Pillar 01
Create demand
Shift consumer behaviours towards nutritious foods through mass media campaigns, digital outreach, community activations, cooking demonstrations and practical nutrition messaging.
GAIN programme A1
For millions of people, nutritious foods such as vegetables and animal-source foods remain out of reach they are either too expensive, difficult to access, unsafe, or not appealing enough to be part of daily diets.
Through the A1 programme, we aim to fix this. Working across six African countries, the programme uses market-based solutions to strengthen food systems, improve the availability and affordability of nutritious foods, and support families, school children, and workers to access the safe, healthy food they need to thrive.
Funded by
The A1 programme is fully funded by the Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Department of Inclusive Green Growth (IGG).

Programme snapshot
A1 is a six-country programme working to improve access to affordable, safe and nutritious foods for low-income consumers.
0m / 30.8m
consumers reached out of 30.8m targeted through A1 activities
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people with improved diet quality by 2027
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African countries
2022–2027
Programme duration
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Budget
Programme objective
The objective of A1 is to increase access to and consumption of affordable, healthy diets for base of pyramid consumers, while strengthening their resilience to nutritional shocks through market-based solutions by 2027.
By 2027, the programme aims to reach 31 million people through its activities, with 4.5 million people expected to achieve improved diet quality.
Target year: 2027
Improve access to affordable, safe and nutritious foods for people who face the greatest barriers to healthy diets, including low-income families, school children and workers.
Use market-based solutions to improve the availability, affordability and appeal of nutritious foods by working with businesses, vendors, producers and supply-chain actors.
Build stronger food systems that help vulnerable consumers maintain access to nutritious foods during periods of stress, including rising food prices, supply disruptions and reduced household purchasing power.
Programme approach
A1 uses market-based solutions to make nutritious foods more desirable, affordable, accessible and sustainable for low-income consumers.
Pillar 01
Shift consumer behaviours towards nutritious foods through mass media campaigns, digital outreach, community activations, cooking demonstrations and practical nutrition messaging.
Pillar 02
Work with vendors, SMEs, producers and supply-chain actors to make safe, nutritious foods more available, affordable and practical in the places where people live, work and shop.
Pillar 03
Support policies, standards, partnerships and regulatory systems that improve food safety, fortification, responsible production and long-term access to healthier diets.
Explore how A1 works across priority value chains in six African countries, combining demand creation, improved market access and enabling environments to deliver measurable nutrition impact.
Select a country on the map or use the tabs to explore each programme focus and activity.
Kenya
The Vegetables for All project works to increase vegetable consumption among low-income consumers across six counties in Kenya: Nairobi, Kiambu, Machakos, Nakuru, Mombasa, and Kilifi.
The project aims to impact over 1.2 million consumers at the base of the pyramid with improved diets. It operates through three pillars: generating demand for vegetables, improving access to fresh and safe produce, and strengthening the enabling environment.
At the heart of the project is the FoodFiti brand — “fiti” being Kenyan slang for good, fine, and fit. Through mass media campaigns, community cooking demonstrations, and digital outreach, the project repositions vegetables as desirable and affordable.
Last-mile vegetable vendors, known as mama mbogas, are central to the model: branded and trained, they bring fresh vegetables directly into low-income neighbourhoods. Safe supply is ensured by connecting vendors to wholesalers sourcing from Good Agricultural Practice-compliant farmers, while cold storage facilities help reduce post-harvest losses and maintain freshness.
To change perceptions and drive lasting behaviour change, the project combines TV and radio campaigns with consumer activations and targeted digital outreach via Facebook and SMS. A recipe book co-created with the Ministry of Health showcases vegetable variety and new ways of cooking them. At policy level, the project supports food safety legislation at both county and national level, conducts pesticide residue testing, and advocates for greater government investment in food safety.
Mozambique
The Animal Source Foods project works to increase the consumption of fish and poultry among low-income consumers across 51 districts in the Beira and Nacala corridors of Mozambique.
The project aims to impact over 1.4 million consumers at the base of the pyramid with improved diet diversity. It operates through three pillars: making animal source foods more desirable, affordable and accessible, while advocating for policy changes that support the ASF sector.
To shift consumer behaviour, the project runs mass media campaigns on TV and radio, complemented by community-level activities through ProConsumers — including cooking demonstrations, market events, and outreach in schools and churches.
Campaigns highlight affordable options such as dried fish and low-cost chicken cuts, and incorporate gender-sensitive messaging to promote equitable food distribution within households.
On the access side, the project focuses on the most affordable ASF options and invests in developing an enhanced last-mile delivery system from aggregation points to retailers. It supports distribution networks by investing in processing, fish drying technology, and cold chain from main distribution centres through to retail.
SMEs receive grants and technical assistance in management, food safety, and cold chain operations. At policy level, the project works closely with the Government of Mozambique and business and consumer associations to strengthen the enabling environment for the ASF sector, including support for a national poultry master plan.
Ethiopia
The Ethiopia project combines three complementary initiatives to improve the diets of 845,000 low-income consumers: a dairy consumption programme, a workforce nutrition intervention, and a large-scale food fortification programme.
The Better Dairy for All initiative works to increase dairy consumption among low-income consumers in the Amhara region. Through community interactions, mass media, and support to SMEs, cooperatives and retail outlets, the project raises awareness, overcomes cultural barriers to dairy consumption, and improves access to safe and affordable milk — including through innovations such as dairy dispensaries.
The project also supports regional government in the development and enforcement of a dairy strategy. This initiative runs until June 2026.
The workforce nutrition initiative operates across large-scale farms and industrial parks in eleven cities, aiming to improve the diets of workers and their families. Working directly with company management, the project diversifies workplace menus in line with national dietary guidelines, trains canteen managers and suppliers on nutritious meal preparation, and provides nutrition education through a peer educator model.
The food fortification initiative focuses on ensuring that edible oil — a dietary staple — is fortified to national standards. While Ethiopia has recently introduced mandatory fortification legislation, challenges remain around imported oil quality and domestic vitamin A premix supply.
The project addresses these gaps by strengthening regulatory oversight, expanding domestic coverage of vitamin A premix, and training local oil producers on fortification compliance.
Nigeria
The Nigeria Enhancing Access to Safe and Nutritious Diets project works to improve access to and consumption of vegetables and fortified foods among low-income households in Kaduna, Kano, and Kebbi states, impacting over 202,000 consumers at the base of the pyramid.
The vegetable initiative supports smallholder farmers to increase vegetable production, view farming as a business, and retain enough produce for household consumption before selling surplus locally.
Farmers are trained on Good Agricultural Practices and Climate-Smart Agriculture, with demonstration plots established to boost production of nutritious vegetables.
Awareness creation activities at community level — delivered through Civil Society Organisations, compound meetings and cooking demonstrations — encourage farmers and neighbouring households to increase the frequency and variety of vegetables in their diets, generating a spillover effect into surrounding communities.
The fortified rice initiative develops a sustainable supply chain linking the school feeding programme to local fortified rice producers in Kebbi state, advocating for increased government funding and long-term connections between the state’s fortified rice mill and school feeding structures.
On the enabling environment side, the project engages government, private sector actors, and farmer associations to ensure ownership and sustainability of both initiatives beyond the project’s lifetime.
Uganda
The Uganda project combines two complementary initiatives to improve diets among low-income consumers across eight districts: a vegetables programme and a workforce nutrition intervention, together impacting over 200,000 consumers at the base of the pyramid.
The Vegetables for All initiative — adapted from Kenya’s model to the Ugandan context — drives demand for vegetables through TV and radio campaigns paired with community cooking demonstrations, where consumers can taste prepared vegetables and discover the appealing flavours of different varieties.
To ensure access to fresh and safe produce, last-mile vendors are branded under the Fit Food brand and coached on good handling practices. Vendors are linked to Market Facilitators who aggregate orders, source from farmer producer organisations, and deliver directly to vendors.
This model enables traceability and direct communication with value chain actors on responsible pesticide use and food safety.
The workforce nutrition initiative engages companies — including Dutch-owned businesses — to improve employee diets through menu improvements, nutrition education, health checks, and breastfeeding support.
The initiative benefits from strong political momentum, including a forthcoming MoU with the Office of the Prime Minister and the Ministry of Health.
Benin
The Benin project combines two complementary initiatives to improve diets among low-income consumers: a vegetables programme and a large-scale food fortification initiative, together impacting over 360,000 consumers at the base of the pyramid.
The Vegetables for All initiative — adapted from Kenya’s model under the Nanavi brand, “the Amazone of Flavour” — drives demand for vegetables through TV and radio campaigns, recipe sharing, and community demonstrations across Abomey-Calavi, Cotonou, Seme-Kpodji, Porto-Novo and Bohicon.
Last-mile vendors are branded with Nanavi materials at point of sale and coached on good handling practices, while market facilitators connect farmers to vendors, ensuring timely supply of a wider variety of quality vegetables.
Vegetables are sourced through farmer networks trained to reduce pesticide use under the SAFEVEG project, promoting safer food for consumers. Business coaches support market facilitators on data collection, quality, and traceability.
The food fortification initiative works to increase access to adequately fortified edible oil, iodised salt, and maize flour — both in local markets and through the school feeding programme.
The project strengthens the capacity of local producers and the regulatory body ABSSA to monitor fortification quality at import, production, and retail levels. Technical assistance supports maize flour and salt producers in meeting national standards, while policy coordination is advanced through the revival of the National Fortification Alliance and the development of a National Fortification Strategy.
Sustainability is anchored in regulatory enforcement, strengthened market linkages, and the institutionalisation of fortified foods within the national school feeding programme.
A1 programme
Explore how A1 works across priority value chains in six African countries, combining demand creation, improved market access and enabling environments to deliver measurable nutrition impact. The programme is fully funded by the Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Department of Inclusive Green Growth (IGG).
Kenya
Focus: Vegetables
Increases vegetable consumption among low-income consumers across six counties using the FoodFiti brand, mama mboga vendors, safe supply chains and food safety advocacy.
Mozambique
Focus: Fish & Poultry
Increases fish and poultry consumption across 51 districts through demand creation, improved last-mile delivery, cold chain support and policy engagement.
Ethiopia
Focus: Dairy & Fortified Oil
Combines dairy, workforce nutrition and edible oil fortification to improve diets among low-income consumers and workers.
Nigeria
Focus: Vegetables & Fortified Rice
Improves access to vegetables and fortified rice among low-income households in Kaduna, Kano and Kebbi.
Uganda
Focus: Vegetables
Combines vegetable demand creation, last-mile vendor support and workforce nutrition.
Benin
Focus: Vegetables & Fortified Staples
Combines vegetables and large-scale fortification of salt, edible oil and maize flour.
Explore stories and resources showing how A1 and Vegetables for All are helping make nutritious vegetables more desirable, accessible and practical for everyday diets from consumer education to supply chains, vendors and communities.
Watch
A featured video showing how vegetables can support healthier diets and how programmes like Vegetables for All are working to make them more appealing, accessible and practical for everyday meals.
Read
A practical resource on why diverse vegetables matter for improved diets, health and nutrition outcomes.
Impact story
A Uganda impact story showing how suppliers help connect farmers, vendors and families with safe, fresh vegetables.
Field story
Mary Wamuyu’s journey to nourish her community and strengthen her vegetable business through FoodFiti.
Op-ed
An opinion piece on the role female market vendors can play in improving nutrition and food access in Benin.