Large-Scale Food Fortification

Large-scale food fortification (LSFF) is a key part of the response to the crisis of malnutrition, adding one or more essential nutrients to widely and regularly consumed foods during processing. This impactful and cost-effective intervention can reach billions of people by making commonly consumed foods such as wheat and maize flour, rice, edible oil, and condiments such as salt more nutritious, combatting vitamin and mineral deficiencies and protecting human health.

GAIN supports food fortification at global, regional and country levels. In collaboration with our Thriving Nutrition Enterprises programme, we aim to empower fortified foods producers with a whole-of-business approach to fortification, combining fortification quality assurance and control with business support services such as supply chain management, product development, and marketing to incentivise fortified foods producers. We also facilitate development or strengthening of policies, legislation, governance and institutions to deliver quality fortified foods.

Since 2002, GAIN has supported the roll-out, or strengthening of food fortification in approximately 40 low and middle-income countries, investing approximately USD 300 million in grants and technical assistance. As a result of these efforts, we have contributed to mandatory fortification legislation in numerous countries. Over one billion individuals have sustained access to fortified foods in current GAIN supported programmes, including the GAIN Premix Facility.

LSFF is not a silver bullet to solve the crisis of malnutrition, but it is an essential component of national and regional nutrition strategies which works best when it is mandated as part of a comprehensive public nutrition strategy. Where national mandatory fortification programmes have been implemented well and reached high coverage and quality, they have significantly decreased micronutrient deficiencies.

GAIN is committed to supporting the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals by improving access to fortified foods to 1.2 billion people by 2025.

Countries

GAIN works to support and strengthen LSFF programmes as a key component of national nutrition and food systems strategies.

LSFF works best when governments enact mandates, requiring that widely consumed foods and condiments are fortified with essential vitamins and minerals.

GAIN works with food producers, governments, academia and civil society stakeholders, supporting these national actors to:

  1. Start or expand fortification programmes where there is a need and an appropriate food vehicle.
  2. Improve quality and compliance of national LSFF programmes.
  3. Monitor, measure, troubleshoot, and sustain LSFF to ensure availability of quality fortified foods and programme impact.

Regionally, GAIN facilitates and strengthens human capacity and systems strengthening for production, regulatory and impact monitoring of fortified foods. We also support initiatives to improve trade and regional markets for fortified foods collaborating with organisations such as the East, Central and Southern Africa Health Community (ECSA-HC) on systems strengthening across its member states, Southern African Development Community on development of regional minimum standards for fortified foods and Smarter Futures on scaling up food fortification in Africa. Under the UNICEF-GAIN Brighter Futures partnership, we supported South Asia Association of Regional Cooperation (SAARC) prioritizing salt iodization as one of the interventions in SAARC's nutrition action framework as well as harmonised standards for salt iodization for the West Africa Economic and Monetary Union (UEMOA) region which were subsequently extended to the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS). Check out a map on GAIN LSFF Technical Assistance to Regional Communities.

Global projects

Fortification initiatives, tools or platforms with fortification data developed by GAIN, alone or in partnership with other organisations.
These include:

    • Fortification Management Information System (FortifyMIS), used by government monitoring agencies and producers for quality assurance and quality control
    • FortiMApp for food fortification data collection at market level
    • FortiCheck for fortification data collection at production level
    • GAIN is currently leading a ground breaking project to implement a Digital Fortification Quality Traceability + (DFQT+) System, involving a consortium of public and private sector partners that will enable countries generate, govern, share and utilize traceable data on food fortification within factories and markets. The digital system is being developed as a global public good with initial deployment in Bangladesh, India and Nigeria.
    • In collaboration with the Food Fortification Initiative (FFI) and Kansas State University, GAIN developed an online accredited flour and rice fortification monitoring programme available to governments, industries, NGOs and other stakeholders globally.
    • A policy guidance document which serves as a resource for those responsible for food fortification policy development and programme implementation.
    • Technical assistance to the WHO/CDC manual for millers, regulators, and programme managers on flour fortification monitoring
    • Technical assistance on EU guidance note on food fortification through 2FAS
    • Guidance on micronutrient testing of fortified foods​​​​​

     

    1. The ENABLE Platform – a technical hub offering audit, credit, procurement, and capacity building services. ENABLE includes the GAIN Premix Facility, which helps countries to procure high-quality, low-cost vitamin and mineral premix;
    2. European Commission Fortification Advisory Services;
    3. The Global Fortification Data Exchange - this platform collates fortification data for 196 countries globally.
    4. Secretariat for the Global Fortification Technical Advisory Group – a community of practice that includes over 20 international partners working in fortification.
    5. Fortify Staple Foods and Staple Crops solution cluster of the United Nations Food Systems Summit.
    6. GAIN helps hosting Future Fortified series. 2015 Global Fortification Summit and 2020/21 Global Fortification Summit
    7. GAIN hosts Nutrition Connect - this platform mobilises knowledge, shares experiences, and stimulates dialogue on public private engagement for nutrition including LSFF.
    • Benin
    • Bangladesh
    • Ethiopia
    • India
    • Indonesia
    • Kenya
    • Mozambique
    • Nigeria
    • Pakistan
    • Tanzania
    • Uganda
    • 1.3 billion people reached (2022) with fortified foods by GAIN-supported fortification programmes.
    • The GAIN Premix Facility has supplied vitamin and mineral premix and straight micronutrients to over 55 countries valued at over USD 86m.
    • GAIN has provided technical assistance to over 2000 companies- producing fortified foods.

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