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Request for Expressions of Interest: GFA Northern State in Sudan

Up to €300,000 in Equity-free Funding available for Food Startups, SMEs & Researchers

Deadline: 18-Dec-2025

The World Food Programme (WFP) is seeking a cooperating partner to implement food assistance in Northern Sudan, targeting internally displaced persons (IDPs) and vulnerable communities. The initiative provides in-kind and cash-based food support, nutritional interventions for high-risk groups, and biometric registration to ensure accurate, accountable delivery. This partnership strengthens food security, prevents malnutrition, and supports community resilience in a region affected by ongoing crises.

Overview

The World Food Programme (WFP) invites organisations to collaborate in delivering essential food assistance in Northern Sudan. The programme addresses critical food insecurity among IDPs and vulnerable resident populations affected by conflict, displacement, and economic challenges. The cooperating partner will support in-kind food distribution, cash-based transfers, nutrition interventions, and beneficiary verification through biometric registration.

Programme Objectives

Key Components of the Programme

1. Food Assistance Delivery

2. Monitoring and Reporting

3. Nutrition Support for Vulnerable Groups

4. Biometric Registration and Verification

Who Is Eligible?

Why This Opportunity Matters

How to Apply (General Guidance)

  1. Register as a WFP Partner

    • Create or update a profile on the UN Partner Portal.

    • Upload organisational documents and compliance information.

  2. Prepare Proposals

    • Technical proposal outlining operational capacity, methodology, staffing, and monitoring.

    • Financial proposal detailing budget and cost justification.

    • Security plan for safe operations in Northern Sudan.

  3. Submit Required Documentation

    • Organisational profile, past performance references, staffing plan, risk mitigation strategies, and monitoring framework.

  4. Evaluation and Selection

    • Assessment based on technical capacity, local presence, cost-effectiveness, and compliance with WFP standards.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

FAQ

1. What types of assistance will the partner deliver?
Both in-kind food commodities and cash-based transfers depending on local conditions.

2. Who are the primary beneficiaries?
IDPs, vulnerable resident communities, children aged 6–59 months, and pregnant and lactating women.

3. Why is biometric registration required?
To ensure accurate targeting, prevent duplication, and maintain accountability.

4. What reporting is expected by WFP?
Detailed reports on food volumes (metric tons), cash distributed (USD), and beneficiaries disaggregated by gender and age.

5. Does the partner need operational presence in Northern Sudan?
Yes, or the capacity to mobilize experienced teams quickly.

6. Are nutrition services included?
Yes, blanket supplementary feeding for children and nutritional support for pregnant and lactating women are core components.

7. Is this a long-term opportunity?
Engagement is typically through renewable programme cycles based on humanitarian needs.

Conclusion

This WFP partnership in Northern Sudan is critical for ensuring food security, preventing malnutrition, and stabilising vulnerable communities. By managing food and cash distribution, biometric registration, and targeted nutrition interventions, the cooperating partner will play a key role in enhancing resilience and improving the wellbeing of some of Sudan’s most affected populations.

For more information, visit UN Partner Portal.

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