Adventist Development and Relief Agency
The Adventist Development and Relief Agency (ADRA) is the international humanitarian organization of the Seventh-day Adventist Church, founded in November 1956 to coordinate relief and welfare efforts, later expanding into long-term development programs operating in more than 118 countries.[1][2][3] ADRA's mission centers on serving humanity to enable all to live as intended by God, delivering aid irrespective of recipients' politics, race, ethnicity, or religion through collaborative partnerships addressing poverty, distress, and emergencies.[4][2] As the humanitarian arm of the 21.9-million-member Adventist community, it has responded to over 114 global emergencies in 2024 alone, focusing on sustainable community strengthening in areas like disaster relief, health, education, and economic development.[1][5] Notable for its faith-based approach rooted in Adventist principles, ADRA maintains operational independence while relying heavily on government grants, with USAID comprising 65% of its 2022 funding, a dependency that has drawn audits questioning administrative expenditures and prompted operational pauses amid 2025 U.S. aid policy shifts.[6][7][8]Organizational Foundations
Establishment and Early Evolution
The Seventh-day Adventist Welfare Service (SAWS) was founded in November 1956 by the Seventh-day Adventist Church to organize and deliver humanitarian relief in response to escalating global disasters, famines, and post-World War II reconstruction needs.[3][9] The initiative centralized the church's scattered relief activities, emphasizing immediate aid such as food distribution, shelter provision, and basic welfare support to affected populations in regions plagued by crises.[4][10] In its early years, SAWS prioritized emergency responses to acute humanitarian emergencies, including famines and war-related displacements, while establishing operational frameworks for efficient aid delivery through church networks.[6] By 1958, the organization had reported initial successes in welfare programs, laying the groundwork for structured international coordination.[6] This phase focused on pragmatic, needs-based interventions without proselytizing, aligning with the church's emphasis on service as a core expression of faith.[11] The organization underwent a name change in 1973 to Seventh-day Adventist World Service, reflecting an expanded scope that incorporated community development initiatives alongside traditional relief efforts.[11][10] This rebranding acknowledged the limitations of a purely welfare model and aimed to address root causes of poverty through sustainable programs.[12] Further evolution occurred in 1983, when it was renamed the Adventist Development and Relief Agency (ADRA) to encapsulate a balanced commitment to both emergency relief and long-term development projects, such as infrastructure and economic empowerment.[9][13] This shift marked a maturation in organizational identity, enabling partnerships with secular entities and governments while maintaining operational independence.[14]Affiliation with the Seventh-day Adventist Church
The Adventist Development and Relief Agency (ADRA) functions as the official global humanitarian organization of the Seventh-day Adventist (SDA) Church, tasked with embodying the denomination's mandate to provide aid and development assistance without religious discrimination. Established by the SDA Church, ADRA aligns strategically with the church's General Conference, which provides doctrinal and missional guidance, while maintaining legal independence as a 501(c)(3) nonprofit entity registered in the United States.[1][15][16] This structure enables ADRA to operate autonomously in project execution and partnerships, distinct from direct ecclesiastical control, yet rooted in the SDA's representative governance model where church representatives influence board composition and policy alignment.[17] ADRA's work is informed by the SDA Church's theological emphasis on holistic human service—addressing physical, mental, and spiritual needs—without mandating or engaging in proselytism, a policy explicitly upheld to prioritize impartial aid delivery.[2] This non-proselytizing commitment, articulated in ADRA's operational guidelines, stems from SDA principles of compassion extended universally, allowing the agency to collaborate with secular donors, governments, and international bodies while avoiding faith-based conditions on assistance.[18] Church funding, derived primarily from SDA tithes and offerings, represents a minority portion of ADRA's resources, with the majority sourced from grants and partnerships, which necessitates this operational neutrality to sustain broad-reaching initiatives.[19] Such independence can introduce tensions, as evidenced in occasional church critiques of ADRA's alignment with secular standards over explicit evangelistic integration, though the agency's charter prioritizes humanitarian efficacy over doctrinal enforcement.[20] ADRA maintains a worldwide network exceeding 100 local offices, staffed in part by SDA church members and affiliates, enabling coordinated responses in over 118 countries as of 2025.[21][22] This infrastructure leverages SDA institutional partnerships for logistics and community access, yet preserves executive autonomy to navigate regulatory and cultural variances, underscoring the balance between denominational heritage and pragmatic, faith-neutral operations in diverse geopolitical contexts.[23]Governance, Leadership, and Operational Structure
The Adventist Development and Relief Agency (ADRA) International maintains its headquarters in Silver Spring, Maryland, co-located with the Seventh-day Adventist Church's General Conference offices.[1] This central location facilitates coordination with church leadership while supporting a global operational footprint. ADRA operates through a networked structure comprising ADRA International at the apex, regional/division offices, and country-level offices that implement programs tailored to local contexts.[24] This decentralized model emphasizes adaptation to regional needs, with over 100 country offices enabling on-the-ground responsiveness without proselytizing, in line with the agency's humanitarian charter.[2][25] Leadership is headed by President Paulo Lopes, appointed effective April 1, 2025, following decades of service within ADRA and bringing expertise in humanitarian operations across multiple continents.[26] Key vice presidents include Imad Madanat for Humanitarian Affairs and Excellence, Sonya Funna Evelyn for Sustainable Development, and Jair Parada for Finance, with recent additions such as Teresa Ferreira as Vice President of Strategic Engagement and Growth in October 2025.[27][28] These executives oversee functional areas like program delivery, financial management, and regional strategy, reporting to the president who directs overall policy and partnerships. ADRA's board of directors includes representatives from the Seventh-day Adventist Church's world headquarters, ensuring alignment with denominational oversight; Geoffrey Mbwana, a General Conference general vice president, serves as board chair.[29] The board provides strategic governance, approving budgets and major initiatives amid fiscal pressures, including a U.S. government pause on USAID funding announced January 20, 2025, which prompted workforce reductions.[30] By mid-2025, ADRA implemented staff cuts approximating 50% globally to address these funding shortfalls, alongside an initial 18% reduction in U.S. staff, while maintaining core operations through diversified private and church support.[31][32]Mission, Principles, and Ethical Framework
Stated Mission and Core Objectives
The Adventist Development and Relief Agency (ADRA) articulates its mission as "to serve humanity so all may live as God intended," emphasizing global humanitarian efforts rooted in justice, compassion, and love.[1] This purpose guides operations to deliver relief and development assistance in over 118 countries, focusing on empowering communities and fostering sustainable change through collaborative partnerships.[1] Core objectives center on poverty alleviation and human empowerment, targeting vulnerable populations such as children, the elderly, and individuals with disabilities.[4] These include advancing food security, economic development, primary health care, basic education, and emergency management to address immediate needs and build long-term resilience.[33] ADRA prioritizes initiatives that promote self-sufficiency and community capacity-building without regard to recipients' ethnicity, political affiliation, gender, or religious association.[1] In alignment with humanitarian standards, ADRA adheres to the Code of Conduct for the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement and NGOs in Disaster Relief, formally adopted by its board in 2001.[34] This commitment underscores impartiality, basing aid priorities solely on need and avoiding discrimination based on race, creed, or nationality.[35]Foundational Beliefs and Non-Proselytizing Stance
The Adventist Development and Relief Agency (ADRA) draws its foundational approach from Seventh-day Adventist theology, which interprets biblical passages such as Matthew 25:31-46 as a mandate for compassionate service to the vulnerable, equating aid to the hungry, thirsty, stranger, naked, sick, and imprisoned with direct ministry to Christ. This holistic view of human welfare integrates physical relief with spiritual principles of benevolence, reflecting the SDA Church's emphasis on demonstrating God's character through practical acts of mercy rather than doctrinal imposition.[20][36] Central to ADRA's operations is a firm non-proselytizing policy, which prohibits linking humanitarian assistance to religious conversion, church attendance, or evangelistic activities. Official statements affirm that "ADRA does not proselytize," with aid extended indiscriminately regardless of recipients' race, gender, political views, or religious affiliation, thereby expressing divine compassion through unconditional support. This stance aligns with SDA ethical guidelines on evangelism, which prioritize human dignity and transparency while distinguishing relief work from direct missionary efforts.[2][37] To sustain collaborations with secular governments, international donors, and non-faith-based organizations—many of which condition funding on the absence of religious agendas—ADRA enforces internal protocols ensuring that aid distribution operates in a secular manner in practice, despite its church sponsorship. This separation safeguards program efficacy and access in diverse contexts, focusing empirical outcomes like need alleviation over theological persuasion, though occasional criticisms from external observers question adherence in specific locales.[38][39][40]Guiding Principles in Humanitarian Work
ADRA prioritizes sustainable development initiatives over purely short-term relief efforts when assessments indicate long-term viability, emphasizing community empowerment and local partnerships to build lasting capabilities.[1] This approach involves rigorous, data-driven evaluations of community needs and risks prior to intervention, ensuring resources address viable pathways to self-sufficiency rather than temporary aid.[41] In humanitarian responses, ADRA adheres to the Sphere Standards, including their four protection principles, as outlined in its agency-wide Protection Policy, which integrates these with the Inter-Agency Standing Committee’s core principles on sexual exploitation and abuse prevention.[42] [43] The organization maintains transparency through annual accountability reporting, detailing project impacts, financial oversight, and compliance with ethical standards, while providing assistance impartially regardless of ethnicity, politics, gender, or religion.[44] ADRA's methodology incorporates causal analysis by targeting root causes of vulnerabilities, such as poverty, conflict drivers, and gender-based risks, rather than solely alleviating immediate symptoms, as evidenced in programs fostering participatory development and resilience-building in regions like the Democratic Republic of Congo.[45] [46] This aligns with first-principles evaluation of systemic factors like governance failures and market inefficiencies, informed by empirical project outcomes and strategic frameworks aiming for sustainable transitions from relief to development.[47]Historical Timeline
Inception and Pre-ADRA Phase (1956-1983)
The Seventh-day Adventist Church established the Seventh-day Adventist Welfare Service (SAWS) in November 1956 to coordinate humanitarian relief and welfare efforts in response to lingering post-World War II needs in Europe and Asia, as well as emerging global crises.[11][3] This initiative formalized the church's ad hoc disaster responses, leveraging its existing network of medical and educational institutions to distribute food, clothing, and other essentials amid widespread displacement and reconstruction demands.[9] SAWS operated under the church's General Conference, emphasizing non-proselytizing aid aligned with Adventist principles of compassion and service.[12] In its initial years, SAWS rapidly expanded operations, organizing relief shipments valued at approximately $485,000 to 22 countries in 1958 alone, focusing on famine-stricken and war-affected regions.[12] By 1962, the agency had provided targeted assistance during acute emergencies, including refugee support in conflict zones, building on shipments of commodities like wheat and medical supplies to Asia and Europe.[9] These efforts marked a shift from localized church welfare to structured international coordination, with annual distributions growing to support thousands amid Cold War-era displacements and natural disasters.[48] The 1970s saw SAWS evolve amid escalating global challenges, such as the Sahel drought, where it contributed to relief operations alongside other faith-based groups, distributing food and agricultural aid to mitigate famine impacts in West Africa.[49] Total aid value reached millions of dollars annually by the decade's end, reflecting increased professionalization and a pivot toward sustainable community interventions beyond immediate relief.[10] In 1973, recognizing this broadening scope, SAWS was renamed the Seventh-day Adventist World Service to encompass long-term development alongside welfare, signaling internal church recognition of the need for more systematic, expertise-driven approaches to poverty and disaster response.[50] This reorientation laid groundwork for further structural changes by 1983, prioritizing development-oriented programming.[51]Formalization and Growth (1984-1990s)
In 1984, the Seventh-day Adventist Church formalized its humanitarian arm as the independent Adventist Development and Relief Agency (ADRA), adopting its current name and structure to emphasize both relief and development activities distinct from prior church welfare services.[4][3] This transition enabled greater operational autonomy while preserving ecclesiastical oversight, allowing ADRA to pursue partnerships beyond denominational channels.[9] Throughout the 1980s and 1990s, ADRA scaled its presence globally, establishing offices and projects in approximately 120 countries by the decade's close, supported by an international staff that grew from around 600 personnel.[52] This expansion coincided with a strategic pivot from predominantly emergency responses to integrated development efforts, including community health clinics and educational infrastructure in underserved regions, particularly in Africa and Asia.[53][3] A pivotal milestone came in 1997, when the United Nations Economic and Social Council awarded ADRA General Consultative Status—the highest level of accreditation for non-governmental organizations—facilitating deeper involvement in international policy dialogues and coordinated aid efforts.[54][55] ADRA's fieldwork during this era included substantial responses to protracted conflicts, such as the Yugoslav wars, where it delivered aid to besieged areas like Sarajevo, Bosnia, amid ethnic violence and displacement affecting millions across the Balkans.[56][57] These interventions underscored ADRA's non-proselytizing commitment, focusing on neutral humanitarian delivery irrespective of recipients' affiliations.[58]Expansion and Challenges in the 21st Century
In the early 2000s, ADRA continued its growth trajectory, expanding operations to over 120 countries by the 2010s and maintaining a presence through local offices responsible for program implementation.[3] This period saw the agency handling thousands of projects focused on development and relief, adapting to increasing demands from natural disasters, economic instability, and humanitarian crises in regions like South America and Asia.[59] The COVID-19 pandemic in the 2020s prompted a rapid scaling of emergency responses, with ADRA implementing 422 projects across 96 countries that incorporated health services, water and sanitation improvements, and risk communication, ultimately serving nearly 20 million individuals affected by the virus, including frontline workers and vulnerable populations facing job losses.[60] These efforts included distributing sanitation kits, supporting elderly vaccination drives, and providing economic aid in hard-hit areas such as India and Indonesia.[61][62] Amid geopolitical tensions, ADRA sustained interventions in conflict zones, delivering three years of aid to millions displaced by the Ukraine war as of 2025 and addressing gender-based violence in the Democratic Republic of Congo through initiatives targeting "survival sex" among girls in unstable eastern provinces.[63][64] However, a U.S. government-mandated 90-day pause of nearly all USAID-funded programs, effective January 20, 2025, triggered immediate operational strains for ADRA, including staff layoffs and interruptions to ongoing projects reliant on such grants.[65][66] In mitigation, the agency shifted toward funding diversification and internal efficiencies to preserve core activities.[65]Programs and Operational Focus
Development and Capacity-Building Initiatives
ADRA implements long-term development programs focused on enhancing economic opportunities and fostering self-sufficiency in vulnerable communities through targeted capacity-building efforts. These initiatives prioritize sustainable livelihoods by providing hands-on vocational training, microloans, seeds, and livestock to establish reliable income sources, distinguishing them from short-term relief by aiming for enduring economic resilience.[67] In agriculture, ADRA employs Farmer Field Schools (FFS) and Farmer Market Schools (FMS) to teach conservation techniques, market engagement, and value chain management, enabling smallholder farmers to improve productivity and negotiate better prices.[68] Evaluations of these programs demonstrate measurable progress toward self-reliance. For instance, in Ghana, training in income-generation activities equipped 80 percent of participants with skills to boost household earnings, as recognized in a 2011 best practice award for a food security program incorporating agroforestry.[69] Similarly, in Mozambique, agricultural interventions led to expanded food access and higher household incomes in one of the country's poorest provinces.[70] In Cambodia's Pro-Market project, over 9,200 households gained from training that indirectly raised incomes through enhanced produce sales and market linkages.[71] Water and sanitation projects complement these efforts by installing sustainable infrastructure, such as solar-powered systems, to support health and economic productivity in rural areas.[72] In Nepal's Samvardhan project, funded by the European Union, dairy farming training resulted in increased household incomes and resilience for participants.[73] Burundi's Action for Social Change program diversified income sources, with evaluations noting sustained household income growth post-intervention.[74] These outcomes underscore ADRA's emphasis on empirical metrics like income elevation and market integration to break poverty cycles, though independent assessments highlight variability based on local implementation.[75]Emergency and Disaster Response
The Adventist Development and Relief Agency (ADRA) maintains a global network for rapid deployment in emergency situations, handling an average of two disasters per week through immediate provision of essentials such as food, clean water, shelter, and medical supplies.[4] This response prioritizes life-saving interventions in natural disasters and conflict zones, leveraging pre-positioned resources and trained teams to deliver aid within hours or days of onset.[76] In 2024, ADRA addressed over 100 emergencies worldwide, supporting more than 1.8 million people across 198 projects focused on crisis mitigation.[77] In natural disasters, ADRA coordinates logistics for emergency kits, temporary shelters, and health services, often partnering with local affiliates to navigate disrupted infrastructure. For instance, following a 6.9-magnitude earthquake in Cebu and flash floods in Mindanao in 2025, ADRA Philippines mobilized teams to distribute aid to thousands of displaced families, addressing overlapping crises including typhoons that destroyed homes and cut off roads.[78][79] Similar efforts in South Asia after floods in 2025 reached an estimated 500,000 affected individuals with urgent supplies in provinces like Nangarhar and Kunar.[80] In war zones, ADRA emphasizes neutral, impartial aid delivery, supplying food parcels, medicines, medical equipment, and psychosocial support while repairing water facilities damaged by conflict. In Ukraine amid ongoing hostilities as of 2024, ADRA provided over 100 tons of food, truckloads of essentials, and shelter to displaced populations, reaching hundreds of thousands through cross-border operations.[81] In the Middle East, responses to conflict included food distributions, shelter setups, and clinic support for medicine shortages, sustaining access for vulnerable groups including children.[82] These interventions underscore ADRA's focus on immediate survival needs, deferring reconstruction to subsequent phases coordinated with governmental and NGO partners.[5]Sector-Specific Interventions
ADRA's health interventions emphasize primary care, nutrition enhancement, and support for vulnerable populations including refugees, integrating community-based education and monitoring to combat malnutrition. In nutrition-focused programs, ADRA employs strategies such as direct supplementation, behavioral change communication, and growth monitoring to address undernutrition in children and pregnant women, often in partnership with local health systems to build long-term resilience against food insecurity.[83] For refugee contexts, these efforts include targeted health and nutrition services in regions like Yemen and Rwanda, providing essential interventions to mitigate acute risks from displacement, such as stunting and micronutrient deficiencies.[84][85] Education initiatives prioritize basic schooling access and teacher capacity-building, particularly for displaced children, with programs designed to foster inclusive learning environments amid crises. In Lebanon, ADRA supports quality education for Lebanese, Syrian, and Palestinian children through structured curricula and psychosocial integration, alongside teacher training to equip educators in handling trauma-informed instruction and diverse classrooms as of August 2025.[86][87] Centers like the Baalbek Learning Center serve hundreds of students with foundational literacy and numeracy skills, emphasizing sustainable teaching models that extend beyond immediate relief to promote literacy as a tool for empowerment.[88][89] Livelihood programs target unemployment through microfinance and agricultural development, aiming to create self-sustaining economic pathways by addressing root causes like limited market access and productivity gaps. Microfinance components utilize village-banking models, where groups of 15 to 35 women collectively manage loans to guarantee repayment and foster entrepreneurship, enabling income diversification in rural settings.[90] In agriculture, ADRA promotes climate-smart practices, permaculture, and diversified cropping in areas like Laos, training farmers in sustainable land use to enhance yields and resilience to environmental shocks, thereby reducing dependency on aid.[91] These interventions link economic security to broader food production, though their scalability remains constrained by local infrastructure and funding continuity.[92]Partnerships, Funding, and Global Engagement
International Affiliations and UN Status
The Adventist Development and Relief Agency (ADRA) has held General Consultative Status with the United Nations Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) since 1997, the highest tier among three categories for non-governmental organizations.[54][93] This status enables ADRA to attend ECOSOC meetings, participate in consultations with UN bodies, propose items for agendas, and submit statements influencing policies on economic, social, and humanitarian issues, including disaster relief and sustainable development.[94][95] ADRA contributes to UN-coordinated humanitarian efforts through participation in the cluster approach, a framework established in 2005 for sector-specific coordination during emergencies.[96] In countries such as Ethiopia, Bangladesh, and India, ADRA has engaged in clusters for nutrition, logistics, and protection to support needs assessments, gap analysis, and joint response planning, enhancing efficiency among UN agencies and NGOs.[97][98] ADRA's operations align with international humanitarian law, emphasizing protection of civilians and non-discrimination in aid delivery amid conflicts.[99][100] This UN affiliation bolsters ADRA's global legitimacy, facilitating access to coordination platforms and policy influence without direct funding ties.[54] However, ECOSOC requirements under Resolution 1996/31 mandate adherence to UN Charter principles, including impartiality and non-proselytizing in humanitarian work, which impose operational constraints on faith-based entities like ADRA to prioritize neutrality over explicit religious advocacy in UN contexts.[94]Funding Sources and Financial Dependencies
The Adventist Development and Relief Agency (ADRA) derives the majority of its revenue from government grants, particularly from the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), which accounted for 62% of total revenue directly in both 2023 and 2024, supplemented by 7% and 1% respectively from USAID sub-awards.[101] In 2024, government grants totaled approximately $75.3 million, underscoring a pattern of heavy reliance on public funding that has persisted for decades, with ADRA offices worldwide receiving hundreds of millions of dollars from USAID and other governments to support operations.[6] Contributions from the Seventh-day Adventist Church and private donations remain minor, historically comprising around 10% of income, limiting internal financial buffers against external fluctuations.[102] This dependence exposes ADRA to significant vulnerabilities, as demonstrated by the 2025 USAID funding freeze initiated under Executive Order 14169, which paused nearly all USAID programs for 90 days starting January 20, 2025, prompting ADRA to implement an 18% staff reduction at its U.S. headquarters and halt multiple global initiatives.[103] The freeze disrupted ongoing humanitarian efforts, forcing reliance on alternative funding streams that proved insufficient to fully mitigate impacts, and highlighted critiques that taxpayer-funded operations create risks of mission misalignment or operational instability when political priorities shift.[65] Advocates within and outside the organization have called for greater diversification, including increased private and church-based support, to reduce exposure to government policy changes that could jeopardize long-term sustainability.[104] ADRA maintains financial transparency through audited annual statements, IRS Form 990 filings, and publicly available reports detailing revenue breakdowns and expenditures, which reveal administrative costs but invite scrutiny over efficiency ratios amid high grant dependency.[105] Independent evaluators, such as Charity Navigator, have rated ADRA highly for accountability, yet ongoing debates persist regarding the proportion of funds allocated to overhead versus direct aid, with calls for enhanced metrics to assess value derived from public investments.[106]Collaborations with Governments and NGOs
ADRA engages in operational partnerships with international bodies like the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) to support refugee operations, including health, education, and sustainable community development initiatives in displacement settings.[107] These alliances facilitate coordinated responses, such as joint assessments and resource sharing in refugee-hosting regions, enabling ADRA to extend its reach beyond independent capacities.[108] In conflict zones like the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), ADRA collaborates with local and international NGOs for multisectoral programming, including tailored interventions in agriculture, water, sanitation, and protection to address vulnerabilities exacerbated by instability.[45] Such partnerships emphasize on-ground implementation, where ADRA works alongside entities to integrate community-led approaches with broader humanitarian efforts, as seen in coordinated responses to displacement and food insecurity.[109] ADRA secures government contracts for aid delivery, exemplified by its role leading a USAID resilience food security project in the DRC launched in 2023, which involves coordination with national authorities and local stakeholders to enhance agricultural livelihoods and emergency response in vulnerable communities.[110] These arrangements provide logistical access in restricted areas but operate within ADRA's commitment to impartiality, as outlined in global humanitarian standards, to mitigate risks of perceived alignment with state agendas in politically sensitive contexts.[111]Impact, Achievements, and Evaluations
Measurable Outcomes and Reach
In 2004, ADRA assisted nearly 24 million people worldwide with over $159 million in aid, reflecting a high point in its operational scale during that period.[112] The organization maintains presence in more than 118 countries, focusing on both emergency relief and long-term development.[21] Annual beneficiary figures, as reported in ADRA's internal documentation, have varied: over 11 million people in 2017 across diverse sectors including health and disaster response, and close to 13 million in 2023 through projects addressing immediate needs and capacity building.[113] A significant expansion in reach occurred during the COVID-19 pandemic, where ADRA implemented 422 projects in 96 countries, benefiting nearly 20 million individuals with health, food security, and economic support interventions.[60][114] These self-reported metrics emphasize direct service delivery, such as access to clean water, education, and livelihoods training, though they primarily capture short-term outputs rather than verified long-term causal impacts like sustained income improvements or mortality reductions.| Year | Reported Beneficiaries | Key Context |
|---|---|---|
| 2004 | Nearly 24 million | Peak assistance with $159 million in funding[112] |
| 2017 | Over 11 million | Across global sectors including emergencies |
| 2020–2021 (COVID response) | Nearly 20 million | 422 projects in 96 countries[60] |
| 2023 | Close to 13 million | Focus on humanitarian and development aid[113] |