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Distributing Food - The Dual Virtues of Food Banking Jeff Klein President and CEO May 2014 Prepared for. Our Mission. To alleviate global hunger by developing food banks in communities where they are needed around the world and by supporting food banks where they exist. Who We Are.
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Distributing Food - The Dual Virtues of Food Banking • Jeff Klein • President and CEO • May 2014 • Prepared for
Our Mission To alleviate global hunger by developing food banks in communities where they are needed around the world and by supporting food banks where they exist.
Who We Are GFN currently supports existing and developing food banks and national food bank networks in more than 25 countries, home to over one-third of the world’s undernourished people. We create efficient and sustainable organizations that provide environmentally friendly alternatives to food disposal. Our management team has extensive background in domestic and international food bank development and administration.
The Hunger Challenge Hunger is pervasive. The world produces enough food for everyone, but hunger still affects more than 840 million people throughout the world 1. Hunger kills. Each year, the death toll from hunger and related diseases exceeds that of AIDS, malaria, and TB combined2. Poverty is still widespread. More than 2 billion people still live on less than $2 each day3. 1 Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. State of Food Insecurity 2013. 2 World Food Program, 2012. 3. World Bank. Global Poverty Update. February 2012.
The Hunger Challenge The world produces enough food to adequately nourish everyone on the planet1. However, much of what is grown, processed and manufactured is never consumed due to: • Failure to harvest • Post-harvest loss • Product disposal • Expiration • Over-production • Damage • Marketing and • other business decisions • Inadequate legal and tax incentives and poor alignment and coordination among government, the private and volunteer sectors. 1 Leathers, H., & Foster, P. (2009). The world food problem: toward ending under-nutrition in the third world. Colorado: Lynne Rienner Publishers, Inc.
Food Banks and Food Waste • Approximately one-third of the food produced for human consumption is never eaten1. • This equates to 1.3 billion tons of food lost each year. • Every year, consumers in rich countries waste almost as much food (222 million tons) as the entire net food production of sub-Saharan Africa (230 million tons) • Food banks source an increasing amount of highly nutritious food including dairy products, proteins and produce from grocery stores prior to their shelf life expiration. • This intervention saves a tremendous amount of food from landfill and the destructive methane that it produces. • 1 Global Food Loss and Waste, FAO, 2011
The Global Community of Food Banks • Africa • Namibia • Nigeria • Sierra Leone • South Africa • Asia: • Hong Kong • India • Singapore • South Korea • Taiwan • Middle East • Israel • Turkey • Europe: • Bulgaria • Russia • United Kingdom • North America: • Canada • Mexico • Central America: • Costa Rica • Dominican Republic • Guatemala • Honduras • El Salvador • Nicaragua • Oceania: • Australia • South America: • Argentina • Brazil • Chile • Colombia • Ecuador • Paraguay • Uruguay In Development: Red Operational: Green
Recovering the Food • Manufacturers, grocers, distributors, farmers and produce markets, hotels, restaurants • Over 920 million pounds recovered through the network in the most recent year • Loss of commercial value • Surplus food hierarchy – human consumption, animal feed, composting/renewable energy, landfill • Sourcing process varies • Manufacturers • Grocery and distributors • Produce • Hospitality and restaurants • Alternative models
Storing and Distributing the Food • Certify best practices – governance, fiscal transparency, food safety and inventory control • Vetting the social services agencies (over 19,000 in our network) • Food is often the draw • Alternative models
How to Reduce Waste and Feed More People • Expand Good Samaritan protection to protect food donors from liability • Only several countries provide this protection to organizations donating food “fit for human consumption” • Supportive tax policy – deductions for donated food and cash contributions to non-profit organizations • Many countries also assess a costly VAT-like tax to companies donating food • Increase in capital to support huge need for expanding transportation equipment as well as cold chain (refrigerators and freezers) • Needed at the farm and within the transportation equipment • Needed to enable grocery store, hotel, and restaurant pickup and distribution operations • Needed at food banks and their agency partners • Raise awareness – Save Food, and other similar initiatives (WRAP UK, Feeding the 5000, Fusion and many others)
Partners in our Mission Caterpillar Foundation
Partners in our Mission Caterpillar Foundation