Gates’ Race To Nourish A Warming World: The Promise Of Dairy

Published by:
Country:
Kenya
Focus Region:
Sub-Saharan Africa
Focus Topic:
Livestock&Dairy

In a small town near Eldoret in western Kenya, dairy farmer Coletta Kemboi hands a cup of milk to each of her three children. This simple beverage, one that many around the world take for granted, is “white gold” for her family— a vital source of nourishment, a means of income, and a powerful shield against malnutrition. In her village, dairy farming has begun to transform lives, thanks to innovative interventions that could reshape the future for millions.

Over 14,000 kilometers away, in the Seattle offices of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, co-chair Bill Gates joins me via video conference. He’s here to review the findings of the foundation’s eighth annual Goalkeepers report, A Race to Nourish a Warming World— a scorecard tracking global progress toward the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals most relevant to the foundation’s work.

His message is sobering. “The malnutrition numbers are really shocking,” he stresses. “I don’t like to depress people. I always start out with reminding people of the progress we’ve made. But on malnutrition, the progress actually is pretty modest… In Africa, we’re still at 40%-type levels.”

The report reveals that child stunting— or “low height for age”— has stalled at 24%, with projections suggesting that 23% of children under 5 will still be affected in 2030, falling short of the 2025 target of 15%. Without urgent global action, climate change could push an additional 40 million children into stunting and 28 million more into wasting by 2050.

Amid these disheartening statistics, Gates speaks with passion about the solutions. Among them, the foundation’s investments in dairy interventions hold great promise. These programs aim to increase milk production, improve its safety, and make it more accessible, potentially preventing 109 million cases of child stunting in just five countries— India, Ethiopia, Kenya, Nigeria, and Tanzania— by 2050.

“Dairy is a uniquely high source of nutrients, which allows it to have a very central impact on children’s growth and development,” says Shelly Sundberg, who leads the foundation’s Agricultural Development team’s initiatives to empower women in agriculture, improve food security, and increase climate resilience.