of vulnerable populations. For many low- and middle-income countries, the resulting shock would be comparable in scale to a global pandemic or a major armed conflict,” commented Davide Rasella, co-author of the study and researcher at the Barcelona Institute for Global Health[4]. Other analyses corroborate these projections, estimating, for example, that 2.3 million children suffering from severe acute malnutrition will no longer have access to the treatments necessary for their recovery, in many countries with failing healthcare systems[5].

These figures are staggering when considered against the lessons of history, the ambitions expressed for decades by the international community regarding sustainable development[6], and more broadly, the fundamental basis of what brings us together as a society—the concept of humanity. Beyond the shock experienced by humanitarian actors faced with unfolding tragedies, it is reason itself that seems attacked by the political decisions causing the current crisis.

From economic rationality to political volatility

In response to this crisis, analyses have proliferated to assess not only the impact of these cuts but also to demonstrate their irrationality in view of the amounts involved (and their insignificance in terms of effects on the macro-budgetary balance of the countries concerned), as well as the counterproductive effects they could generate, even with regard to the national interests of the donor states (starting with global public health issues, given the cessation of funding for numerous vertical programs—HIV, malaria, etc.—and support for failing health systems). These findings have been established and known for a long time, and no one seriously disputes today the causal links showing that international aid is an element of global stabilization benefiting all. Nevertheless, acknowledging this does not mean that nothing needed to be changed or radically transformed in the international aid system, starting with the structure and mechanisms of its funding, whose fragility and political dependence are now more exposed than ever in light of the current crisis, even as its positive effects remain evident. Thus, facing such evidence, how can we explain decisions taken by governments, sometimes against what appears to be their own interest or that of their population, and at a relatively modest cost?[7] At first glance, this seems opaque, and perhaps it is because, focused on the system itself—its objectives and impacts—we overlook a crucial factor in understanding current developments: the conditions that allow it to thrive.

2025, Gaza ©PUI

Historical reversal or a new era?

The current crisis gives the impression of a major step backward or a return to almost immemorial gains—a feeling entirely legitimate given the real halt in allocated funding and the threat it poses to the survival of the international aid system. However, it is worth recalling that this system remains relatively “young,” both in terms of international relations and the history of international solidarity more specifically. Indeed, while the United Nations system was established in 1945, as a response to the trauma of World War II, functionally it only truly took off after the Cold War in the 1990s, during a very particular historical period. The concept of “humanitarianism,” at least in its modern form, had responded to other “forms” before being structured and defined within its current scope. Each of these historical incarnations developed under specific conditions, linked to particular ideas about society and governance, both from governments and their populations. From the creation of the Red Cross when war became industrialized, producing unprecedented casualties, to the invention of “borderless” humanitarianism during the paralysis of the international system due to bloc opposition, the era and environment always shape how the act of “saving lives” is conceived and structured. The contemporary period, now ending, is no exception.

Complementary narratives now obsolete

From a certain perspective, the past twenty-five to thirty years represent a kind of “golden age” of humanitarianism, as never before in history were so many preventable deaths averted. While never fully covering all identified needs for access to essential services for the most vulnerable populations affected by crises, the progress made by the aid system in identifying needs and organizing an appropriate large-scale response has had a tremendous impact on survival, unmatched by previous mechanisms of human solidarity. Such achievement was only possible because the conditions for such growth were met, combining political will and financial means. The undermining of these conditions is at the root of the crisis observed in recent years—and we must ask why.

2025, ©PUI Syria Rural Damascus Projects, Visit O.ROUTEAU

Looking at the current situation from a broader perspective, we sense a deadlock directly linked to the fact that the narratives supporting the conceptual framework of humanitarianism are made obsolete by evolving realities. This deadlock, and the contradictions it creates for the governments of the main donor countries, explains the profound reversal currently observed.

First, the foundational narrative that has become ineffective relates to the idea of social progress. International solidarity (developmental or humanitarian) has always been anchored, in one way or another, to a sense of moral duty and/or social justice, aligned with the growing prosperity experienced by populations in “developed” countries. Following a continuous period of rising prosperity (the “Trente Glorieuses”), in a world where politics aimed to improve people’s living conditions and meet their material needs, it seemed coherent, even essential, to develop a discourse asserting that the collective ambition should be to eradicate extreme poverty globally and ensure universal access to essential services. In an era of mass consumption and leisure-focused societies, with information technologies making global living conditions visible, persistent famine, malnutrition, or child mortality appeared as glaring inconsistencies detrimental to the civilizational progress promoted by Western societies. Victorious in a unipolar world, the capitalist model was expected to meet citizen aspirations and support minimal development in the least advanced countries while ensuring access to essential services for the most vulnerable worldwide.

But in a “finite” world, where the energy-intensive, consumerist Western growth model is increasingly challenged, and prosperity recedes for large segments of Western populations, political discourse inevitably changes. The narrative of international solidarity struggles to anchor itself. While alternative societal choices are possible, the prevailing discourse increasingly leans toward pessimism and inward-looking thinking. The populist and conservative wave sweeping across the West, with Donald Trump as a prominent figure, acts as a principle-based hostile force toward international solidarity, resistant to rational arguments regarding Northern states’ responsibilities or interests. This complicates efforts by aid actors to fight proposed budget cuts. As governments slash social budgets and public services, cutting development aid reinforces, at low cost, the idea of global effort: “the state must cut here first before taxing its citizens more.” Politically, it avoids controversy over declining living standards at home linked to foreign aid spending. While not the sole reason, the degraded economic context and the end of the myth of infinite prosperity create fertile ground to challenge the concept of humanitarian responsibility. The famous phrase, “France cannot welcome all the misery of the world”[8], resonates today as strongly applied to international solidarity as it did domestically decades ago.

A second powerful narrative supporting donor investment in humanitarian objectives is that of peace. For an extraordinarily long period, the West—and Europe in particular—experienced a relative absence of war on its territories, promoting the civilizational notion of the “end of war.” War, though never entirely gone, was largely a distant phenomenon affecting other regions. This context allowed international law, especially humanitarian law, and related institutions to flourish, offering hope for humanity. The return of war—geographically, e.g., the conflict in Ukraine, and in form, i.e., high-intensity clashes—shatters this utopia. These geopolitical shifts expose inconsistencies and double standards among past “codifiers,” highlighting the selective application of principles. While violations of international humanitarian law (IHL) have always existed, overall coherence was previously maintained by official discourse supporting lawful conflict management. Today’s tragedy in Gaza exceeds the immediate atrocities against Palestinians; it accelerates the deconstruction of the humanitarian space and undermines IHL. Gaza exemplifies this trend, which increasingly challenges aid actors to define a “legitimate humanitarian zone”[9]. Whether in the Sahel, Ukraine, Gaza, Afghanistan, Sudan, Myanmar, Lebanon, or the DRC, this quest grows ever more complex.

Finally, a third narrative mobilized resources from the global North for populations affected by humanitarian crises. This narrative, sometimes called “empathy by kilometers,” suggested that emotional engagement diminished with distance. While partly true, another factor inversely influenced the ability to mobilize resources: as humanitarian crises were once seen as distant and temporary, mobilizing resources in prosperous countries seemed coherent. However, as crises globalize, even affecting wealthy countries, this narrative becomes less effective.

2025, Gaza ©PUI

Reinventing humanitarianism

Beyond the budget cuts themselves, the current battle is also fought in the realm of ideas. The “software” has changed, and we must acknowledge it to rethink tomorrow’s humanitarianism. While the future shape of humanitarian action is uncertain, some paths can be explored. First, before being a system or category of actors, “humanitarianism” is above all a concept structured around principles, regardless of implementers. Determining the most operational actor in Gaza is less important than safeguarding the fundamental principles, particularly in operations by the Humanitarian Foundation for Gaza (GHF). Preserving core capacities is thus a priority. Similarly, whether the current period ends or not, it has fostered expertise that must not be lost, to prevent repeating past mistakes. Advocacy should include preserving humanitarian capacity. At the same time, it is essential to expand operational and inventive capacities to other actors, local or not. Tomorrow’s challenges are immense, and all energies are needed to succeed in reinventing humanitarianism. Finally, since much is ultimately played at the level of underlying ideas, activism and witnessing humanitarian realities must remain ever-present, as humanitarianism has historically arisen from indignation at worldly injustices.

Olivier Routeau

A graduate in law and political science, Olivier completed humanitarian project management training at Bioforce in 2007. He then joined Triangle Génération Humanitaire as Field Coordinator and later Head of Mission in CAR, Lebanon, Congo-Brazzaville, and Tunisia. In 2011, he joined Première Urgence Internationale, initially as Head of the Africa Unit, then leading the Emergency and Operational Development Service from 2015 to 2018. Since 2018, he has served as Director of Operations. He has also collaborated with IRIS since 2014 and became the Pedagogical Manager of the “International Program Manager” training in 2020.

Première Urgence Internationale

[1] United States: Court Upholds Budget Cuts Imposed by the Trump Administration on International Aid

[2] The U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), created in 1961 by the Kennedy Administration and responsible for American economic development and humanitarian aid, whose dismantling took effect on February 23, 2025, following a decision by the newly elected Trump Administration.

U.S. Agency for International Development

[3] Evaluating the impact of two decades of USAID interventions and projecting the effects of defunding on mortality up to 2030: a retrospective impact evaluation and forecasting analysis

[4] U.S. cuts to international aid could cause more than 14 million deaths by 2030

[5] Deep dive: Food aid cuts leave behind a trail of hunger and uncertainty | Devex

[6] Sustainable Development Goals

[7] Before the clear cuts in its funding, USAID represented 0.3% of U.S. federal spending. “American citizens contribute about 17 cents per day to USAID, or roughly $64 per year. I think most people would support maintaining USAID funding if they knew how effective such a small contribution could be in saving millions of lives,” said James Macinko, co-author of the study published by The Lancet on the impact of U.S. cuts in early July 2025, and professor at the University of California (UCLA).

U.S. cuts to international aid could cause more than 14 million deaths by 2030

[8] Statement repeatedly made from 1989 by Michel Rocard, then Prime Minister of France, in relation to migration issues.

[9] Ukraine-Gaza: Why the Zone of Legitimate Humanitarian Relevance is Shrinking | Alternatives Humanitaires

[10] For a long time, it was assumed that humanitarian actors worked toward their own disappearance, and once crises were resolved, they would cease to exist as their raison d’être would be eliminated.

[11] Save And Rescue (SAR). Here we refer to sea rescue operations for populations attempting to reach Europe by sea.

I invite you to read these interviews and articles published in the edition :