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Iran war doubles Sudan aid costs, deepens delivery crisis: UN
Rerouting shipments around the Cape of Good Hope and rising war-risk premiums are delaying relief to the world’s largest displacement crisis.
Iran war doubles Sudan aid costs, deepens delivery crisis: UN
An elderly man picks up his food aid ration at the Umdulu Camp, in Engpung County, Sudan, on January 30, 2026. / Reuters Archive

The cost of sending some aid to Sudan — the world's largest displacement crisis — has more than doubled due to the Iran war, as shipping disruption pushes up costs and delays the delivery of relief, the UN refugee agency has said.

Heightened insecurity around key Gulf shipping routes, including the Strait of Hormuz, as well as congestion at ports, rising fuel prices and higher insurance premiums have all hampered the delivery of aid, particularly in Africa, the agency said on Friday.

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Ships with aid that previously passed from Dubai through the Strait of Hormuz are being replaced by ships coming from Europe around the Cape of Good Hope, adding up to 25 days to delivery times, UNHCR spokesperson Carlotta Wolf told reporters in Geneva.

"People in dire need are receiving things that are ready later than what's needed," she said.

Transport costs for moving shipments of relief items from Dubai to Sudan and to neighbouring Chad have more than doubled, rising from $927,000 to $1.87 million, Wolf said. The UN routinely refers to the humanitarian crisis caused by the war in Sudan as the world's largest.

Increased reliance on overland routes

The Dubai hub hosts UNHCR's biggest global stockpile of relief items. It is one of seven stockpiles around the world, with others in Copenhagen, Nairobi, Douala, Accra, Panama City and Termez.

Beyond the disruption to shipping in the Strait of Hormuz since the US and Israel launched their war against Iran on February 28, congestion at major ports, including Jeddah in Saudi Arabia and Mersin in Türkiye, along with sharply higher war-risk insurance premiums — estimated at between 0.5 percent and 1.5 percent of cargo value for Gulf transits — is adding further pressure, Wolf said.

Increased reliance on overland routes is also fuelling truck shortages and higher transport costs, she added.

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In Nairobi, Kenya, fuel prices have risen by around 15 percent, triggering delays and reducing the availability of trucks for shipments to Ethiopia, the Democratic Republic of the Congo and South Sudan, the agency said.

The disruptions come as UNHCR faces severe funding constraints following global donor cuts, with its $8.5 billion appeal to assist 135 million refugees and displaced people only 23 percent funded.

"Every dollar that is spent additionally on transportation is $1 less that we can provide to people forcibly on the ground, or less people that we can support," Wolf said.

The UNHCR also warned that rising fuel prices and fertiliser shortages were driving up food costs, exacerbating hardship for people in need.

SOURCE:Reuters