Due to COVID-19, the Unicode Consortium has decided to postpone the release of version 
14.0 of the Unicode Standard by 6 months, from March to September of 2021. This 
delay will also impact related specifications and data, such as new emoji 
characters.
The Unicode Consortium relies heavily on the efforts of volunteers.
“Under the current circumstances we’ve heard that our contributors have a lot on 
their plates at the moment and decided it was in the best interests of our 
volunteers and the organizations that depend on the standard to push out our 
release date,” said Mark Davis, President of the Consortium. “This 
year we simply can’t commit to the same schedule we’ve adhered to in the past.”
ICU and CLDR to stay on schedule
The two other main Unicode projects,
ICU and 
CLDR, are maintaining their 6-month cycles for releases in the spring and 
fall, although the feature sets this year may be lighter. The CLDR project 
supplies language- and locale-specific data and specifications, while the ICU 
project supplies internationalization code libraries that allow operating 
systems and applications to use Unicode and CLDR data and specifications. These 
projects are impacted less by current conditions since they have always 
operated via virtual meetings and are more compartmentalized, meaning that it is 
easier to withhold a particular feature if it falls behind schedule without 
jeopardizing the whole release. Sub-projects of CLDR and ICU, such as the CLDR 
Message Formatting project, will also be little affected.
Emoji
This announcement does not affect the new emoji included in Unicode 
Standard version 13.0 announced on
March 10, 2020.
Because of the lead time for developers to incorporate emoji into 
mobile phones, emoji that are finalized in January don’t appear on phones until 
the following September or so. For example, the
emoji 
that were included in Release 13.0 in March 2020 won’t generally be on 
phones until the fall of 2020. With the delay of the release of Unicode 14.0, 
the deadline for submission of new emoji character proposals for Emoji 14.0 is 
also being postponed until September 2020.
The Consortium is considering whether it is feasible to release
emoji 
sequences in an Emoji 13.1 release. These sequences make use of existing 
characters. An example from Emoji 13.0 is the
black cat, which is internally a combination of the cat emoji and black 
large square emoji. Since sequences rely only on combinations of existing 
characters in the Unicode Standard, they can be implemented on a separate 
schedule, and don’t require a new version of Unicode or the encoding of new 
characters. Such an Emoji 13.1 release would be in time for release on mobile 
phones in 2021.
The Emoji Subcommittee will be accepting new emoji character 
proposals for Emoji 14.0 from June 15, 2020 until September 1, 2020. Any new 
emoji characters incorporated into Emoji 14.0 would appear on phones and other 
devices in 2022.
Over 140,000 characters are available for adoption 
to help the Unicode Consortium’s work on digitally disadvantaged languages
![[badge]](http://www.unicode.org/announcements/ynh-1fab4-potted-plant.png)