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FOOD

TECHNOLOGY Feature

Fighting World Hunger


Through Micronutrient
Fortification Programs
The UN World Food Program helps fight global hunger through emergency
relief and development programs, including milling and fortification activities.

Tina van den Briel and Patrick Webb

s we enter the new millennium, there are roughly 840 million


chronically undernourished people in the world, 799 million of
them in developing countries (FAO, 2002). The remaining 41

million are found in industrialized countries and in states undergoing

Children wait for the preparation of a meal of fortified maize


meal in Lusaka, Zambia.

Author Tina Van Den Briel (Tina.VanDenBriel@wfp.org) is


Senior Program Adviser and Patrick Webb
(Patrick.Webb@wfp.org) is Chief of Nutrition, Policy,
Strategy, and Program Support Div., United Nations World
Food Program, Via Giulio Cesare Viola, 68/70, 00148
Rome, Italy. Send reprint requests to author Webb.

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transition, including the former Soviet Union and Eastern Europe.


That the total number of undernourished people is 20 million lower
than it was in 199092 is both good news and bad news. The good news is
that there has been a decline in the number of hungry people in the past decade despite rapid population growth (there are more people around today
than in 1992); despite natural disasters, such as hurricane Mitch, floods in
China, and droughts across Africa; and despite an upsurge of armed conflicts in countries like Liberia, Bosnia, Chechnya, and Sudan. It should at
least be recognized that some progress is being made against very difficult
odds.
But the bad news is that progress remains patchy and very slowfar too
slow, in fact, to meet the internationally accepted target of halving rates of
hunger by the year 2015 (UN, 2000). A great many efforts are being made
across the globe to bring about increases in agricultural productivity
through research and extension, reductions in poverty through, for example,
microfinance schemes, and reductions in the disease burden through vaccination campaigns. However, even if all such efforts were to succeed in coming decades, hungry people need to eat today to benefit from, and contribute
to, those gains. Indeed, poverty reduction efforts remain stymied by the persistence of hunger that prevents millions of people from participating in
processes of change.
That is where the World Food Program (WFP) comes in. WFP is perhaps best known as the United Nations agency that responds to humanitarian emergencies by delivering food aid to hungry people all over the globe.
In 2002, WFP fed 44 million individuals through emergency operations. Yet
WFP also seeks to remove root causes of hunger by using food in development programs. In both contexts, getting enough food to people who need
it is critical. But quantity of food is not all that mattersso, too, does qualiNOVEMBER 2003 VOL. 57, NO. 11

Grain is offloaded at a World Food Program warehouse at the Nangweshi


refugee camp, Zambia.

Lakes region of Africa, the Balkans, the Democratic Peoples


Republic of North Korea and, elsewhere meant that WFP channeled almost $12 billion of humanitarian assistance during the
decade. Sadly, the trend continues: simmering crises in Afghanistan, Angola, and Sudan were joined in 2002 by renewed
large-scale emergencies in Ethiopia/Eritrea and southern Africa.
Always on the front line in emergencies, WFP staff often
face logistical and personal nightmares. For example, during
Afghanistans winter of 2001 (after removal of the Taliban regime), there was a serious threat of famine. To meet the threat,
WFP had to airlift food from Pakistan to Turkmenistan when
WFP warehouses in Central Asia ran dry; snow and avalanche
experts were brought in from Sweden and Canada to help keep
the mountain passes open during the depth of winter; commercial trucks braved storms at high altitude because WFP fitted snow blowers and subsidized their fuel; and donkeys were
hired to carry food where trucks could not proceed through
the deep snow. And as in many conflict zones, personal insecurity from land mines, bombing, and armed engagements led to
some tragedies. Since 1988, more than 60 WFP staff members
have been killed in the line of humanitarian duty.

Quality, Not Just Quantity

Containerized milling and fortification units are installed at the Nangweshi


refugee camp, Zambia.

ty. As a result, WFP has increasingly turned to state-of-the-art


milling, extruding, and fortification technologies to support
some of its food aid activities. This article briefly describes what
WFP does and the challenges it faces in addressing hunger with
food aid, then presents three recent initiatives in the micronutrient fortification of food aid that offer some hope for making
faster progress against hunger in coming years.

Getting Food to Hungry People


In the 40 years since it was founded, WFP has acted to redress
the devastating impact of hunger on the worlds poorest people.
The numbers involved are so large as to be mind-numbing. Consider, for example, the entire population of the U.S. and Canada
going hungry. Then double it. Then add the population of Mexico. Even that total does not match how many undernourished
people there are in developing countries.
As a UN institution, WFP embodies the principle that food
should reach hungry people when they need it, wherever they
may benot only in the context of disasters, but also where
grinding poverty and ill-health inhibit access to food on a daily
basis. While WFP is not the only agency that dedicates itself to
this ideal, it is the largest multilateral player where food aid is
concerned. Between 1962 and 2002, WFP delivered more than
65 million metric tons of food to people in 100 countries.
In recent years, the bulk of WFPs food assistance has been
for addressing emergencies. The 1990s saw a large increase in
the number of refugees and other people displaced by political
instability or war. Humanitarian crises in Somalia, the Great
VOL. 57, NO.11 NOVEMBER 2003

A large part of helping people better withstand shocks involves building up human capacitythe health, nutrition, education, and skills that are essential if poor people are to pull
themselves out of poverty. Enabling girls to get into school,
providing skills training to widows, offering nutritional rehabilitation to those who are seriously illall such activities represent investments against the return of hunger. With that in
mind, WFP has become increasingly focused on the need to
ensure not just enough food, but also the most nutritious food
possible.
Since its first operations WFP has made a point of delivering a nutritionally balanced food basket. WFPs main food
commodities are cereal grains, pulses (beans of varying kinds),
vegetable oil, salt, sugar, and blended foods used for nutritional
rehabilitation of malnourished children and mothers. The
typical food ration is designed to provide at least 2,100 kcal
(the minimum acceptable level of energy needed by most people to maintain light activity and remain healthy), while providing sufficient diversity such that minimal levels of fat and
protein are achieved. Great care has always been taken in ensuring local palatability/acceptability and food safety. In 2002,
WFP purchased (rather than had donated in-kind) 41% of all
the food delivered to recipients; of that, 67% was obtained
from within developing countries.
However, with all the care in the world, food rations cannot
always meet all nutrient requirements of people who have been
depleted by months, perhaps years, of hunger. That is especially true of refugees who often rely almost exclusively on food
rations for their consumption needs. This is where micronutrient fortification becomes an option.
Micronutrient Problems. While undernutritiona continued shortage of foodbecomes all too visible when a child
is thin or sickly, there are also other forms of malnutrition that
are less visible but equally devastating: micronutrient deficiencies. Vitamins and minerals such as iron keep children active
and help with mental development; vitamin A prevents blindness and strengthens the immune system; iodine stops goiter
and cretinism (problems rarely seen in richer countries, since

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Fighting World Hunger


most salt was fortified with iodine long ago), and zinc helps
young childrens physical growth.
Everyone needs micronutrients, if only in minute quantities. But when the minute quantities are not met, problems
arise. According to the World Health Organization, deficiencies of iron, vitamin A, and zinc rank among the top ten leading causes of death through disease in developing countries
(WHO, 2002). Where iron is concerned, at least half of all
pregnant women and young children around the world are
deficient. Children under 24 months of age are especially at
risk of anemia, which impairs their mental and physical development, reduces their ability to resist common childhood
diseases, and lowers their ability to concentrate and perform
well in school (Mason et al., 2001). Anemia is a serious risk
to mothers in childbirth, and it impairs the health and labor
productivity of other working adults. As a result, countries
like Bangladesh lose 12% of their annual gross national
product directly because of high levels of anemia (FAO,
2002). Similarly, removing zinc deficiencies would prevent
around 800,000 deaths per year, and eradicating vitamin A
deficiency would cut child deaths from measles by 50%
(UNICEF, 2002).
Potential Solutions. In the longer term, enhancing the
amount and variety of local foods produced should be the
desired goal. When people have access to more and better
foods, the micronutrient problem becomes manageable. But
in the absence of sustained poverty reduction and greater
food access in most poor countries a number of agencies such
as WHO, UNICEF, the Micronutrient Initiative (MI), Helen
Keller International, and others continue to be actively engaged in supporting developing countries to distribute supplements (often capsules) containing vitamin A or iron
through clinics and sometimes schools. Great progress has
been made in tackling vitamin A deficiency around the world
through this means, but iron and other deficiencies are proving to be more difficult to tackle via supplements (sometimes
because of poor compliance among recipients), and coverage
remains limited in many places.
In industrialized countries, most people are not deficient
in micronutrients, partly because of a normally varied and
rich diet, and partly because most such nations have for decades been fortifying widely consumed foods like flour, salt,
margarine, sugar, and even ketchup (salt has been iodized in
the U.S. and Switzerland since the 1920s, and mandatory fortification of various foods with vitamins A and D, iron folate,
and other micronutrients followed not long afterward).
During the 1990s interest in fortification grew in developing countries, and quite a few have now begun to enact national policies that require fortification of major food commodities, such as maize meal in South Africa and Namibia,
sugar in parts of Central America, Nigeria, and Zambia, and
vegetable oil in Morocco. However, such initiatives are still
relatively limited, largely because they require coordinated efforts from many stakeholders, including governments, the
private sector, and consumer organizations, which is not always easy to achieve. What is more, the foods fortified often
do not reach the very poorest consumersthe people helped
by WFP are not going to the grocery store to buy processed,
packaged foods that would include fortified bread or sugar.
People who rely on food aid cannot go long distances in
search of more nutritious food. It is up to WFP to try to
bring more nutritious food to them.
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WFPs Food Fortification Efforts


WFP has a long history of distributing micronutrient-fortified foods. It requires that vegetable oil procured from industrialized nations, like the U.S. or the Netherlands, be fortified
with vitamins A and D, and that all of the salt be fortified with
iodine. WFP is the leading purchaser worldwide of fortified
blended foods, mainly from Norway, France, and the U.S.
Blended foods (such as cornsoy blend), contain extra protein
and are typically fortified with multiple vitamins and minerals.
WFP has now developed local capacity to produce fortified
blended foods in 13 of the worlds poorest countries, including
India, Nepal, Madagascar, Ethiopia, and Malawi.
However, the bulk of food commodities donated to WFP or
procured take the forms of whole-grain cereals, which are not
fortified. Thus, local-level milling and fortification close to the
consumer may offer an answer to micronutrient deficiencies
among the target groups. Three examples of this approach are
illustrated below.
Milling and Fortifying Emergency Relief. At its peak, the
food crisis in Southern Africa during 200203 affected more
than 15 million people. More than 1 million metric tons of
food has been delivered to Lesotho, Swaziland, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Malawi, and Mozambique, where it was distributed to
critically hungry people by government agencies and nongovernmental organizations (NGOs). Indeed, NGOs such as
CARE, Catholic Relief Service, World Vision, and Project Concern International were instrumental in implementing the successful relief activity.
Yet even here, micronutrients were an issue. On the one
hand, the nutritional requirements of beneficiaries in this region are more exacting than usual because of the unusually
high rates of HIV/AIDS. It has been argued that the onset of
the disease might be delayed in a well-nourished individual
and that sound nutrition may reduce opportunistic, secondary
disease infections among AIDS patients, thereby potentially delaying mortality (Allen and Gillespie, 2001; Webb and Rogers,
2003). While it can correctly be argued that food security is
also affected by malaria, tuberculosis, and other diseases, HIV/
AIDS is unique in the scale and severity of its impact and because of the lack of low-cost and reliable medical (or indeed
non-medical) responses tailored to low-income countries. In
this sense, good nutrition is arguably both the first line of defense and the first line of attack against the epidemic.
On the other hand, some drought-stricken countries were
concerned that if imported food aid contained any genetically
modified material, and if recipients were to plant such grains
rather than eat them, then this might affect their ability to
trade in grains on the international markets. Respecting beneficiary country sovereignty, WFP therefore sought alternatives.
To some degree, it was possible to purchase grain within the region and move it from South Africa, say, to Zambia for distribution. In other cases, where countries decided to accept
milled maize (since that cannot be planted), WFP decided to
take advantage of the milling process to also fortify the meal.
Agreements were reached with five large roller mills in South
Africa, Malawi, Lesotho, and Zimbabwe to fortify the maize. To
date, more than 70,000 metric tons have been milled, fortified,
and distributedby far the largest distribution in history of
micronutrient-fortified cereals in an emergency context.
Milling and Fortifying in a Refugee Camp. Even when
emergencies are over, their effects sometimes linger for years.
That is especially the case with civil wars. Refugees who cross
NOVEMBER 2003 VOL. 57, NO. 11

borders to escape conflict can rely on food aid for the majority
of their food for long periods of time. The resulting lack of dietary diversity can sometimes lead to outbreaks of scurvy, a deficiency of vitamin C seen in refugee camps in Somalia in 1992
and Kenya in 1994; beriberi, a thiamine deficiency, recorded
among Bhutanese refugees in Nepal in 1999; or pellagra, a skin
disorder due to a lack of niacin, outbreaks of which occurred in
Mozambique in 1996 and Angola in 2003.
Since most refugee camps are located in remote regions, it is a
challenge to ensure a smooth and unbroken flow of food. WFP
therefore decided to install a mill and fortification unit to a
camp housing 26,000 Angolan refugees in Western Zambia. Because of the harsh environmental conditions (dry, sandy soil)
and the absence of employment opportunities, the refugees are
almost totally dependent on WFP for food. Yet the camp is located at least 1215 hours travel from the capital, Lusaka. It has
to be reached along extremely poor roads and a precarious ferrycrossing over the Zambezi river. When the Zambezi is flooded,
food convoys cannot cross for long periods of time.
As a result, stocks of whole maize kernels had to be kept in
the camp. Since whole grain has a longer shelf life than milled
flour, it was best to stock up grains. Upon receiving their maize
rations, refugees went to one of six small-scale hammer mills set
up inside the camp by WFP to convert whole kernels into meal.
Those small mills, with a capacity of about 300 kg/hr, could not
keep up with the need, and some refugees would wait two weeks
before they could have their entire twice-weekly ration milled.
Consequently, WFP decided in 2002 to bring a new, larger
mill to the camp to pilot-test an on-site maize fortification program. A milling/fortification unit was designed in collaboration
with the Natural Resources Institute (affiliated with Greenwich
University), and T.H. White Installation Ltd., both in the United
Kingdom, MI, the Canadian government, the UN High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR), and CARE/Canada.
Supplied in a space frame with most components installed
and pre-wired, the unit was transported in two pieces in a container on the back of a large truck. The unit consists of two hammer milling and mixing units, each with a capacity to mill 1
metric ton/hr. The mills were erected in a Rub-Hall mobile
warehouse, a sturdy 10-m x 24-m tent with a height of just over
5 m that is widely used for storage in humanitarian operations.
The mill is currently in operation, with labor provided by the
refugees themselves, and a fine meal is produced at a rate that
does not keep families waiting for weeks. A study of the impact
of the fortification on micronutrient status in the camp is ongoing. If the project is successful, similar units could be produced, packed in a container, and shipped to other emergency
sites.
Village-Level Milling and Fortification. One way that
WFP tries to minimize the threat of emergencies is to remove
the worst hunger before it reaches an intensity that triggers famine. Development interventions are designed to allow hungry
people to send their children to school (by providing school
meals), to attend clinics (offering rations for the mother and
child), or to reduce soil erosion (offering work on tree-planting
or water-control activities in return for food). In Bangladesh,
WFP supports an activity that reaches around 500,000 extremely
poor women. It has for many years been providing 30 kg of
whole wheat per month to support literacy training, while also
off-setting startup costs for income-generating activities, like
raising poultry or vegetable gardening.

VOL. 57, NO.11 NOVEMBER 2003

However, since vitamin A and anemia were found to be widely prevalent among the target group, a pilot project was established in 2002 to fortify whole-meal wheat flour (atta). Working
on a no-loss/no-profit basis, local NGOs (BRAC and Jagorani
Chakra) set in place four small hammer mills equipped with a
novel fail-safe fortification device. Designed by former WFP
staff member Pieter Dijkhuizen in collaboration with ABC
Hansen, a Danish mill-producing company, the units have a capacity of about 750 kg/hr and use a blender to fortify batches of
500 kg at a time. Since the fortification device can only be used
once per batch, possible overdosing of the flour with micronutrient premix is avoided (Dijkhuizen and Afsar, 2003). This can
be important, since overdoses of some micronutrients, such as
vitamin A and iron, could lead to harmful health effects for
some people.
Poor local women enrolled in development programs suported by WFP are employed to implement the milling and fortification process. They now provide 28,000 families with 25 kg of
milled, fortified flour each month at a total processing cost of
less than $20 (U.S.)/metric ton. The cost of the micronutrient
premix is small (about $5/ton of grain), but WFP also has to
cover the cost of milling and bagging, typically about $25/ton.
The Bangladesh village-level operations (with low overheads)
show that it can be done cheaper than that. Although ration size
was cut from 30 kg of unmilled wheat to 25 kg of flour, the cost
savings to beneficiaries where they had to pay for milling themselves represent a 50% increase in the transfer value.
Studies carried out by USAID/MOST show that the cost savings are recognized by beneficiaries, and an efficacy study by ICCDR/B confirms the beneficial impact on vitamin A status.
WFP is therefore planning to expand the project to 40 units,
thereby meeting the needs of 430,000 participants per year.
In sum, WFPs goal in food fortification is to make food aid a
tool that not only reduces immediate hunger but also allows
children a better chance to survive the ravages of disease and
grow into healthy and productive adults. Small- and large-scale
milling and fortification technologies have a growing and important role to play in that goal.

REFERENCES
Allen, L. and Gillespie, S. 2001. What works? A review of the efficacy and effectiveness of
nutrition interventions. ACC/SCN Nutrition Policy Paper.19. Geneva, Switzerland.
Dijkhuizen, P. and Afsar, N. 2003. Review mission: Pilot project for atta milling and fortification in the VGD program of WFP Bangladesh. Consultants Report to World Food Program. Dhaka, Bangladesh.
FAO. 2002. The state of food insecurity in the world. FIVIMS (Food Insecurity and Vulnerability Information and Mapping System) and Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, Rome, Italy.
Mason, J. S., Lotfi, M., Dalmiya, N., Sethuraman, K. and Deitchler, M. 2001. The micronutrient report: Current progress and trends in the control of vitamin A. Micronutrient Initiative
and International Development Research Centre, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
UN. 2000. Millennium Development Declaration. Resolution No. 55/2. United Nations General Assembly, New York.
UNICEF. 2002. A world fit for children. New York.
Webb, P. and Rogers, B. 2003. Addressing the In in food insecurity. Occasional Paper
No.1. Office of Food for Peace, United States Agency for International Development,
Washington, D.C.
WHO. 2002. The world health report 2002; Reducing risks, promoting healthy life. World
Health Org., Geneva, Switzerland.

The views expressed in this paper are those of the authors and should not be interpreted as
reflecting those of the World Food Program. The authors are grateful to the many individuals
who made the initiatives described here possible, especially Pieter Dijkhuizen, Francesca
Erdelmann, John Wood, Anne Callanan, and Rita Bhatia.

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