Contribution "WFP Humanitarian Innovation Accelerator"



Projektträger: WFP - World Food Programme Land: Developing countries, unspecified Fördersumme: € 1.000.000,00 Beginn: 01.12.2022 Ende: 31.12.2024

Kurzbeschreibung:

Projektziel


To enable humanitarian innovation and improve the lives of vulnerable communities, the Humanitarian Innovation Accelerator will:


- Identify high impact ventures, which are working on innovations addressing the prioritized challenges published in a call for innovations.

- Design, deliver and manage an acceleration programme that will connect selected ventures with funding, knowledge, and networks

that may help them move along their pathway to scale in a sustainable way.

- Create collaborative spaces that promote new private-public collaborations.

- Track the increased adoption of the innovations and their intended impact.

- Attract funding from multiple donors and enable funding to humanitarian innovation ventures.


Erwartete Ergebnisse


Overall, the Humanitarian Innovation Accelerator aims to achieve the following results:


- 10+ high potential ventures are sourced and selected per year (50% local startups, 30% female led (at least 50% women in leadership team).

- At least 75% of ventures participating in the Humanitarian Innovation Accelerator added value to their innovation.

- Networking opportunities have connected 50% of innovators to relevant collaborations and/or valuable funding that enhance their innovation.

- 100% of selected ventures have a MEL framework and financial plan in place with a reporting schedule aligned to their project plan.


At the beginning of the programme, a Project Tracker will be created to enable the startups to define and report on impact and performance indicators. Their impact will be tracked in terms of reach (how many people have access to the innovation) and depth (what positive impact can the innovation create), while

performance will be tracked in terms of milestone achievement.


Zielgruppe


The primary Target Group are ventures which are established legal entities in their target countries working on innovation in a humanitarian context.


The main users of the innovations created by the selected ventures are intermediary organizations and beneficiaries:


- Intermediary organizations refer to organizations (e.g. NGOs, Government, private enterprises) who will become users of the innovation or enable access to implementation of the innovation (e.g. access to the field, delivery of field work, access to fundraising, access to technical support).

- Beneficiaries refer to the poorest reachable strata for which food aid can help to achieve a developmental outcome. In the case of the Humanitarian Innovation Accelerator, beneficiaries of innovation projects are people impacted by conflict or disaster.


The contribution from ADA will enable the following:


- Up to 10 ventures will be sourced and invited to participate in an Innovation Bootcamp

- Up to 5 ventures will be selected to participate in the Sprint Programme with the provision of an equity-free grant of up to EUR 119.000

- ADA’s funded workstream will give special consideration in the application process to civil society organizations


Maßnahmen


The Humanitarian Innovation Accelerator programme will be executed in four phases:


0. Workstream Design: Design and setup of workstreams; identify and onboard relevant stakeholders, including Innovation Committee; establish communications strategy; define and prepare call for innovations including problem discovery, challenge framing and selection and eligibility criteria.

1. Source: Publish and promote call for innovations; perform proactive sourcing activities; review applications and curate long-list; interview and shortlist; present shortlisted teams to Innovation Committee for scoring; select innovation bootcamp participants.

2. Boost: Deliver bootcamp experience for selected startups including innovation plenaries, workshops and networking moments; support innovators with their action plans and applications to sprint programme; deliver pitch training; review sprint applications; organize and host pitch events.

3. Award: Conduct due diligence of pre-selected startups, which will include reputational, operational and financial assessments of the potential grantees; complete project plans; present results to WFP’s compliance committee; establish grant agreement of WFP with

startups.

4. Accelerate: Deliver sprint programme with coaching sessions to help startups work on the desirability, feasibility and viability of their solutions; disburse funding to selected startups; provide access to mentors; host networking opportunities; set up and manage community platform; track progress on implementation of action plans; attract relevant potential partners; host share out events.


Hintergrundinformation


In 2022 alone, a staggering 274 million people worldwide will need humanitarian assistance and protection. This number is a significant increase from 235 million people only a year ago, which was already the highest figure in decades. The compounding challenges of COVID-19, conflict, climate shocks and economic instability have meant that while humanitarian needs have sky-rocketed, resources have hit rock bottom. The United Nations and partner organizations aim to assist 183 million people most in need across 63 countries, which will require USD 41 billion.3 As the challenge is immense, innovation must quickly disrupt business-as-usual in the humanitarian sector and develop locally-led, scalable solutions to the world’s most pressing problems.


So far the experience leading and supporting humanitarian innovation initiatives globally has shown that sourcing and supporting local innovators and developing a community of innovation in humanitarian assistance adds value and impact. There is an opportunity to build on the support provided to innovators in humanitarian assistance by providing a platform of support to innovators working in humanitarian innovation. This will enable innovators to access funding from a variety of sources, innovation and technical support as well as access to a network of support organizations and a community of like-minded innovators.

Projektnummer 2881-00/2022
Mittelherkunft OEZA
Sektor Humanitäre Hilfe: Sofortmaßnahmen
Tied
Modalität
Marker Geschlecht: 1, Armut: 1
  • Marker: kennzeichnet und bewertet die entwicklungspolitische Zielsetzung eines Projektes auf Gendergleichstellung, Reproduktive Gesundheit, Umweltschutz, Demokratieförderung, Armutsorientierung, Entwicklung des Handels sowie auf die Erfüllung der Klima- Biodiversitäts- und Wüstenkonventionen.
    • 1= das entwicklungspolitische Ziel ist in das Projekt integriert
    • 2= das entwicklungspolitsche Ziel ist der spezifische Inhalt des Projekts
  • Mittelherkunft: Die ADA setzt in Projekten und Programmen Mittel der Österreichischen Entwicklungszusammenarbeit (OEZA) sowie anderer Finanzierungsquellen um.
    • AKF - Auslandskatastrophenfonds der Österreichischen Bundesregierung
    • BMLFUW - Bundesministerium für Land- und Forstwirtschaft, Umwelt und Wasserwirtschaft
    • EU - Mittel der Europäischen Kommission
    • Andere Geber - Diverse Finanzquellen, die dem jährlichen Geschäftsbericht der ADA im Detail zu entnehmen sind.
  • Modalität: definiert die Art der Hilfe (z.B: Sektorbudgethilfe, Kernbeiträge an multilaterale Institutionen, Projekthilfe, Technische Assistenz (personelle Hilfe), Bildungsarbeit im Inland, etc.)
  • Sektor: bezeichnet den wirtschaftlichen oder sozialen Sektor des Partnerlandes, welcher mit dem Projekt/Programm unterstützt wird.
  • Tied/Untied: Ungebundene (untied) Hilfe ermöglicht dem Projektpartner im Entwicklungsland - unter Befolgung der lokalen Beschaffungsregeln - freie Entscheidung über die Herkunftsländer im Zuge der Beschaffung von Dienstleistungen und Waren. Gebundene (tied) Hilfe verknüpft die Hilfsleistung auf die Beschaffung aus dem Geberland oder aus einem eingeschränkten Kreis von Ländern.