World Food Programme
World Food Programme
World Food Programme
The World Food Programme (WFP) is the leading humanitarian organization saving lives and
changing lives, delivering food assistance in emergencies and working with communities to improve
nutrition and build resilience.
It was founded in 1961 by the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) and United Nations General
Assembly (UNGA) with its headquarters in Rome, Italy.
It is also a member of the United Nations Sustainable Development Group (UNSDG), a coalition of
UN agencies and organizations aimed at fulfilling the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
The international community has committed to end hunger, achieve food security and improve
nutrition by 2030.
The WFP assists 88 countries, and has assisted 97 million people (in 2019) which is the largest
number since 2012.
Objectives
• WFP focuses on emergency assistance as well as rehabilitation and development aid.
• Two-thirds of its work is in conflict-affected countries, where people are three times more
likely to be undernourished than elsewhere.
• It works closely with the other two Rome-based UN agencies:
• The Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), which helps countries draw up policy and
change legislation to support sustainable agriculture
• The International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), which finances projects in poor
rural areas.
• To end hunger by protecting access to food.
• Improving nutrition and achieving food security.
• Supporting the SDG implementation and partnering for its results.
• WFP’s Strategic Plan for 2017-2021
• It was adopted just over a year after the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. It aligns
the organization’s work to the 2030 Agenda’s global call to action, which prioritizes efforts to
end poverty, hunger and inequality, encompassing humanitarian as well as development
efforts.
• The Strategic Plan is guided by the SDGs set forth in the 2030 Agenda, in particular SDG 2 on
ending hunger and SDG 17 on revitalizing global partnerships for implementation of the
SDGs.
• It ushers in a new planning and operational structure, including the implementation of
results-based country portfolios that will maximize WFP’s contribution to governments’
efforts towards achieving the SDGs.
Funding
• The WFP has no independent source of funds, it is funded entirely by voluntary donations.
Its principal donors are governments, but the organization also receives donations from the
private sector and individuals.
• Governments: governments are the principal source of funding for WFP; the organization
receives no dues or portions of the UN assessed contributions. On average, over 60
governments underwrite the humanitarian and development projects of WFP
• Corporates: Through corporate-giving programmes, individual companies make vital
contributions to fighting hunger.
• Donations from private and not-for-profit entities have included frontline support to several
emergency operations; expertise to enhance WFP's logistics and fundraising capacities; and
critical cash for school feeding.
• Individuals: Individual contributions can make a difference in the lives of the hungry. A
personal donation can provide:
• Emergency food rations during a crisis
• Special food for hungry children in schools.
• Food incentives to encourage poor families to send their girls to school.
• Food as payment for people to rebuild schools, roads and other infrastructure in the wake of
conflicts and natural disasters.
Donations from the ShareTheMeal app support various WFP operations ranging from resilience
building and school feeding programmes to providing food assistance in emergencies.
The app was launched in 2015 and since then, it has helped provide aid to some of the largest food
crises in the world including Yemen, Syria and Nigeria.
The report is produced by the Global Network against Food Crises, an international alliance working
to address the root causes of extreme hunger.
Award Won
The WFP has been awarded with the Nobel Prize for Peace 2020 for its efforts to combat hunger,
bettering conditions for peace in conflict-affected areas and preventing the use of hunger as a
weapon of war and conflict.