Royal DSM N.V., the global Life Sciences and Materials Sciences company
headquartered in the Netherlands, and the United Nations World Food Programme
(WFP) announce that the 2008 ICIS Innovation Awards for Best Business
Innovation has been awarded to DSM Nutritional Products and WFP for the MixMe™
micronutrient powder.
In a joint initiative, DSM and WFP have developed MixMe™ sachets to provide
people in developing countries with micronutrients that can be mixed with food
at home. This "home fortification" is a novel approach to the enrichment of
food with micronutrients, as food is usually fortified industrially during the
processing stage.
This year alone, the MixMe™ sachets will reach over 250,000 people in Nepal,
Kenya and Bangladesh. WFP and DSM plan to substantially increase the coverage
area in the coming years to reach millions of people.
The food enriching micronutrient powder MixMe™ will enable the World Food
Programme, the UN’s frontline agency for hunger solutions, to bring better
food assistance to the hungry poor. In addition to the almost one billion
people who are hungry there are close to another billion of people in this
world who seem not to suffer from hunger at first glance but are suffering
from a deficiency in micronutrients (the so-called “hidden hunger”). These
people appear to have enough to eat, but often eat mainly carbohydrate rich
foods such as rice or maize which do not provide the essential vitamins and
minerals (micronutrients) needed for good health and therefore they develop
all kinds of diseases such as anemia and blindness.
Feike Sijbesma
, Chairman of the DSM Managing Board said: “Through various
initiatives we show our dedication to improve human health and prosperity by
eliminating micronutrient malnutrition. I am very proud of this award. It is a
recognition of the hard work of everyone involved in the collaboration between
DSM and the UN WFP and in particular in the development of the MixMe™ sachets
and it shows that innovation can make a difference in helping to reduce hidden
hunger, still the number one cause of death in the world."
"This is a concrete example of how a UN agency can work with the
private sector to jointly develop an innovative product,” said Martin
Bloem, WFP’s Chief of Nutrition. "For just 2.5 US cents per
child per a day, we can save countless children's lives by giving them
essential vitamins and minerals. But it’s more than that. Recent evidence
shows that micronutrient deficiency in the first 24 months of life can have
irreversible effects on intellectual and physical development. With the MixMe
powder, we can help children fulfill their potential and help build a brighter
future for entire communities."
DSM and WFP had to overcome several challenges before the sachets could be put
to use. The first challenge was to produce a stable and tasteless powder and
appropriate packaging to protect the contents from the harsh climatic
conditions in many developing countries. The second challenge was to find a
suitable packaging facility that could handle the high volumes involved, and
the third was to understand and comply with the approval processes of
individual governments.
Among the many hundreds of millions of malnourished people, those groups with
the highest micronutrient needs include children up to the age of five and
pregnant and breastfeeding women. For these groups, the lack of micronutrients
can have devastating consequences, causing the death of many women during or
shortly after childbirth, irreversible mental and physical impairment to their
offspring, and high child mortality due to communicable diseases.
Over 1.1 million child deaths per year are attributed to deficiencies in
vitamin A and zinc. A lack of vitamin A weakens the immune system and can
cause blindness, while zinc deficiency contributes to stunted growth and
weakened immunity in young children.
Since March 2007, DSM has been an official partner of the United Nations World
Food Programme. DSM provides WFP with expertise, high nutrient products as
well as financial assistance. Besides the well-known humanitarian program
SIGHT AND LIFE, DSM has also developed the Nutrition Improvement Program
(NIP), providing technical and scientific support for supplementation programs
and for the fortification of staple foods with essential vitamins and minerals
in developing countries.
The ICIS Innovation Awards, now in their fifth year, are designed to recognize
those companies that have made significant steps forward through R&D, with
tangible results emerging during 2007 and the early part of 2008. ICIS is the
chemical publishing arm of Reed Business Information, part of global
publishing group Reed Elsevier.
SIGHT AND LIFE
SIGHT AND LIFE is a non-profit humanitarian
initiative of Royal DSM N.V. whose mission is to fight micronutrient
deficiencies in developing countries. When SIGHT AND LIFE was first set up in
1986 it focused on vitamin A deficiency. Since 2003, SIGHT AND LIFE's mission
has expanded to address other essential micronutrient deficiencies including
nutritional anemia. Malnutrition is still an underlying cause of more than
3.5 million deaths per year among children under five years of age. SIGHT AND
LIFE actively seeks to end micronutrient malnutrition – also known as “hidden
hunger” – by raising awareness of these problems as serious public health
issues. More information:
www.sightandlife.org.
Nutrition Improvement Program
The Nutrition Improvement Program
(NIP) of DSM Nutritional Products is dedicated to improving human health and
prosperity by eliminating micronutrient malnutrition. The program supports and
promotes the addition to staple foods of essential micronutrients (nutrients
that cannot be synthesized in the body and are required only in minute
quantities daily, such as vitamins, trace elements and most minerals) that are
lacking in a population’s diet. A global team of committed experts works to
eliminate micronutrient deficiencies through customized quality products,
scientific and technical expertise, and educational support. NIP plays an
important role in the partnership between DSM and WFP. It develops products
that are tailored to the individual needs of the WFP beneficiaries. More
information:
www.nutritionimprovement.com.
UN World Food Programme (WFP)
WFP is the UN’s front-line food
assistance agency and the world’s largest humanitarian organization, providing
food to an average of 90 million people (including 58 million children) per
year. Hunger is still the biggest health threat in the world, affecting 923
million people and claiming 25,000 lives every single day. WFP fights hunger
via emergency aid, recovery and rebuilding programs for post-emergency
situations, and development projects aimed at helping poor countries
strengthen their own ability to reduce chronic hunger. For more information
see www.wfp.org.