Food Systems Grants in New Zealand: Funding Food Security and Sustainable Food

Food is fundamental to wellbeing, yet food insecurity is a significant and growing problem in New Zealand. Concurrently, concerns about food system sustainability — agricultural emissions, biodiversity impacts, soil health — are driving transformation in how food is produced and distributed. Grant funding supports a wide range of food system initiatives: from emergency food provision to community gardens, from school food programmes to regenerative agriculture.

Food insecurity in New Zealand

Scale

Food insecurity has grown in New Zealand:
- Food banks report significantly increased demand — driven by cost of living pressures
- Approximately 1 in 8 New Zealanders experiences food insecurity at some point in a year
- Children in low-income families are particularly affected
- Māori and Pacific families are disproportionately food insecure
- Geographic food deserts in remote communities

Root causes

Food insecurity reflects broader economic inequality:
- Low wages and precarious work
- High housing costs leaving insufficient for food
- Welfare adequacy
- Social isolation (inability to access food systems)

Emergency food provision

Food banks

Food banks are the frontline response to immediate food insecurity:
- City Mission food banks
- Salvation Army food provision
- Church-based food pantries
- KiwiHarvest and similar food rescue

Funding for food banks

  • Gaming trusts (equipment, operations)
  • Lotteries Community
  • Government (MSD Emergency Relief)
  • Corporate and individual philanthropy

KiwiHarvest

New Zealand's food rescue organisation — collecting surplus food from supermarkets, restaurants, and producers for redistribution. Funded through philanthropy and partnerships.

Community food initiatives

Community gardens

Community gardens provide fresh produce and social connection:
- Neighbourhood gardens on council land
- School gardens for education and supplementary food
- Mārae gardens
- Supported gardens for people with disabilities

Funding: gaming trusts, local councils, community foundations, Lotteries.

Community fridges and free food

Community fridges — publicly accessible refrigerators with donated food — growing across New Zealand. Minimal funding required but municipal coordination.

Community kitchens

Shared kitchen facilities for food production:
- Community cooking classes
- Meal preparation for vulnerable community members
- Small food businesses incubation
- Preserved food production (preserving, pickling)

Kai Not Waste

Surplus food redistribution and food waste reduction — funded through MBIE and philanthropy.

School food programmes

School lunches

The Government's Healthy School Lunches programme provides lunches to students in lower-decile schools — government contracted, not grant-funded, but significant.

Breakfast clubs

KickStart Breakfast (Fonterra and Sanitarium funded — not grants but significant in-kind donation) provides breakfast to thousands of children.

School gardens and food education

  • Enviroschools (including food and growing)
  • Edible School Gardens
  • Tāngata Aro (Māori-led school garden programmes)

Sustainable food production grants

Organic farming transition

  • BioGro NZ organic certification support
  • Organic farming grants (limited — primarily commercial)

Regenerative agriculture

  • Soil health programmes
  • Carbon farming
  • Reduced chemical input farming

Agtech and food innovation

  • Callaghan Innovation food and beverage development
  • MPI Sustainable Food and Fibre Futures (for larger projects)
  • Alternative protein research and development

Māori food sovereignty

  • Mahinga kai (traditional food gathering) restoration
  • Kaitiakitanga-based food production
  • Māori agribusiness development

Pacific food systems

Pacific communities have rich food traditions — and specific food security challenges:
- High rates of food-insecure Pacific families in New Zealand
- Loss of traditional food practices in urban settings
- Cultural food as health (traditional Pacific foods vs processed)
- Church-based food sharing as cultural practice

Funding for Pacific food security: Pacific health providers, Ministry for Pacific Peoples, gaming trusts.

Urban food systems

Urban farming grants

  • Community garden development in cities
  • Urban orchards
  • Rooftop and vertical farming pilots
  • Urban food forests

Local food economy

  • Farmers markets support
  • Community-supported agriculture (CSA)
  • Local food procurement for institutions

Key funders for food systems

Lotteries Community

Lotteries grants fund community food programmes — food banks, community kitchens, school food.

Gaming trusts

Gaming trusts fund food security:
- Food bank equipment
- Refrigeration for community food initiatives
- Kitchen equipment for community cooking

Foundation North

Auckland and Northland food security and community food programmes.

The Tindall Foundation

Community food and food security investment.

Community foundations

Local community foundations fund food security and community food initiatives.

Corporate food philanthropy

Foodstuffs, Countdown (Woolworths NZ), and other food retailers fund food bank operations and food security programmes.

Government MSD

Emergency Relief funding through MSD supports food bank operations.

Grant applications for food systems

Food security vs. food experience

Applications should be clear about whether the primary goal is addressing food insecurity (economic access to food) or food education and experience (growing, cooking). Both are fundable but different funders prioritise differently.

Sustainability and scale

Show how the food programme will continue beyond the grant — volunteer sustainability, community ownership, self-funded elements.

Cultural appropriateness

For Māori and Pacific communities — show cultural appropriateness of food. Mainstream food banks providing non-Pacific food to Pacific families miss the mark.

Community ownership

Community food initiatives are most effective when communities own and run them — not externally managed. Show genuine community leadership.

Nutrition and health connection

Connect food provision to nutrition and health outcomes — particularly for children's food programmes. Show the health dimension of food access.


Tahua's grants management platform supports food system organisations and community food funders — with programme outcome tracking, beneficiary reach data, community food grant management, and the tools that help food security funders demonstrate impact across emergency food provision, community food, and food system sustainability programmes.

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