The Future is Equal

Kiwi Aid Agencies urge Government to Increase Climate Finance & Foreign Aid Spending

Kiwi Aid Agencies urge Government to Increase Climate Finance & Foreign Aid Spending

In the lead-up to the 2025 budget, an open letter from New Zealand’s international development NGOs has asked the government to increase aid spending in the Pacific region, at a time of significant cutbacks by other bilateral donors.

Wellington, New Zealand 17 March 2025 – Aotearoa’s international development sector has issued an open letter to three ministries imploring them to increase spending on climate finance and foreign aid in the upcoming budget.  

The letter, from the Council for International Development (CID), the peak body for New Zealand NGOs and charities in the international development and humanitarian space is addressed to Foreign Minister Winston Peters, Finance Minister Nicola Willis, and Climate Change Minister Hon Simon Watts.

It calls for an increase in NZ funding to Pacific nations to help them adapt and prepare for climate change, as well as to pay for the damage caused by extreme weather. It also calls for a general increase in the foreign aid budget to address the escalating challenges facing the Pacific.

The letter warns that without sustained investment, Pacific nations will bear an unfair burden of the climate crisis they did not create. Increased funding will support resilience, sustainable livelihoods, and disaster preparedness – as well as help Pacific nations to avoid the burden of climate change debt, which is becoming an increasing issue across the region, with Samoa, Tonga and Fiji now spending more on climate related debt than they do on health and education.

Currently, Aotearoa invests an annual NZ$325 million on climate finance for Pacific countries. The letter is requesting that the government increases this to at least NZ$558 million for 2025, and to NZ$1.7 billion by 2035. The New Zealand budget is due to be released on 22 May.

CID is also urging that Aotearoa maintains its current strategy of delivering climate aid as grants, rather than loans. “New Zealand has a proud history of standing with our Pacific neighbours. But as climate impacts intensify, our government must step up its commitments to ensure Pacific communities have the resources they need to adapt and thrive,” said CID Executive Director Peter Rudd. “We welcome the Government’s commitment to grant-based climate finance, which has set a world-leading example. Now, we urge Ministers to strengthen this approach and ensure our contributions keep pace with the growing need.”

The call for increased investment in the aid sector comes as other major donors have begun to step back on aid commitments. The US government, which until recently, was a major donor to the Pacific, suspended USAID in January this year and has terminated 90 percent of its programmes. Other key European donors, including France, Germany, the UK and Switzerland have also reduced spending, removing nearly NZ$22 billion from humanitarian and development funding globally.

Key Asks from the Development Sector

The open letter calls on the New Zealand Government to:

  • Scale up annual climate finance to NZ$558 million in 2025, ensuring contributions remain additional to Official Development Assistance (ODA).

  • Maintain New Zealand’s grant-based approach, with at least 50% allocated to adaptation and 50% directed to the Pacific.

  • Develop a roadmap to increase ODA to 0.7% of Gross National Income by 2030, in line with United Nations targets.

New Zealand has a unique opportunity to strengthen its leadership and partnerships in the Pacific. By investing in climate finance and development cooperation, the Government can build lasting goodwill and security in the region.

As New Zealand reviews its climate finance commitments for the next five years, this decision will shape its international standing and relationships in the Pacific. Aotearoa has long been known for an outward-facing foreign policy guided by kotahitanga, manaakitanga, and aroha. Now is the time to uphold these values rather than retreat from them.

Read the full letter here.

Personal to Powerful Report

Thirty years on from the commitments enshrined in the Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action (BPfA) this briefing reveals a picture of broken promises and unfulfilled ambition by States. This failure is not just due to a lack of political will, but also an economic system that is unequal by design. A range of right-wing, religious, and conservative actors around the world are capitalising on persistent crises, to reorient state power towards a reassertion of racist and sexist profit-driven systems that favours the wealthy, privileges men, and harms and disadvantages women and LGBTQIA+ people in the name of ‘traditional’ family values. This diminishes governments’ capacity to protect, respect, promote, and fulfil bodily autonomy and sexual and reproductive health, rights and justice. As world leaders prepare to review their commitments to the BPfA, the consolidation and mainstreaming of these anti-rights movements risk eroding the hard-won gains of feminist, LGBTQIA+ activists and movements, ultimately breaking the social contract between the state and people.

Read report here

Israel blocks aid to Gaza as Ramadan begins – Oxfam reaction

Israel’s decision, to block aid to over two million Palestinians in the Gaza Strip as Ramadan begins, is a reckless act of collective punishment, explicitly prohibited under international humanitarian law. The Government of Israel, as occupying power has the responsibility to ensure that humanitarian aid can reach the population in Gaza. 

Humanitarian aid is not a bargaining chip for applying pressure on parties, but a fundamental right of civilians experiencing urgent need in challenging and life-threatening circumstances. 

When our teams assessed the conditions in Gaza in the wake of the January 19th announcement of a temporary ceasefire, they encountered apocalyptic scenes of complete destruction and famine-like conditions.  

People in Gaza are in need of everything:  lifesaving water, food, sanitation and other necessities, as well as equipment critically needed for restoration of water and electricity. The goods that were able to enter during the weeks of ceasefire have brought some relief but remain a drop in the ocean.   

The international community must apply immediate pressure on Israel to ensure vital aid urgently gets into Gaza. The International Court of Justice has ordered Israel to ensure aid deliveries at scale throughout Gaza.  

Oxfam Reaction to USAID Funding Cuts in DRC

Commenting on news today that the US has confirmed the termination of USAID funding for multiple life-saving projects in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Oxfam Country Director Manenji Mangundu said: 

“These USAID cuts will have an immediate and devastating impact on millions of the world’s most vulnerable people who depend on humanitarian aid for survival.  

“For the half a million people in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, already desperate for food, water and shelter due to the spiralling conflict, the impact will be immediate and life-threatening. 

“USAID was the leading donor in DRC and most aid agencies here relied on its funding to provide life-saving assistance. Without it, agencies will be forced into having to make terrible triage decisions including who gets to live and who might needlessly die. 

“The health of up to one million people could be at risk due to the impact of this decision on the work of humanitarian agencies in the DRC. We will be forced to cut vital clean water and sanitation services, increasing the risk of the spread of cholera, measles and mpox.  

“Multiply this by all the humanitarian agencies dependent on USAID funding not only in DRC but around the world, and the impact of this decision will be catastrophic.” Ends 

For more information contact Rachel Schaevitz at [email protected]

Notes to Editors

  • Oxfam is helping over 670,000 people in eastern DRC with food, clean water, sanitation, cash assistance as well as hygiene kits for women and girls. Renewed fighting has led to an escalation of the humanitarian crisis with camps for displaced people destroyed and vital water and sanitation infrastructure damaged.  
  • The United States Agency for International Development (USAID) is the leading humanitarian donor in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC). Last year’s report indicates that it provided over $838 million in 2024 alone, including $414 million specifically for humanitarian needs resulting from the ongoing conflict and displacement. 

Ukrainian agency toward peace must be honored and preserved: Oxfam

In response to the US-Russia meeting yesterday (Feb 18) on the future of the war in Ukraine, Nicola Bay, Director of the Oxfam in Ukraine Response Team said: 

“Any path toward a genuinely sustainable and just peace must obviously include Ukrainians, with the voice and agency of Ukrainian women and civil society made prominent. Russia’s invasion breached international law and its act of aggression must not be rewarded. Legitimizing an act of aggression risks setting a dangerous precedent that would threaten the very fabric of the international laws that are designed to prevent wars before they start. Whether or not Ukraine and Russia agree to negotiate a peace plan, civilians must be protected from harm, in line with the countries’ obligations under international humanitarian and human rights law.” 

“The Ukrainian people have been the backbone of all the efforts to respond to the humanitarian crisis sparked by Russia’s illegal war. Despite being underfunded and often marginalized, local Ukrainian organizations have shown remarkable strength, determination, and the have been successful in helping to save people’s lives and provide them with aid and support.”

Contact information

Rhea Catada, Communications Manager Oxfam Ukraine Response: [email protected] 

Less than seven percent of pre-conflict water levels available to Rafah and North Gaza, worsening a health catastrophe