UN refugee agency (UNCHR) Spokesperson Carlotta Wolf told reporters in Geneva that higher transport, food and fuel costs are hitting people already living through emergencies, including refugees and displaced communities, while reducing the ability of aid agencies to deliver assistance on time. Wolf said the impact is already visible in delayed deliveries and rising operational costs.
According to Wolf, UNHCR has been forced to reroute sea cargo and rely more heavily on alternative land corridors, extending transport times and increasing costs. Freight rates from sourcing countries have risen by nearly 18% since the crisis began, while the capacity of UNHCR global transport providers fell from 97% to 77% since the start of 2026.
For some shipments, costs have more than doubled, Wolf said, citing relief transport from UNHCR stockpiles in Dubai to operations in Sudan and Chad.
Wolf highlighted heightened concern for Africa, where multiple displacement crises overlap. Wolf said fuel price increases in Kenya, where one UNHCR global stockpile is located, have reduced truck availability for shipping containers of emergency supplies to operations in Ethiopia, the Democratic Republic of the Congo plus South Sudan. Wolf said delays mean people in urgent need are receiving support later than required.
Funding shortfalls are compounding pressure. Wolf said UNHCR operations are 23% funded against a required total of $8.5 billion, warning that additional spending on transport directly reduces resources available for displaced communities.
UNHCR also warned that restrictions on fertiliser passage through Hormuz are feeding food price inflation, reducing purchasing power in crisis settings.
UN human rights office Spokesperson Jeremy Laurence described the fuel dimension as an immediate human rights threat, citing impacts on farming, generators, school transport plus access to education. Laurence said the most vulnerable communities are affected first.
UN Secretary‑General António Guterres warned that the Hormuz crisis could push tens of millions into poverty, worsen global hunger and create prolonged negative effects for the global economy.
–ChannelAfrica–
