2. The Hunger
Challenge in India
India is home to the largest undernourished and
hungry population in the world.
And it is despite the fact that India has seen
tremendous growth in the past decade.
51% women
between 15-59
years of age
are Anaemic
30.7% of
children under
5 Years are
under-weight
190.7 million
Indians are
under –
nourished
Source: FAO, IFAD and WFP. 2014. The State of Food Insecurity in the World 2014.
2014 Global Hunger Index: The Challenge of Hidden Hunger.
India’s Undernourished Children: A Call for Reform and Action, World Bank Report (2005)
Ministry of Women and Child Development, India, and UNICEF, India.
Hunger is Pervasive! Hunger Affects
Growth and Learning!
Hunger Affects Health
and Productivity!
3. *40% in terms of value of total food produced.
35 - 40% of food produce is not consumed.
Source: Vision 2050 Report by Central Institute of Post-Harvest Engineering & Technology (CIPHET);2013
http://www.business-standard.com/article/current-affairs/can-india-feed-1-7-billion-people-by-2050-114081401033_1.html
https://agenda.weforum.org/2014/08/india-perishable-food-waste-population-growth/
On one hand there is hunger and on the other
~40% of India’s food produce is wasted & does
not reach the end consumer.
Food Wastage - 40%Available for
consumption - 60%
40%
4. Food Banks - Our solution to the Hunger problem
India Food Banking Network (IFBN) is leading India's fight against hunger through
a national network of Food Banks that systematically acquire food from donors and
channelize it to various feeding programs to address the problem of hunger.
Packaged food & grains
are donated by food
companies, government &
community to Food Banks
Food is Sorted &
stored at the
Food Banks
Food is distributed to
NGOs running feeding
programs for the needy
Food is made
available to the
hungry
5. Who we are…
India Food banking Network (IFBN) is
the flagship program of ‘Food Security
Foundation India’, a Section 8 Not-For-
Profit Company.
Our Mission is to alleviate hunger in
India through the development of a
nationwide network of Food Banks,
and engage the corporate sector,
government and civil society in the
fight to end hunger.
India Food Banking Network - Established in 2011 with
support from Global and Indian partners
“To have each district of
India accessible to one
Food Bank by 2020.”
6. IFBN: Network of 6 Food Banks and multiple
partnerships
Collect food from food
companies, food drives,
& government.
Efficiently distribute the
food through NGOs &
feeding programs
6 Food
Banks
Delhi
Food
Bank
Ghaziabad
Food Bank
Gurgaon
Food Bank
Kolkata
Food
Bank
Bangalore
Food Bank
IFBN
Jaipur FB
Partnership
IFBN Food Bank
FB Partnership
7. Our Value Proposition
Provide access to food as freedom
from hunger is a fundamental right
& a pre-requisite for all activities
including health, education, skill
building & livelihood.
National Network of Food
Banks with a goal to reach
every district in India by 2020.
a b
c
Multi-stake holder initiative in
collaboration with private sector,
government and NGOs to
maximize the impact.
Process based efficient, transparent
and cost effective, collection and
distribution of food to reach the most
needy.
d
8. Our strength is
Network of Food Banks
The Food Banks have strong capabilities to
drive successful food collection and
distribution drives.
• Wide coverage through network of food banks; with an aim to cover
every district by 2020
• Continuous supply of food through partners and food drives
• Collaborating and expanding the network to include more stakeholders
• Partnership with credible NGOs to help scale the feeding & nutrition
programs and ensure that the food reaches the most needy
• Nutritious good quality food supplied through Food Banks
• Process based safe food storage and transportation
• Calendar of events to involve the community and spread awareness on
Hunger.
9. Our Advisory Board
Sam Pitroda
Ex Advisor to Prime
Minister of India on Public
Information Infrastructure
& Innovations
Vandana Singh
CEO, FSFI – IFBN
Nita Ambani
Chairperson,
Reliance Foundation
K P Singh
Chairman, DLF Ltd.
Shobhana
Bhartia
Chairperson, HT
Media
Neville Mehta
International
Secretary, India,
South Asia Lions
Clubs International
Rajan Sankar
Country Manager,
India Global Alliance
for Improved Nutrition
Vinita Bali
Ex Managing
Director, Britannia
Industries Ltd.
Amrita Patel
Chairperson, National
Dairy Development
Board
Hari Bhartia
Co-Chairman & MD,
Jubilant Life
Sciences
Siraj
Chaudhury
Chairman, Cargill
India
Debashish
Mukherjee
Partner, A.T. Kearney
Aslesha
Gowarikar
Partner Desai &
Diwanji
Our Partners
10. Our Success Stories in India…
Partnership with Wave
group
(Noida & Ghaziabad
Food Bank)
Britannia Partnership
(Products distribution;
Food drives )
Cargill Partnership
(Gurgaon Food Bank)
Numerous food drives conducted across corporates and schools
11. Our Success Stories in India…
Partnership with Griffith Lab,
Grant Thornton, FrontalRain
(Bangalore Food Bank)
Partnership with Annakshetra
(Jaipur IFBN partner
- aims to minimize food loss and
wastage)
Produce for Hunger Initiative
Pre-mix Khichdi packages by Griffith
Laboratories
Numerous food drives conducted across corporates and schools
Partnership with Rotary Club
of Calcutta Mahanagar
(Kolkata Food Bank)
12. Our Success Stories in India…
• IFBN & Sodexo conducted a food collection drive under
the Sodexo CSR programme – Servathon 2015.
• The Food will be distributed through FoodBanks to
NGOs, orphanages, old age homes, institutes for
specially-abled, etc.
• The food drive reflects IFBN’s strength as a network to
bring together the donors and the recipients, and how
corporate partnership can help fight hunger in India.
Food Drive at
55 sites of
Sodexo in
Bangalore,
Chennai &
Delhi
~12,000 Kg
Raw food
materials – Wheat
flour, Rice, Pulses
collected
14. How you can support IFBN
Corporate Leadership
• Extend corporate
leadership at IFBN’s
Board to expand network
of Food banks to Stop
Hunger in India which
affects 190.7 million
people
• Support Feed India
Campaign
• Support National Multi
Sectoral Round Table
and Dialogue on Food
Security And Nutrition
• Align CSR Initiatives to ‘
Stop Hunger’
Program Support
• Support the implementation
of a Food Bank
• Support running of a
centralized kitchen to supply
nutritious food to NGOs
running feeding programs
• Support Food Collection
Drives within the
organization and also in the
community
• Celebrate Stop Hunger Days
on festive occasions
IFBN Partnership
• Contribute towards IFBN’s
corpus fund to expand the
network of food banks
• Provide specialized skills in
food safety, quality
assurance, supply chain
management by providing
volunteering opportunities to
employees
• Connect with customers,
suppliers and other partners
to raise food & funds and for
logistic & warehouse support
• Participate in campaigns,
sports events, marathons etc
to spread awareness and
generate funds.
15. Benefits for funding donors
Branding
with a Stop
Hunger national
initiative
Tax
Benefits
under 80G
Initiative under
CSR provisions
Employee
volunteer
program
Strategic
Partnership &
join IFBN
Advisory Board
16. …as well as Food Donors
Join hands with a
national network of
feeding programs
Reduce
food wastage
Save financial &
environmental
costs on disposal
Release valuable
warehouse space
Build brand
image as socially
responsible
17. To improve health and performance of
school children.
For better health outcomes for women and girls
through better nutrition
To improve the productivity of workers
Support IFBN to
www.IndiaFoodBanking.org
HungerSTOP
Editor's Notes
Previous Title/Section
Organizations have made the difference globally and in India through IFBN