Gulf News

Surplus food from UAE hotels to feed refugees

UAE FOOD BANK IN ALLIANCE TO DISTRIBUTE FROZEN, VACUUM-PACKED EXCESS FOOD ABROAD

- BY SAJILA SASEENDRAN Senior Reporter

Surplus food from starrated hotels and other food outlets in Dubai will soon feed Syrian and Yemeni refugees and the needy in countries like Somalia, thanks to the UAE Food Bank spreading its wings.

The Food Bank has signed a partnershi­p agreement with the Food Banking Regional Network (FBRN), which connects 33 food banks in 32 countries in the region, including the UAE.

As per the agreement, surplus food donated to the UAE Food Bank will be sent to the needy in these countries through FBRN.

Dawood Abdul Rahman Al Hajiri, director general of Dubai Municipali­ty and deputy chairman of the UAE Food Bank’s board of trustees, said it is part of the food bank’s strategy to extend its operations outside the UAE.

“This is a big step for this humanitari­an project. It will give us a chance to support the needy in many countries and reduce food wastage,” said Al Hajiri.

Since April 2017 till the end of last July, the food bank — through its two branches in Dubai — channelled the donation of 615 tonnes of food, which would otherwise have gone to waste. “So far, we have not sent any food outside the UAE. Now, it will start.”

The third branch of the food bank, sponsored by the Easa Al Gurg Charity Foundation, will open in Al Muhaisnah in two months, said Khalid Sharif Al Awadhi, assistant director general of Environmen­t, Health and Safety Control Sector at Dubai Municipali­ty.

Reducing waste

Surplus cooked food will be frozen and vacuum-packed to ensure safety, before being sent outside the UAE.

“We have a lot of [surplus] food and there are not many people lacking food here. Our aim is to reduce the food wastage here. In five years, all the hotels in the UAE should reduce organic waste. It is very important,” he said.

Packaged and canned food products will also be sent to the needy abroad. The donations will be channelled through charity organisati­ons approved by FBRN.

A non-profit organisati­on registered at the Internatio­nal Humanitari­an City in Dubai in 2013, FBRN is engaged in safe packaging and transporta­tion of donated foodstuffs to partner charity organisati­ons.

Moez Al Shohdi, FBRN’s cofounder and CEO, said the first model of the food bank under it was launched in Egypt in 2006. “We now serve more than 12 million people through different programmes. In Egypt alone, we’re saving 20 million meals per month from wastage. What we can save here in the UAE will be much more.”

Food wastage is estimated at Dh4 billion a year, ranking the UAE as the fourth highest in the world per capita for throwing away surplus food.

Food from the UAE will be channelled through food banks under FBRN that serve the needy, including refugees from war-hit countries like Syria and Yemen, malnourish­ed children in Somalia, and the sick and the unemployed in Egypt.

“We also provide food to people who are unable to work including the elderly, households with chronic diseases, single mothers and orphans. Food waste reduction awareness campaigns are also part of our activities.”

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 ?? Source: Dubai Municipali­ty ©Gulf News ??
Source: Dubai Municipali­ty ©Gulf News

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