Stockpile 72 hours of supplies in case of disaster or attack, EU tells citizens

Bloc’s first preparedness strategy urges people to prepare for floods, fires, pandemics or military strikes


The commission recommended making household emergency plans.

People in the EU are being advised to stockpile enough food, water and essentials for 72 hours as part of a European strategy that aims to increase readiness for catastrophic floods and fires, pandemics and military attacks.

Outlining its first preparedness strategy, the European Commission said it wanted to encourage citizens to take “proactive measures to prepare for crises, such as developing household emergency plans and stockpiling essential supplies”.

The strategy was partly inspired by plans in Germany and the Nordic countries, which have distributed public information pamphlets and devised apps advising people what to do in the event of a military attack or other national crisis.

“We are saying to member states: 72 hours of self-sufficiency is what we recommend,” Hadja Lahbib, the European commissioner for preparedness and crisis management, told reporters. Asked about what citizens should stockpile, she referred to a video on her social media, in which she presents an emergency bag.

https://x.com/hadjalahbib/status/1904858985972351264

To a soundtrack of off-key jazz piano, Lahbib is shown on the video discussing her emergency stockpile in a tongue-in-cheek way, including ID documents in waterproof casing, canned food, bottled water, matches, a Swiss army knife, cash, playing cards, medicines and a small radio.

The strategy was devised to ensure better EU coordination and public awareness in response to a range of potential risks, such as extreme weather exacerbated by the climate crisis, pandemics, cyber-attacks and military invasions. “We must prepare for large-scale, cross-sectoral incidents and crises, including the possibility of armed aggression, affecting one or more member states,” the document states.

The commission is also calling for a Europe-wide preparedness day to raise awareness; for the topic to be put on school curriculums; and for an EU “stockpiling strategy” to ensure adequate supplies of raw materials, shelters, generators, and “potentially” food and water.

While the EU has no powers over civilian or military uniformed services, it has carved out a bigger role in crisis response since the Covid pandemic led to the unprecedented common purchases of vaccines and medical equipment. Now it wants to go further after a report from the former Finnish president Sauli Niinistö last year found there was no “clear plan” on what the EU would do “in the event of armed aggression against a member state”. Nïïnistö, a special adviser to the European Commission president, Ursula von der Leyen, said the EU was better prepared to deal with crises and disasters than five years ago, but needed a change of mindset and more planning to anticipate crises.

The plans are likely to provoke a mixed response from EU member states, who perceive threats in different ways. Last week, the European Commission rebranded its military spending plans “Readiness 2030”, instead of Rearm Europe, after complaints from the leaders of Italy and Spain, who argued the language risked alienating people.

In contrast, northern European countries have led the way in emergency planning. Swedish authorities recommend keeping at home a good supply of water, energy-rich food, blankets and alternative heating, as well as investing in a battery-powered radio. Norway advises people to stock up on non-essential medicines, including iodine tablets in the case of a nuclear incident. German households have been urged to adapt their own cellars, garages or store rooms for use as bunkers, while housebuilders will be legally obliged to include safe shelters in new homes – as Poland has already done.

Roxana Mînzatu, a commission vice-president, responded to accusations of scaremongering, likening preparedness to taking out accident insurance: “It doesn’t mean much more than the fact that you want to be prepared and you want to minimise the damage, the costs, the suffering that you might go through.”

Mînzatu, who admitted she did not have a three-day stockpile, citing her mobile lifestyle as the reason, said the dividend of peace had given people a sense “it’s not going to happen to us” despite seeing disastrous wildfires in Greece or floods in Spain. “I’m a good example of what we need to do,” she said.

Lahbib, who said she did have her 72-hour supplies, including ingredients for pasta alla puttanesca, said it was up to member states to define what was needed “on the basis of the geopolitical and geostrategic position they’re in”.

The Belgian commissioner noted that in Finland young people were taught how to handle a weapon, “but I don’t think that’s the kind of thing you’d have here in Belgium or France, not immediately, at any rate. It differs from one country to another, but we can learn from each other.”

The strategy was published the day after Denmark’s defence ministry announced it was bringing forward plans to introduce military service for women by two years.

Women who turn 18 after 1 July 2025 could be required to take part in an annual ballot from next year to determine if they must perform mandatory military service, something which is already required of men.

1 Like

No stockpiling for me, I voted leave!

15 Likes

I was thinking about getting into prepper stuff anyway, this is a good reminder.

4 Likes

genuinely have a lot of this stuff already in our basement.

2 Likes

They forgot to tell people to have a jailbroken 3DS ready and charged with sick games downloaded

19 Likes

UK Government cutting down on all this faff by making sure no-one can afford to eat in the first place.

9 Likes

I’ve still got my goo spoon stored safely from Brexit.

4 Likes

Computer Game Emulation thread massive be like

6 Likes

It was actually more my wife than me, but I’m on board. It’s a reasonably big thing in Sweden as (in the article) they do encourage preparedness especially being in the Baltic and so close to Russia. She got freaked out and ordered a bunch of stuff, but it feels like a smart move now tbh.

1 Like

My mum always raised me to have a “war cupboard” and how we laughed at the time :flushed:

1 Like

Some of you guys are unwilling to murder your neighbours and it shows

12 Likes

I don’t mind just dying if there’s a war. Honestly it’s no trouble, you wouldn’t want me around anyway, I’d make a fuss and get in the way.

7 Likes

who even has space for 72 hours of supplies? in this economy?

This is genuinely my plan for nuclear warfare: head for the nearest big population centre and hope to be taken out on the first wave.

5 Likes

The kendal mint cake marketing board is behind this, mark my words.

2 Likes

My final experience on God’s green earth will be the smug satisfaction of driving in the opposite direction to all the traffic

13 Likes

Reckon I’d give heroin a go first, then off myself before the WiFi goes down

2 Likes

i’d live off the land (loot)

1 Like

Add it to the stockpile shopping list.

“Extra extra strength painkillers”

1 Like

I’m gonna go to epimer’s house

1 Like