Source · Select Committees · International Development Committee
Recommendation 24
24
Not Addressed
UK's extensive nutrition and food security research resources remain underutilised.
Conclusion
The UK has a tremendous array of research institutes and a strong history of contributing to the fields of nutrition and food security. There is more the Government could be doing to make use of these resources and to integrate learning into programming. (Conclusion, Paragraph 74)
Government Response Summary
The government's response primarily discusses future ODA budget decisions and existing investments in the Child Nutrition Fund and Child Wasting and Innovation Programme, but does not explicitly address how it will do more to leverage UK research institutes or better integrate learning into programming.
Government Response
Not Addressed
HM Government
Not Addressed
Partially Agree. The decision on what the UK will spend its future ODA budget on is being worked through following the decision to reduce UK ODA from 0.5% of GNI currently to 0.3% in 2027. We will be taking a rigorous approach to ensure all ODA delivers value for money and will set out our spending plans following the completion of the Spending Review. We are therefore not in a position to agree or disagree to the recommendation regarding any future pledge to the Child Nutrition Fund. The FCDO agrees on the importance of ensuring that funding for key nutrition commodities and services is predictable and long-term and that, to support sustainability, this should be done in partnership with national governments and support local production wherever possible. This is why the UK is proud to have co-founded the Child Nutrition Fund (CNF) which we continue to support as a member of its steering committee. FCDO investment in the CNF so far totals over £15 million. The CNF has used FCDO’s and others’ contributions to leverage an additional $33 million in domestic contributions from several high-burden countries. Our wider investments through the Child Wasting and Innovation Programme (CWIP) have also supported the diversification of the local supplier base for key commodities which has led to an increase in proportion of RUTF coming from local producers in West and Central Africa from 26% in 2019 to 78% in 2024. Our CWIP investments have also supported eleven national governments to integrate RUTF into national supply chain systems and the generation of evidence around more cost-effective formulations of RUTF using locally available ingredients.