The sudden halt in US foreign aid is severely impacting global hunger relief efforts, with critical food shipments and emergency support for famine-stricken regions now suspended. Over 500,000 metric tonnes of aid, valued at approximately $340 million, are currently stranded in warehouses, awaiting approval from the US State Department. This halt has disrupted humanitarian programs globally, putting millions of lives at risk, especially in conflict-ridden areas like Sudan and Gaza.

This aid freeze follows the Trump administration’s directive to review all foreign-aid programs, with a focus on reshaping the US’s humanitarian efforts. While emergency food assistance was meant to continue, the lack of clarity on which relief efforts qualify for exceptions has caused widespread confusion among aid organizations.

The situation has been further complicated by the shutdown of the US Agency for International Development (USAID), which traditionally managed the distribution of such aid. Humanitarian workers are now left without guidance, and crucial services, including community kitchens and nutritional supplements for malnourished children, have been suspended.

One of the most significant losses is the shutdown of the Famine Early Warning Systems Network (FEWS NET), a vital resource that monitors global food security and provides data to inform emergency responses. Without this system, aid groups struggle to predict where hunger crises will escalate, slowing down the global response to famine.

As the US is the world’s largest provider of famine relief, this aid freeze is a severe blow to efforts aimed at combating hunger. Last year, nearly 282 million people in 59 countries faced extreme food insecurity, and the ongoing disruptions in aid delivery risk exacerbating the global hunger crisis.