Rotary International Trustee Chair Mark Maloney.
In a decisive move to counter these escalating threats and inject renewed vigor into the final stages of eradication, Rotary and the Gates Foundation today announced a substantial joint commitment of up to US$450 million for global polio eradication efforts.
The pledge was revealed at the annual Rotary International Convention in Calgary, reaffirming a long-standing partnership now more critical than ever.
This renewed financial commitment
signals an urgent recognition by leading philanthropic and humanitarian
organizations that despite remarkable progress, the path to zero polio cases is
increasingly complex and demands sustained, strategic investment.
He believes that the extension of the fundraising partnership with the Gates Foundation allows Rotary to reach children around the world with lifesaving vaccines, keeping every child and community safe from this preventable disease.
Under the renewed agreement, Rotary
will continue its dedicated fundraising, aiming for $50 million per year.
"Rotary was the first to envision a world without polio—and today, we have the tools and knowledge to make that vision a reality,” said Bill Gates, Chair of the Gates Foundation. “If we all maintain our commitment and keep funding the solutions we know work, then soon, no family will have to live in fear of this horrific disease ever again."
These vital funds will be deployed to support a comprehensive array of activities, from crucial vaccine delivery and enhanced surveillance to robust community engagement and the sustained implementation of polio eradication programs in the remaining affected regions.
A particular focus will remain on Afghanistan and Pakistan, the two nations that continue to report cases of wild poliovirus. The funding also enables Rotary to provide emergency response for polio outbreaks, exemplified by the US$500,000 committed in late 2024 to support a two-round polio vaccination campaign in Gaza following a confirmed case of a 10-month-old child who was diagnosed with polio.
Polio, a paralysing and sometimes
deadly disease, is on the verge of becoming only the second human disease in
history to be eradicated. This critical funding infusion ensures that efforts
to protect children in at-risk countries continue with the necessary resources.
Rotary has been at the forefront of polio eradication since launching its PolioPlus program in 1985, contributing over US$2.9 billion and countless volunteer hours. In 1988, Rotary, alongside the World Health Organization (WHO), UNICEF, and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), co-founded the GPEI.
This partnership was later joined by the Gates Foundation and Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance. From an annual incidence of 350,000 cases at the GPEI's launch, coordinated global efforts, supported by world governments like Canada, which has pledged over CAD$1 billion to the GPEI to date, have dramatically reduced cases by more than 99.9 percent.