$1-a-Day Nutrition: Exploring an Ultra-Low-Cost, Shelf-Stable Approach to Global Hunger

By Keen Visionary @ 2025-09-05T19:51 (+26)

Ingredient costs for a fully nutritious meal: ~$0.20.

This could retail for ~$0.35.

Therefore it should.

TLDR: I need a cofounder/partner types who thrive on execution, scaling, and operations.

 

If we can produce a fortified, shelf-stable meal at $0.20 in ingredients (~$1/day retail for full nutrition), why isn’t this the global default for how people get their nutrition?

Those meals EXIST (WFP/UNICEF/RAH etc), but are not available at retail.
Big Food is -not- incetivized to provide this (low margin, would cannibalize high-margin low-nutrition products).

A public benefit corporation could leverage capitalism while addressing a global issue. 

 

The principle behind this project: build food from nutrition up, not from tradition down.

 

1. The Problem

Hunger and malnutrition remain among the world’s most stubborn problems.

 

Effective Altruism has rightly emphasized highly cost-effective interventions like malaria prevention (AMF) and unconditional cash transfers (GiveDirectly). Food aid has often been deprioritized as expensive or logistically messy. Yet the question remains: could there be a scalable, logistics-driven food solution that makes adequate nutrition universally affordable?

 

2. The Idea

We are developing NutriMeal (working title): a fortified, plant-based, shelf-stable meal designed to cost ~US$0.30 per serving, targeting ~US$1 per day for full nutrition.

 

Core principles:

 

Our hypothesis: hunger is less about “not enough food” and more about inefficient distribution and unaffordable nutrition. By treating food as a logistics/engineering challenge, we might unlock solutions that complement existing aid models.

 

3. Why This Could Be Different

 

4. Current Status

 

5. Key Challenges

From our perspective, two issues dominate:

 

  1. Making it desirable: Even if nutrition and cost are solved, success depends on consistent demand. Taste, texture, and cultural appeal will make or break adoption.
  2. Scaling: Achieving and maintaining <$0.30/meal depends on scaling production and distribution efficiently across multiple geographies without unduly harming local actors. Getting the logistics right is as important as the formulation.

And of course, Big Food is unlikely to just let this happen. 

 

6. Collaboration (Most Important)

I’m a visionary more than an operator. I have founded and scaled businesses before, but operations has never been my strongest suit. The project now needs cofounder/partner types who thrive on execution, scaling, and operations. This is the most important piece for moving NutriMeal forward.

 

I can provide initial funding to support the early phase, but I need someone who can turn resources + concept into structured execution.

 

If you remember only one thing from this post: I am looking for a strong partner to co-lead this — someone who can take a big vision and drive execution at scale.

 

7. Closing

This is  early work. But I’d rather invite EA feedback now than polish in isolation.

If successful, a $1-a-day, nutritionally complete, shelf-stable meal could make nutrition the universally affordable sustainable default, while also strengthening global resilience to shocks.

I’d be grateful for any critiques, suggestions, or introductions.

 

References:


Larks @ 2025-09-06T00:43 (+6)

I'd recommend talking to the Mealsquares team about their experience building a similar product.

Keen Visionary @ 2025-09-06T10:52 (+3)

Good idea — Likely some valuable insights. Would you happen to have a contact there?

Kestrel🔸 @ 2025-09-06T09:47 (+3)

Strong upvote for use of EA worker time in this kind of thing - it could very well be a funding-neutral project that would inherently improve international food resilience.

Mart_Korz @ 2025-09-15T18:36 (+1)

This is an interesting idea, thanks for sharing!

While thinking about your suggestion a little, I learned about RUTF (peanut-based ready-to-eat meals used to treat child malnutrition) which appear to be rather established. Using the UNICEF 2024 numbers they distributed enough RUTF to feed half a million people throughout the year if we go by calories[1]

According to UNICEF:RUTF-price-data a box of 150 meals (92 g which should correspond to ~500 kcal) costs them around $50 (using 2023 numbers and rounding up). Boiling this down to 2 000 kcal per day, this corresponds to a $1.33/day nutrition.

A few important aspects of RUTF are different than your suggestion (aimed at temporary treatment of malnutrition in children and not general nutrition for all ages, the prices above are not consumer prices, main ingredients differ, RUTF avoids the requirement of adding safe water which might not be easily available), but it seems to me that this supports your cost-estimate at least for large-scale purchases.

I think that together with existing consumer brands for meal-replacement powders, RUTF could be a second great reference for a similar and established idea :)

  1. ^

    Of course, RUTF is used as a temporary treatment so that the amount corresponds to a potential of 5.1 million treated children according to the linked dashboard

Keen Visionary @ 2025-09-16T12:39 (+2)

Yes, I've validated the concept with RAH's Philippines Executive Director. Their cost at scale for meal packs is in that range, similar-ish content.

I'm planning to add a comparison to that, plumpy'nut, huel, mealsquares, soylent etc to the website.

Ideally, our meals would be dehydrated bars that can be eaten as-is, with the possibility to rehydrate it into a crumbly format that can be used as a meat-replacement ingredient to cook any culturally-appropriate local recipe.