By Evan Cameron | Associate, Development Writing
World Central Kitchen (WCK) is first to the frontlines providing meals in response to climate, humanitarian, and community crises. In November 2021, WCK launched the Climate Disaster Fund as our decade-long commitment to raise and spend $1 billion to support communities impacted by the climate crisis. While there are unknowns for a disaster relief organization—such as when, where, or how many crises will occur—our Climate Disaster Fund gives WCK the resources to respond with the “urgency of now” on a global scale without having to wait for disaster-specific funding. We are grateful for your incredible support of our climate-related relief work.Together, we helped provide nourishment—as well as comfort, hope, and dignity—to impacted communities around the world. Including the conclusion of our responses to the monsoon flooding in Pakistan and Hurricane Erick in Mexico, WCK responded to 14 climate crises between June and October 2025, serving more than 5.2 million meals to impacted communities. We are pleased to share summaries of several of our emergency responses below:
Hurricane Erick (June - July): In June, Hurricane Erick slammed into the southern coast as a strong Category 3 storm with sustained winds of 125 mph to become the first major Pacific hurricane of the 2025 season. Erick underwent rapid intensification—when maximum sustained winds increase at least 35 mph in 24 hours—as the storm approached Mexico’s Pacific Coast, making landfall between Acapulco and Puerto Escondido. Local authorities reported downed power lines, flooding, landslides, and washed away roads. WCK’s Relief Team distributed fresh sandwiches while we assessed food support needs. Hurricane Erick impacted many of the same communities in and around Acapulco for a third year in a row, following the devastation left behind by Hurricane Otis in 2023 and Hurricane John in 2024. Having responded to all three hurricanes, WCK was able to reignite existing partnerships with local restaurants, aid groups, and community leaders to help expedite a speedy and efficient response. Our teams also prioritized the distribution of culturally-appropriate food kits aimed at supporting the long-term recovery of impacted families. In total, WCK served nearly 700,000 meals in just 18 days via hot plates of food, sandwiches, food kits (each designed to provide 25 meals), and bulk food item purchases for locally operated community kitchens.
Wildfires in Canada (June - July): This summer, dry conditions and high temperatures caused multiple wildfires to rip through northern Canada, burning 1.7 million acres in Saskatchewan, Manitoba, and Alberta. In total over 25,000 people across these provinces were evacuated from their homes. A team from WCK arrived quickly in Winnipeg, and—working alongside our local food truck partners—began serving hot meals at the Billy Mosienko Arena, a local hub for relief that served as a shelter for displaced families. Our teams also supported Winnipeg and the surrounding areas by serving warm meals in shelters, welcome centers, and through local contacts in the First Nations communities—where we delivered meals to hotels hosting displaced residents. In late June, we supported two events with meals, including a celebration for Nation Indigenous People Day where we served meals to 400 people. In July, wildfires burned over a million hectares in Manitoba. WCK worked with the Manitoba Métis Federation (MMF) Command Center to provide the local Métis community with meals and other vital supplies. The steady supply of food the MMF received from WCK drastically helped their teams expand the reach of their relief efforts, from the Manitoba Métis community to other evacuees and First Nations families in need.In total, WCK served more than 45,000 meals in response to the wildfires in Canada.
Texas Hill Country Floods (July - August): On July 4, heavy downpours inundated communities in central Texas, with some areas receiving over 15 inches of rain in just a few hours. The Guadalupe River overflowed and caught local communities by surprise, sweeping away entire homes as floodwaters poured into neighborhoods, roadways, and nearby summer camps. Children and families at summer camps in the area were impacted by flooding, with many people stranded or missing. WCK reached children and staff at summer camps with fresh meals before they were safely evacuated. We provided hot meals at a reunification center where evacuees were gathering to reconnect with loved ones. In Hunt, we supported the Camp Mystic community, which was hit hard by the flooding. Our meals reached families at reunification centers, hotels, and rescue crews on-site at the camp and grieving families. In addition to the impacted summer camps, we delivered hot meals and sandwiches in hard-hit communities including Kerrville, Hunt, Ingram, and Georgetown. The team served these meals to displaced families sheltering in hotels or with other family members, and to first responders working long hours in the search zone. In Kerr County, WCK established a base at The Hunt Store, a longtime and treasured presence in the community. From this location WCK provided thousands of fresh meals. In total, WCK served more than 45,000 meals to impacted communities alongside 30+ local restaurant partners.
Pakistan Monsoon Floods (September - October): In early September, the worst monsoon flooding to hit Pakistan in over 40 years forced more than 500,000 local residents to flee their homes in search of safety. The floods unleashed devastating levels of damage across most of eastern and southern Pakistan, directly affecting and disrupting food systems for approximately 3.3 million people. WCK worked alongside our long-standing and trusted local partner, Rizq, to launch a widespread, multi-faceted emergency response spanning more than 260 communities across Jalalpur, Alipur, Narowal, and Hafizabad. Initial relief efforts centered around establishing community kitchens to serve warm meals to the hardest-hit regions that were left completely cut off by the floods. As access to impacted communities slowly returned, our teams shifted to distribute food kits—each including enough ingredients to feed a family of 4 for 22 days—allowing families to cook for themselves again in the hopes of returning some sense of normalcy amidst the destruction. In just five weeks, WCK distributed over 4.4 million meals to families affected by the monsoon floods.
Thank you again—we are so grateful for your support of our climate-related relief efforts!
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