UK aid spending on fossil fuels

...in aid between 2002 and 2018. Over this period PIDG has spent $3.5bn on investments in a range of sectors including energy. Of this $750m was spent on oil and...
...in aid between 2002 and 2018. Over this period PIDG has spent $3.5bn on investments in a range of sectors including energy. Of this $750m was spent on oil and...
...million over a seven year period (2011 – 2018) through the DFID Malawi country programme to increase the use of effective family planning methods. This money will prevent: more than...
...that that a quarter of recipients are not the country’s poorest, but what this means in reality is that these recipients were living on 90 pence or less per day...
...World Bank President David Malpass, that he intends to use the UK’s leverage to secure change at the Bank. Mr Sharma is quoted in the piece as saying: “The UK...
...that the regime has since used chemical weapons in four separate attacks – which Russia has gone to great lengths to conceal. The UK is committed to ensuring that all...
...good we do with what money we have. Poverty reduction is at the heart of what we do but UK aid is also tackling global challenges like disease, terrorism and...
...could be ready by January 2021, with initial use prioritised for healthcare workers and the most vulnerable. Dr Saville went on to say that aid was also being used to...
...creating an international alliance, which says not ‘winner takes all’ but the opposite which is that this is critically important for all of us.” BBC Radio 4’s The Today Programme...
...and research but called for more to be done to create a truly feminist global humanitarian aid system that tackles “the structures of power that create inequalities between men and...
...an active conflict zone. It is appalling that they are routinely targeted and attacked. And that is why today, on World Humanitarian Day, I want to highlight the important work...