Top Banner
Making Food Safe and Available Everywhere Public Private Partnerships Ulla Holm, Global Director Tetra Laval Food for Development Office - Save Food Congress
19

Nutrition and Health - the No 1 priority for sustainable development

Feb 09, 2016

Download

Documents

Davina Sn

Making Food Safe and Available Everywhere Public Private Partnerships Ulla Holm, Global Director Tetra Laval Food for Development Office - Save Food Congress. Nutrition and Health - the No 1 priority for sustainable development. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Nutrition and Health - the  No 1  priority   for  sustainable development

Making Food Safe and Available Everywhere

Public Private PartnershipsUlla Holm, Global DirectorTetra Laval Food for Development Office - Save Food Congress

Page 2: Nutrition and Health - the  No 1  priority   for  sustainable development

Nutrition and Health- the No 1 priority for sustainable development 842 million people in the world do not have enough to eat.

Poor nutrition causes nearly half (45%) of deaths in children under five - 3.1 million children each year.

One out of six children - roughly 100 million - in developing countries is underweight.

One in four of the world's children are stunted. 80 % of the world's stunted children live in only 20 countries.

66 million primary school-age children attend classes hungry across the developing world The UN Millenium

Development Goals

Page 3: Nutrition and Health - the  No 1  priority   for  sustainable development

FAO on Multiple benefits of Dairy Farming:

Global Focus on Food Security and Nutrition

Nearly one billion people live on dairy farms, smallholdings or in landless households keeping one or more animals

Nutrition Women empoverment Income and Jobs Asset creation and social standing

Demand for school feeding is increasing as a safety net School feeding linked to local food production and food processing – a win-win solution For every $1 spent by governments and donors, $3-8 is gained in economic returns

WFP and World Bank Messages:

Page 4: Nutrition and Health - the  No 1  priority   for  sustainable development

Why Milk? Milk is a complete food product

Contains 18 of 22 minerals & vitamins humans need, for example

- Calcium for bones and teeth

- Protein builds and repairs muscle tissue.

- Vitamin A for vision and skin, cell growth and the immune system.

- Vitamin D for absorption of calcium.

Aids cognitive and physical development

Reduces the risk of various medical disorders

Good base for fortification if required

Encourages healthy eating

Page 5: Nutrition and Health - the  No 1  priority   for  sustainable development

The Tetra Pak Tradition- a commitment to sustainable development

The aseptic package developed by Tetra Pak in the 1960-is opened up new ways to preserve milk in developing countries

To help customers in developing countries build a sustainable dairy industry, it was important to support the whole milk value chain

School Milk Programmes create demand for locally produced and processed quality milk and improve children’s health and learning capacities

For more that 50 years Tetra Pak has helped governments to implement School Milk Programmes

Page 6: Nutrition and Health - the  No 1  priority   for  sustainable development

Food for Development OfficeSet up in 2000

Knowledge Center School Feeding Programmes Highly Fortified Drinks for Nutrition Programmes Agricultural & Dairy Development Programmes Global Partnerships Development

Page 7: Nutrition and Health - the  No 1  priority   for  sustainable development

Integration via Public Private Partnership - a value chain approach to sustainable solutions

Dairy Farms

► Support for training of farmers

► Equipment financing

► Dairy Hubs

Dairy Plant

► Commercial financing of processing plants

► Management support and training

Distributors

► Support for market development

Consumer School Feeding

► Support for feeding programmes

► Consumer information

Page 8: Nutrition and Health - the  No 1  priority   for  sustainable development

Number of children 64 million- of which developing countries 43 million

Number of countries 63 countries Number of packages 8 318 million

- of which developing countries 5 098 million Majority of programmes based on government

funding

The Tetra Pak Tradition- school feeding in Tetra Pak packages in 2013

Page 9: Nutrition and Health - the  No 1  priority   for  sustainable development

Examples of School Milk Programmes

Kenya► Ran between 1979 – 1998 with

Government funding► Covered 4,3 mio children ► Created milk drinking generation

and a developed dairy industry► Parent-paid programme

introduced in 2008

China► Covers 13,7 million children (2013)► More than 2 billion packages

delivered to schools in 2013► School milk the driver for dairy

development► Started as parent paid programme,

now expanded to government funded

Thailand► Covers 7 million children (2013) ► Grew milk consumption

2 – 28 l/capita (1988 – 2007)► 250 000 jobs created► Reduced malnutrition► Government funded

Page 10: Nutrition and Health - the  No 1  priority   for  sustainable development

The Dairy Hub Model - a response to food crises in 2008

A large portion of locally produded milk in developing countries is never collected and processed.

Dairy processors are often dependent on importation of milk powder.

During food crises prices of milk powder more than doubled.

The Dairy Hub model builds on the one herd concept and links dedicated dairy processors to small holder milk farmers.

Training and education and a consistent link to market help milk farmers move from subsistance farming to driving dairy as a business.

Dairy Hubs develop local food reservs and replace imports.

Page 11: Nutrition and Health - the  No 1  priority   for  sustainable development

Development of local milk production- growing a local food reserve

With sister company DeLaval we have expertise to develop the whole milk value chain

Support small holder milk farmers to:1. increase quantity of locally produced milk 2. improve quality of locally produced milk

Integrated Dairy Value Chain projects (Dairy Hubs)

Page 12: Nutrition and Health - the  No 1  priority   for  sustainable development

► Training

► Feeding

► Services

► Financing

► Mechanization

► Access to market

The Dairy Hub Model - links small holder farmers to dedicated dairy processors

Builds on the One Herd Concept

Page 13: Nutrition and Health - the  No 1  priority   for  sustainable development

PRAN in Bangladesh- a success case Cooperation between PRAN and Food

for Development Office was initiated in 2008.

First Dairy Hub was set up in 2010. Milk Collection at first Dairy Hub

started in October 2010- from 50 000 liters to 495 000 litres/months in 6 months.

2011 - 1 more dairy hub started. Expansion plans – partnership with

UNIDO and Sida to establish 3 new Dairy Hubs by 2016.

Page 14: Nutrition and Health - the  No 1  priority   for  sustainable development

The Chatmohar Dairy Hub in Bangladesh- achievements from the start until December 2013 (39 months)

Average milk yield/cow/day: from 4,75 liter to 8,5 liter

Milk collection/day: from 2 000 litres to 27 500

litres

Average income/small holder farmer: from USD 100 to USD

223 / month for 1766 farmers

+80%

+1275%

+120%

Comparison between starting date Oct 2010 and average results for 2013

Page 15: Nutrition and Health - the  No 1  priority   for  sustainable development

Sep-10

Oct-10

Nov-10

Dec-10

Jan-1

1

Feb-11

Mar-11

Apr-11

May-11

Jun-1

1Ju

l-11

Aug-11

Sep-11

Oct-11

Nov-11

Dec-11

Jan-1

2

Feb-12

Mar-12

Apr-12

May-12

Jun-1

2Ju

l-12

Aug-12

Sep-12

Oct-12

Nov-12

Dec-12

Jan-1

3

Feb-13

Mar-13

Apr-13

May_1

3

Jun-1

3Ju

l-13

Aug-13

Sep-13

Oct-13

Nov-13

Dec-13

Jan-1

4

Feb-14

0

200

400

600

800

1000

1200

PRAN Dairy Hub, Chatmohor, Pabna.Month wise Milk Collection (Thousand Ltrs)

Page 16: Nutrition and Health - the  No 1  priority   for  sustainable development

The Power of Partnerships- making a difference with others

CustomersIn more than 170 countries

Governments Partnerships in school feeding and agricultural development programmes

International Development Agencies Co-funds nutrition programmes and dairy development(Sida, GiZ)

UN AgenciesPartnership with WFP (School milk), UNIDO (Value chain Development), UNICEF (Nutrition), IFAD (Agricultural development), INCAP (Nutrition)

World Bank / Development BanksThe WB fast Track Initiative, IDB (Interamerican development bank)

OthersGCNF – Global Child Nutrition FoundationGAIN – Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition

DSM – Supplier of vitamins and minerals

Page 17: Nutrition and Health - the  No 1  priority   for  sustainable development

Protect what’s good Milk and Dairy Industry Development - Huge potential to drive evolution from subsistence small holder milk production to small-scale commercial dairy farming

- Opportunity to reduce food losses and develop a nutritious food reserve

- Development of small holder production creates on-farm employment and income opportunities beyond farm gate. Ex: Ghana (FAO): one full-time job created for every 20 liters of milk collected, processed and marketed.

Growing demand assures sustainable economic and social development - School milk programmes grow demand for locally produced and processed quality milk, in parallel with improving health and learning capacities of school children

Public Private Partnerships - With technical assistance and co-funding we can replicate successful models!

Page 18: Nutrition and Health - the  No 1  priority   for  sustainable development

THANK YOU FOR YOUR ATTENTION!www.tetrapak.com/ffdo

Page 19: Nutrition and Health - the  No 1  priority   for  sustainable development

THANK YOU FOR YOUR ATTENTION!www.tetrapak.com/ffdo