NZ Disaster Response Partnership

In the days following a disaster, the Minister of Foreign Affairs may approve a New Zealand Disaster Response Partnership (NZDRP) funding round.

Occasionally MFAT will also invite applications from NZDRP accredited NGOs to pre-position (make ready) essential relief supplies in the Pacific.

NGOs can apply for up to a maximum of $250,000 per activity for high quality proposals that:

  • provide rapid humanitarian assistance to natural disasters in the Pacific through essential NGO prepositioned relief supplies
  • provide humanitarian assistance to meet initial needs assessed following natural disasters or in the case of civil or armed conflict in the Pacific and through NGO response (relief and early recovery) activities
  • provide humanitarian assistance to significant natural disasters outside the Pacific through NGO response (relief and early recovery) activities.

Our Partners

NGOs applying for funding must be already accredited to the NZDRP. The current agencies accredited to the NZDRP are: ADRA, Caritas, CBM, Childfund, Christian World Service, Habitat for Humanity, Oxfam, Rotary, Salvation Army, Save the Children, SurfAid, TearFund, UNICEF and World Vision.

How NZDRP funding rounds work

Applications

In a humanitarian crisis, the Minister of Foreign Affairs can approve a new funding round and will call for NZDRP applications (by emailing accredited agencies).

Application appraisal and criteria

MFAT appraises applications against a set criteria looking at relevance, effectiveness, efficiency, impact, and sustainability.

Applications must also:

  • demonstrate value for money. The overall cost of the activity should represent a good investment for the results (outputs and outcomes) that will be achieved through the activity
  • clearly describe outputs and outcomes and how they will be achieved, including the number of vulnerable people provided with essential assistance following natural disasters or armed conflict
  • demonstrate New Zealand NGO expertise and comparative advantage that includes strong and effective partnerships with in-country implementing partners and how the New Zealand NGO supports, advocates for, and influences the delivery of quality humanitarian activities with their partners
  • demonstrate how the cross cutting issues of environment, gender and human rights have informed activity design and implementation.

NGOs will be advised if their application has been successful or not.  A contract will be sent to successful applicants and payment made soon after. 

Reporting

NGOs must submit a mid-term report at the half-way point in their activity and a completion report within three months of completing the activity. This includes submitting a completed budget template with actual costs.

Terms and conditions

  1. Activity timeframe
    NZDRP activities will have an implementation timeframe of up to 12 months for both Pacific and non-Pacific responses.
  2. Matched funding
    For selected activities outside the Pacific, the NZDRP will match New Zealand NGO contributions committed, up to $250,000 per project, based on the NGO contribution over the life of the activity. This NGO contribution will need to be reported on as part of the normal NZDRP financial reporting process. In the Pacific there is no matched funding requirement for NZDRP activities, to ensure rapid mobilisation of both government and NGO resources.
  3. New Zealand based activity support costs
    New Zealand based support costs should not exceed 10% of the total activity budget. For both Pacific and non-Pacific activities, the NZDRP will contribute up to 50% of New Zealand based activity support costs.
  4. Integration of disaster risk reduction
    Integrating disaster risk reduction (DRR) into response and early recovery activities is an effective way of reducing the impact of future shocks on communities and offers more sustainable solutions. The NZDRP provides up to 20% of NGO funding to be targeted to DRP activities in both Pacific and non-Pacific responses.
  5. Funding allocation
    As the NZDRP is a contestable fund, MFAT reserves the right to select the best applications and to allocate the funding pool accordingly. This may, from time to time, involve changing the indicated level of up to $250,000 per activity.

MFAT will coordinate with New Zealand NGOs for jointly timed public statements on a case by case basis.

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