The New Zealand Herald

Making A Difference: KiwiHarves­t CEO Deborah Manning

Viva and Dilmah Tea celebrate women creating change for a positive future

- This is part of a special Viva and Dilmah editorial series celebratin­g inspiratio­nal women excelling in their fields. To see more, go to Viva.co.nz/Dilmah • For more informatio­n, visit Kiwiharves­t.org.nz

The old adage: ‘one man’s trash is another man’s treasure’ rings true for Deborah Manning.

She’s the driving force behind KiwiHarves­t, a food rescue organisati­on that works with more than 300 food businesses to rescue surplus fresh food they aren’t able to sell.

These businesses include supermarke­ts, wholesaler­s, growers, manufactur­ers, producers, farmers markets, cafes, restaurant­s and hotels. The KiwiHarves­t team then deliver good food, free of charge, to New Zealand charities and people in need.

Dubbed the ‘perishable food rescuers’, KiwiHarves­t has delivered 5,577,182 meals since Deborah founded the organisati­on in Dunedin in 2012.

Deborah’s ‘ah-ha’ moment came while reading a story about dumpster divers seven years ago. The former physiother­apist and qualified lawyer always had a passion for people, saying she “genuinely wanted to leave the world a better place for my children and grandchild­ren.”

After learning about global food rescue initiative­s, Deborah sought out to start her own — and so FoodShare was born.

“I’d take day-old bread and other supplies in my car to food banks. Eventually, the car got so full of food I couldn’t see out the back window. My local car dealer donated a van,” she says.

Across the ditch, Australia was following suit and developed OzHarvest with the support of the Goodman Foundation. Deborah says she jumped at the opportunit­y to ask the charity to help her establish a similar model here in New Zealand. FoodShare merged with KiwiHarves­t, and the rest, as they say, is history.

Today, the organisati­on has seven refrigerat­ed vehicles on the road — the newest of which services the Hawke’s Bay area in collaborat­ion with food bank Nourished for Nil.

With establishe­d bases in both Auckland and Dunedin, Deborah has her sights set on opening a base in Queenstown, before deploying vehicles all over the country. “We are always looking to expand to new cities and towns or to collaborat­e with existing services to rescue fresh food to support those in need,” she says.

But as the business grows, so too does the need for volunteers. This financial year alone KiwiHarves­t saw 5,000 hours volunteere­d to help deliver rescued food.

“We take care of our volunteers not only because they bring irreplacea­ble value to the business, but also because they take our message into the community,” Deborah says.

However, the impact of KiwiHarves­t goes far beyond helping those in need.

Food that is lost or wasted produces carbon emissions, in the form of electricit­y used to manufactur­e and process food; energy used to transport, store and cook food; landfill emissions, as well as emissions from a change in land use and deforestat­ion.

“40% of food produced does not make it to market. By keeping this food in the value chain we are reducing the greenhouse gas emissions associated with its loss and waste,” Deborah says.

While thousands of people have benefited from the efforts of the KiwiHarves­t team so far, it’s important to note that not all food can be rescued. “Food safety is our number one priority. KiwiHarves­t has strict food safe handling policies and procedures to ensure the food we pass on is safe and suitable for people,” Deborah explains.

“Every donation of food is assessed with the food donor, and we match it to the needs of the community groups to ensure safe handling and responsibl­e redistribu­tion.”

As 2019 looms, Deborah and her team have a national food rescue distributi­on hub in the pipeline for Auckland early next year. This hub will ensure KiwiHarves­t continues on its current trajectory, while presenting new opportunit­ies to partner with likeminded organisati­ons and galvanise community action.

“We need to grow the support of both public and private partnershi­ps to build capacity and scale our operations. Our growth is so fast we can barely keep up. So being transparen­t and having measurable impacts with real environmen­tal, social and financial benefits, we are encouraged that our family of supporters and sponsors continues to grow.”

“KiwiHarves­t doesn’t want to stand still on the war of food waste.”

 ?? Photo / Supplied ?? Deborah Manning.
Photo / Supplied Deborah Manning.
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