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UN Agencies back bold plan to ensure every child in need gets a regular healthy meal in school by 2030

NEW YORK – United Nations agencies have announced their strong support for an international coalition aiming to rapidly improve the nutrition, health and education of school-age children around the world following pandemic-driven school closures.

In 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic caused extensive disruption to schools and education worldwide and millions of children were unable to get their school meals or benefit from school-based health and nutrition services such as deworming, vaccination and psycho-social support. Globally, more than 150 million children are still missing out on meals and essential health and nutrition services.

In a joint declaration, five agencies committed to assisting the School Meals Coalition, a grouping of more than 60 countries led by France and Finland, whose vision is to give every child in need the opportunity to receive a nutritious meal in school by 2030. The coalition is also committed to ‘smart’ school meals programmes, which combine regular meals in school with complementary health and nutrition interventions for children’s growth and learning.

“School health and nutrition programmes are impactful interventions to support schoolchildren and adolescents’ growth and development”, the UN agencies’ leaders said in their declaration. “They can help to combat child poverty, hunger and malnutrition in all its forms. They attract children to school and support children’s learning, and long-term health and well-being.”

School children are not the only ones who benefit. The leaders of the five agencies noted that school meals can serve as “springboards” for food system transformation.  Where possible, they can use locally grown food, supporting national and local markets and food systems, improving opportunities for smallholder farmers and local catering businesses, many led by women. These programmes can contribute to the achievement of at least seven of the SDGs.

Each of the five UN agencies -- the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), UNICEF, the UN World Food Programme (WFP) and the World Health Organization (WHO) -- will bring a specific set of expertise to the coalition. More than 50 partners, including NGOs, civil society, foundations and other organizations have said they will also provide support.

“The School Meals Coalition has the potential to help countries recover from the COVID-19 crisis. School feeding programmes can get children back in school, fix the damage done to their education, create jobs locally and enable smallholder farmers to earn a sustainable living to feed their families. We are proud to support the Coalition’s vital work,” said WFP Executive Director David Beasley.

The coalition will work to restore the school meals and other health and nutrition programmes that were in place before the COVID-19 pandemic, expand these to reach 73 million children who were not covered before COVID, and raise their quality in part by establishing standards and linking them to local food production where possible.

In their declaration of support, the leaders of the five UN agencies committed to work with governments to achieve the coalition’s goals, providing technical and operational support where it was needed, as well as advocating for funding and helping gather better data about the impact of school health and nutrition programmes.

Read about School Meals Coalition: Nutrition, Health and Education for Every Child

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The United Nations World Food Programme is the 2020 Nobel Peace Prize Laureate.  We are the world’s largest humanitarian organization, saving lives in emergencies and using food assistance to build a pathway to peace, stability and prosperity for people recovering from conflict, disasters, and the impact of climate change.

 

 

Topics

School meals Health emergencies

Contact

FAO: Peter Mayer,

FAO Rome, Tel: (+39) 06 570 53304,

Peter.Mayer@fao.org

UNESCO: Gabriela Cieploch,

UNESCO Paris, g.cieploch@unesco.org

UNICEF: Sara Alhattab, UNICEF New York,

Tel: +1 917 957 6536,
salhattab@unicef.org

WFP:  Martin Penner, WFP Rome,

Tel: +39 06 6513-3254, martin.penner@wfp.org

WHO: Pippa Haughton, WHO Geneva,

+41 79 44 66 331 haughtonp@who.int