A $500 Million Coalition Forms to Treat Child Malnutrition in Crisis Zones
Save the Children, CIFF, UNICEF, the Gates Foundation, and others pledged $500 million to reach 5 million children with nutrition treatment as a new global food crisis looms.
A $500 Million Coalition Forms to Treat Child Malnutrition in Crisis Zones Save the Children, CIFF, UNICEF, the Gates Foundation, and others pledged $500 million to reach 5 million children with nutrition treatment as a new global food crisis looms. Aaron Rafferty June 26, 2026 Key Takeaways: A coalition including Save the Children, CIFF, UNICEF, the Gates Foundation, and MBRGI announced a $500 million commitment to fight child malnutrition in the world's worst humanitarian hotspots. The One Childhood, One Chance Alliance aims to reach at least 5 million children with treatment and prevention, against more than 42 million children worldwide suffering acute malnutrition. Backers call the surge a start, estimating at least $2 billion a year is needed to treat and prevent malnutrition across the most affected countries. A group of donors and aid organizations committed $500 million on June 4 to treat and prevent child malnutrition in the world's most fragile places, forming what they call the One Childhood, One Chance Alliance. The members include Save the Children, the Children's Investment Fund Foundation, UNICEF, the Gates Foundation, Action Against Hunger, ALIMA, and the Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum Global Initiatives. The alliance aims to reach at least 5 million children in conflict and crisis settings with nutrition treatment and services, paired with malaria care, immunizations, and clean water where possible. More than 42 million children globally suffer from acute malnutrition, and most of the severe cases sit in humanitarian zones across Africa, Asia, and the Middle East. The timing is deliberate. Backers point to rising fuel prices, fertilizer shortages, and the prospect of a severe El Nino, with another global food crisis looking increasingly lik