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Gaza: Israel’s shelter restrictions force nearly a million people to endure summer heat in tents

Note: The Norwegian Refugee Council leads the Shelter Cluster in Palestine and coordinates humanitarian shelter actors responding to emergency shelter needs in Gaza and the West Bank. It provides a new update on the deteriorating shelter situation in Gaza amid rising temperatures and ongoing Israeli restrictions on critical shelter relief. 

Oslo, 18 June 2026 – As Gaza enters the sweltering summer months, Israel’s destruction of homes and restrictions on shelter materials have trapped displaced families in Gaza in dangerously hot tents and makeshift shelters, warns the Shelter Cluster in Palestine. 

Across Gaza, around 170,000 households, equivalent to nearly one million people, live in tents. Another 5,000 households sleep outdoors, while 52,000 households live in overcrowded shelters. This month, 850,000 people still lack emergency shelter items such as plastic sheeting, plywood, and rope. These figures point to a shelter crisis driven not by weather, but by destruction, displacement, and blocked relief.  

Summer heat will only sharpen the risks families face, with daytime temperatures reaching 34.5C in the warmest month and the number of hot days with temperature recording 35C or higher expected to increase. 

“Gaza’s families are not facing a natural disaster. They are being forced to endure deadly heat in emergency shelters that were never designed to withstand prolonged displacement or high temperatures. Simple measures such as shading, ventilation and basic shelter improvements can significantly reduce risks and improve living conditions, but this is currently not available inside of Gaza and deliberately not being allowed to enter,” said Jehan Salim, Shelter Cluster Coordinator. 

Without these supplies, preventable risks will deepen. Children, older people and those with chronic illnesses face higher risks of heat stress, dehydration, respiratory distress, and disease. Women and girls face greater danger in overcrowded sites where poor lighting, lack of privacy and unsafe sanitation deepen fear and exposure. 

“It is an outrage that families in Gaza, after months of displacement and loss, now face summer heat in makeshift tents because Israel continues to restrict shelter materials,” said Jan Egeland, Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC) Secretary General. “The Shelter Cluster and its partners have the expertise and capacity to help Palestinians secure safer and more dignified shelter. But skills cannot replace materials. Israel must allow shelter supplies into Gaza now so our partners can help families protect themselves from heat, exposure and further harm.” 

Israel’s military operations have destroyed and damaged 76.6 per cent of Gaza’s housing stock, displaced families again and again, and left entire communities with no safe place to go.  

Families need proper tents and basic shelter materials, including tarpaulins, shade nets, plastic sheeting and basic repair supplies. These materials will not rebuild Gaza, but they can make the difference between a tent that traps heat, smoke, dust and disease, and a shelter that gives a family shade, airflow, privacy and a measure of protection. 

“I could not bear to be inside the tent from 8am until 7pm, because as soon as the sun rises, ants, flies, and insects begin to spread inside, and the heat starts to soar,” said a 44-year-old husband and father of three from Deir al-Balah. “My wife and children ended up with burns on their faces.” 

The Shelter Cluster calls for rapid, predictable and sustained entry of shelter materials through all available crossings, alongside urgent donor support for summer-specific household items such as bedding, clothing, solar fans, lighting and safe storage. This includes 64,000 tents, 73,000 sealing-off kits for damaged structures, and 2,000 emergency shelter kits that remain at the border despite receiving approval for entry. 

“This summer does not have to strip away more lives and dignity,” said Salim. “The solutions are known, the response capacity exists, and partners are ready to act. What is needed now is sustained entry of shelter materials to help families protect themselves from heat, exposure and further harm.” 

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