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European Civil Protection and Humanitarian Aid Operations
fst EU Civil protection pool
© European Union, 2021 (photographer: Žiga Živulovic)
European Civil Protection Pool

What is it?

The EU established the European Civil Protection Pool (ECPP) to advance European cooperation in civil protection. Its objective is to enable a faster, better-coordinated, and more effective European response to both human-induced disasters and natural hazards.

All EU Member States, along with 10 additional states also participating in the EU Civil Protection Mechanism, can voluntarily commit civil protection resources - known as response capacities - to the Pool for 1 or more years. These resources are kept ready for rapid deployment to disaster zones abroad at short notice. Each response capacity combines specialised staff and equipment necessary to effectively respond to disasters.

Why is this important?

Whenever a disaster strikes, the EU Civil Protection Mechanism may receive a request for assistance from the affected country. In such cases, response capacities must be deployed as quickly as possible to support national response efforts.

Being well-prepared to respond immediately to a disaster is essential to save lives and minimise damage. The European Civil Protection Pool enables quality-assured and more predictable EU response operations.

To achieve this, the European Commission has established a certification and registration process, which ensures that the capacities - such as emergency response teams and their equipment - provided by EU Member States and participating states meet high operational standards. 

Certification includes the participation of response capacities in disaster simulation exercises, so that their performance can be observed and assessed by a certifying team composed of peers and EU staff. The goal is to verify that the teams can operate effectively during international deployments. 

For most response capacities, the European Commission oversees and funds the certification process with support from national experts.

How are we helping?

As of January 2025, Member States and participating states have offered a total of 148 specialised response capacities to the European Civil Protection Pool.

Of these, 101 are certified and ready for deployment in response operations both within and outside the EU, following a request for assistance through the EU Civil Protection Mechanism.

The European Commission provides financial support to capacities in the Pool when they are deployed for response operations. These capacities range from mountain rescue teams and mobile laboratories to medical air evacuation units and water purification equipment. 

The Commission contributes to transport and/or operational costs for deployments within or outside Europe. Additionally, financial support is available for upgrading or repairing response capacities committed to the Pool to enhance disaster preparedness.

EU co-financing, in the form of “adaptation grants,” can be granted for existing capacities within a Member State or participating state to ensure their readiness for international deployments.  

Recent response operations using resources from the European Civil Protection Pool include:

Floods in France (2024)

At the start of the year, France experienced severe flooding and river overflows caused by heavy rainfall. On 2 January, the country requested emergency assistance through the EU Civil Protection Mechanism for the Nord and Pas de Calais departments.

Slovakia and the Netherlands each deployed a high-capacity pumping (HCP) team. The Netherlands dispatched 4 pumps, pipelines, personnel, and transport vehicles, while Slovakia sent 1 high-capacity pumping module equipped with 2 pumps.

Forest fires in Bolivia (2024)

In 2024, the Bolivian Amazon was particularly affected by unusually warm and dry weather, likely a consequence of both global warming and the El Niño phenomenon. 

In September, Bolivia declared a national state of emergency due to a high number of wildfires across the country and requested assistance through the EU Civil Protection Mechanism to help combat the fires.

Spain deployed 2 European Civil Protection Pool assets: a Forest Fires Assessment and Advisory Team (FAST) comprising 8 experts and a Ground Forest Firefighting Team (GFFF) with 41 members.

The mission concluded on 19 October with the return of the last FAST experts to Spain.

Previous activations

Last updated: 23/01/2025

Facts & figures

The European Civil Protection Pool is a reserve of emergency response teams and equipment, known as “capacities”.

Capacities are committed by 27 EU countries and 10 participating states to respond to disasters both inside and outside the EU. To date, they have jointly contributed 148 resources to the Pool.

The Pool was established in 2013.

It enables a more predictable, pre-planned, and quality-checked European response.

The European Medical Corps brings together all health-related response capacities committed to the Pool.