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Olam partners MIT Solve on sustainable food systems solutions

 

Olam International, a leading global agri-business, has partnered the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Solve (MIT Solve) to design a Challenge aimed at addressing the issues around sustainable food systems in Nigeria. Olam International and MIT Solve co-hosted a Challenge Design Workshop which held in Lagos, recently.
โ€™MIT Solve is a hybrid business incubator and business ideas marketplace from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, that advances solutions from tech entrepreneurs to address pressing global issues. MIT Solve connects innovators with resources such as expertise, human capital, technology, and fundingโ€™.
The workshop was designed to engage cross-sector stakeholders in Nigeria, to deliberate on issues affecting the countryโ€™s agri-business ecosystem and aid MIT in designing Solveโ€™s 2020 Global Challenges. The event was also aimed at building connections amongst individuals and organizations with an interest in innovation, to address social and environmental challenges.
Addressing the audience on the rationale behind the event, Mukul Mathur, Country Head, Olam Nigeria said: โ€œOlam started as a single-man, single product operation in Nigeria and we have managed to achieve massive growth over a 30-year period. However, we still face problems and we cannot fix these challenges alone. We realize the value of having an ecosystem which can help in proffering solutions, especially around sustainable food systems in Nigeria. It is important to have such an ecosystem of likeminded people. I know that together, we can fix these problems.โ€
Sharon Bort, Officer, Sustainability Community for MIT Solve, described the programme as an initiative of the MIT aimed at solving identified global challenges. According to her, the MIT Solve cycle which starts in February of each year initiates competitions in the areas of Economic Prosperity, Health, Learning and Sustainability. Bort added that MIT Solve decided to focus on challenges associated with food in an attempt to find solutions to issues around sustainable food systems.
According to Julie Greene, Vice President, Corporate Responsibility and Sustainability, Olam International, the rise in the worldโ€™s population presents an opportunity for players in the agricultural value chain with the rapid rate of urban migration resulting in mass movements away from farms where crops are harvested. She said: โ€œFor most part of history, people lived near their food sources, they grew their own food. Today over 50% of the population lives in the cities. This has huge implications because of the channels through which these food products are transported and stored. The bigger challenge is that it inhibits people from having a healthy diet.โ€
Ms. Green pointed out that agriculture also has its negative impacts, despite its positive effects. She said: โ€œAgriculture and other land uses are responsible for a quarter of greenhouse gas emissions from fertilizers, deforestation and transportation. Agriculture is responsible for 70% of freshwater withdrawals. While these are critical to productivity, they also have polluting effects on the environment. We only grow enough food to feed the population, but the problem is that 1/3 of that food never actually reaches our plates due to food loss and waste. Therefore, the food system needs innovation and that is why we are here today to answer the question โ€œwhat are the various opportunities for a sustainable food system?โ€

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