World Food Programme Launches Innovation Accelerator To Test Drive Hunger Solutions

Published July 11, 2016

MUNICH – The United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) today stepped up its search for innovative solutions to spur progress towards Zero Hunger by launching an Innovation Accelerator to identify and nurture new, bold responses to humanitarian and development challenges as outlined in the Sustainable Development Goals.  

Based in Munich, the Innovation Accelerator combines internal WFP staff with experts and entrepreneurs from across the private sector and civil society. Teams collaborate for three- to six-month periods on selected ideas that are either proposed by WFP innovators with first-hand field knowledge or crowd-sourced by engaging members of the general public.

“Every day WFP and our partners work to meet the emergency food assistance needs of the world’s poorest, yet toughest people living in the most vulnerable places around the globe,” said WFP’s Executive Director Ertharin Cousin.

 

“What we do is not enough to achieve our shared goal of ending hunger by 2030. We must boldly seek new ideas, tools and solutions that make more food available, accessible and ultimately give every person everywhere the ability to feed her or his own children.

 

“We must capture the benefits of new technologies and the revolution in big data. WFP’s desire to collaborate like never before ensures that by working together we will transform how we serve, and the speed at which we deliver.  As a result, we will overcome the persistent challenges that even today keep generations locked in hunger and poverty.”

 
The world has made real progress by reducing the number of people suffering from hunger by 200 million since the 1990s. Yet there are still 795 million people who do not receive enough food for an active healthy life. The Innovation Accelerator should be a key way to help reach Sustainable Development Goal 2 and end hunger by 2030.

“Achieving the Sustainable Development Goals is ambitious and requires us to accelerate our current efforts,” said Dr. Gerd Mueller, Federal Minister for Economic Cooperation and Development in Germany.

 
“The WFP Innovation Accelerator will unlock the immense potential that German academia, research institutions, the private sector and the development community have to offer. Germany is currently the second-largest donor to WFP, and investing in innovation will increase the value of our financial contributions,” said German Federal Minister for Foreign Affairs, Dr. Frank Steinmeier, adding, “Germany has provided a record €570 million for Syria and the region alone, but emergency aid on its own will not suffice.”

 

“New approaches must be found if we want to ensure that nobody on our planet has to go hungry any more. To this end we need to enhance the links between humanitarian aid, business, research and civil society. The Innovation Accelerator will contribute to the development of new technologies and business models which will benefit people in need,” Steinmeier said.

The Accelerator is generously supported by contributions from the German Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development, the Federal Foreign Office of Germany and the Bavarian State Ministry for Food, Agriculture and Forestry. With 12 projects drawn from WFP’s global operations currently in its portfolio, the Accelerator will both benefit from and contribute to Munich’s strong innovation and start-up community.

“Bavaria is proud to support the establishment of a WFP office in Munich. Through close collaboration with companies and research institutes based in Bavaria, we can identify intelligent and sustainable solutions to global hunger,” said Mr. Helmut Brunner, Bavarian State Minister of State for Food, Agriculture and Forestry.

Ms. Cousin, Dr. Mueller, Dr. Steinmeier and Mr. Brunner were joined at the launch by more than 200 guests committed to harnessing the power of new technology, close collaboration and new ideas to create a world with Zero Hunger. To mark the occasion, project teams and external start-ups pitched their ambitious ideas of how to end global hunger.

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WFP is the world’s largest humanitarian agency fighting hunger worldwide, delivering food assistance in emergencies and working with communities to improve nutrition and build resilience. Each year, WFP assists some 80 million people in around 80 countries.

For more information, contact (email address: firstname.lastname@wfp.org):

Frances Kennedy, WFP/Rome, Tel. +39 06 6513 3725, Tel. Mob. +34 67600806
Ralf Suedhoff, WFP/Berlin, Tel. +49 160 949 12547
Katharine Weltecke, WFP/Rome – in Munich  +49 172 410 56 77
Alex Sloan, WFP/Munich +49 170 247 52 83
Gregory Barrow, WFP/London, Tel.  +44 20 72409001, Mob.  +44 7968 008474
Gerald Bourke, WFP/New York, Tel. +1-646-5566909, Mob.  +1-646 525 9982

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