In today’s evolving food landscape, the conversation around food and sustainability is shifting beyond environmental impact to encompass the overall nutritional quality of our food supply. Nutritional quality is directly linked to accessibility and affordability of nutrient dense foods, which can be improved through activities such as product reformulation, ingredient diversity, regenerative agriculture, or in many cases, food fortification.
As the global population grows and food systems face increasing pressure, the intersection of nutrient density, sustainable nutrition, and food fortification is emerging as a critical solution for sustainable food systems to support both human and planetary health.
Nutrient density refers to the concentration of essential vitamins, minerals, and other beneficial compounds in a given food relative to its caloric content. Nutrient density can be naturally occurring or enhanced, such as through food fortification. A diet rich in nutrient-dense foods supports optimal health and helps prevent diet-related diseases. However, global nutrition challenges — including micronutrient deficiencies, food insecurity, and diet-related non-communicable diseases — underscore the urgent need for solutions that prioritize both health and sustainability.
Sustainable nutrition is the synergy between dietary patterns that support human health and practices that preserve environmental resources. This means shifting towards food production and consumption patterns that:
The challenge? Some sustainable food sources, such as plant-based proteins, can lack adequate micronutrients essential for human health. Conversely, some nutrient-dense foods can have a higher environmental footprint. This is where the concept of tradeoff is important to consider and where food fortification can come into play.
Food fortification has long been used to combat malnutrition. According to the FAO, food fortification, is the practice of deliberately increasing the content of one or more essential nutrients in a food to improve its nutritional quality and provide public health benefits. Traditional fortification efforts, such as iodized salt and folic acid-enriched grains, have successfully addressed nutrient deficiencies worldwide. But how does fortification fit within the sustainable nutrition paradigm?
Want to learn more about food fortification?
Check out the Accelerating Food and Nutrition Security through Food Fortification: A Private Sector Playbook, a collaboration between the World Business Council for Sustainable Development and Eat Well Global. This playbook highlights real-world challenges that hinder fortification efforts and explores practical solutions to overcome them, in order to build sustainable business models that drive better public health outcomes.
As food companies seek to align with sustainability goals, fortification programs need to evolve to ensure both efficacy and environmental responsibility. Data-driven strategies, policy harmonization, consumer education and multi-stakeholder collaboration are a few ways to develop successful, viable fortification strategies that improve public health and environmental interest.
Some examples of fortification programs might include:
The Accelerating Food and Nutrition Security through Food Fortification: A Private Sector Playbook includes two inspirational case studies on successful food fortification programs that are positively influencing human and planetary health. Download the playbook here to learn about how stakeholder collaboration could improve iodine deficiencies in India and has improved rates of malnutrition in Kenya.
A sustainable food future depends on a multi-pronged approach that prioritizes nutrient density, fortification, and environmental impact in equal measure. Governments, food producers, and health professionals must work together to create food systems that nourish people while protecting planetary resources.
For businesses and organizations in the food and health sectors, this intersection presents an opportunity: how can your products and policies support both nutrition security and sustainability?
At Eat Well Global, we empower organizations to navigate these challenges, ensuring that sustainable nutrition strategies drive both impact and innovation.