Affordable and healthy food for low income people
There are over 2 billion people in the world who suffer from food insecurity. It doesn’t have to be this way if we consider that we waste over a third of the food that we produce in the world, while the food is perfectly edible, for reasons such as aesthetic or packaging defects, or because the food is about to expire.
At Nilus, we have developed technology to rescue food products that are at risk of being wasted from producers and retailers, and distribute them at 30% to 50% of their market price among soup kitchens in low income neighborhoods. We are currently operating in Argentina, Mexico and Puerto Rico, where we have delivered over 3 million plates of food to over 90,000 people.
We are resolving two deeply intertwined problems: malnutrition and food waste. More than 820 million people in the world suffer from severe food insecurity, which means that they have likely run out of food and, at the most extreme, gone for days without eating. Additionally, there is another 17 percent of the world population, or 1.3 billion people, who have experienced food insecurity at moderate levels. This means that they do not have regular access to nutritious and sufficient food. Malnutrition is directly associated with chronic diseases, as well as intellectual and emotional underperformance.
Additionally, by tapping into food that is about to be wasted (for aesthetic or packaging defects, or proximity to expiration) we are tackling one of the main hidden drivers behind climate change. Food waste is responsible for the emission of 1.3 gigatons of CO2 equivalents into the atmosphere, and the needless use of 20% of the world’s hydric resources and 30% of the world’s arable land.
These two problems are so grave that they are included in the UN SDGs: Goal 2, which addresses hunger, of course; and Goal 12, that addresses responsible consumption and production, and specifically targets food waste reduction in Goal 12.3.
We have created a digital marketplace that connects food companies with products at risk of being wasted with soup kitchens and convenient stores in low income neighborhoods, and manages the last-mile distribution of the products by crowdsourcing the trips among professional drivers.
Nilus' operations are technology-based. We have developed 3 digital solutions for our three users in the marketplace:
(1) Stock Management System: this is a platform to: (i) create and manage stock online, (ii) create trips, (iii) register and manage users of the two mobile solutions, (iv) generate metrics and reports.
(2) Community Kitchens App: this is a mobile app that community kitchens use to placer orders and process payments.
(3) Driver App: this is a mobile app for our professional drivers to manage trip requests; receive pick-up and delivery information; and confirm the delivery of the products.
Our mission is to reduce food insecurity and malnutrition, by making it possible for low income people to access healthy food in a sustainable manner. Malnutrition is a problem that affects low income people disproportionately, because of inefficiencies in the food supply chain.
In Latin America, for example, transportation and intermediation costs account for a 270% markup on the price of the food from farm to fork.
Therefore, by reducing inefficiencies in the food supply chain - using food that would otherwise be wasted and crowdsourcing the last-mile logistics - we are able to offer healthy food at 30-50% of the market price, and make it affordable for the most vulnerable to food insecurity.
In addition, by tapping into food that would otherwise be wasted - because it is close to its expiration date, or because it has aesthetic or packaging defects - we are also making a meaningful contribution towards climate change (and human health). Consider that if food waste was a country, it would be the third emitter in the world after the US and China.
- Improve supply chain practices to reduce food loss, scale new business models for producer-market connections, and create low-carbon cold chains
We are aligned in three main ways:
- We are actively preventing food loss and waste, by creating a distribution channel for food producers and retailers with food at risk of being wasted.
- By creating a distribution channel in low income neighborhoods - unexplored for most of our suppliers - we are creating new business models for producer-market connections.
- By delivering food waste and crowdsourcing last-mile logistics, we are reducing the carbon footprint of the industry. In fact, the UN FAO estimates that for every ton of food waste rescued, we save 1:45 gigatons of CO2 equivalent emissions.
- Growth: An organization with an established product, service, or business model rolled out in one or, ideally, several communities, which is poised for further growth

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