Amazon India to Create 25 Food Gardens in schools in Karnataka
Amazon India announced a new collaboration with ICLEI South Asia to establish 25 urban food gardens in schools in Karnataka by 2027, expanding its nutrition initiatives that have already supported 250,000 schoolchildren across the state. This new program builds on Amazon's ongoing investments in nutrition and will address food security, drive digital inclusion, operational excellence, and sustainability — directly improving the lives of underprivileged children.
Through the
collaboration, Amazon contributed $1 million through its Right Now
Climate Fund to ICLEI South Asia to establish 75 urban food gardens by 2028 in
schools across Bangalore, Delhi, and Kolkata. These gardens provide students
with hands-on experience growing fresh vegetables while learning about
sustainability. Early pilots in Bangalore show strong student participation,
with 10-12 vegetable varieties already distributed to students over four
months. The program will expand to an additional 16 schools in the next six
months.
Amazon's nutrition initiatives in Karnataka also include its long-standing collaboration with AkshayaPatra Foundation. Since supporting Karnataka's KsheeraBhagya milk programme in 2017—which benefited 170,000 children in Bengaluru government schools—the collaboration has evolved to address broader nutrition and education needs. In 2024, Amazon launched Project Aasha, enabling employees to share its expertise in supply chain and logistics to enhance AkshayaPatra's operational capabilities. Amazon employees nationwide have also supported the preparation and distribution of nearly 450,000 nutritious mid-day meals across India in 2025.
"From funding
milk programs to building creative ways for children to understand nutrition,
our programs and initiatives have continuously evolved to meet the changing
needs of children and communities," said Abhinav Singh, VP
Operations, Amazon India and Australia. "Together with AkshayaPatra
and ICLEI, we are creating lasting impact that goes beyond food to education on
nutrition and sustainability in the formative years of a student’s life."
Dr. Monalisa Sen,
Associate Director at ICLEI South Asia added, "Urban gardens
are more than nutrition; they cultivate sustainability awareness and empower
students to grow their own future."
Mr. ShridharVenkat,
CEO of The AkshayaPatra Foundation said, "Amazon has been a
transformative partner since 2017, evolving from the KsheeraBhagya programme to
encompass digital education and operational excellence through Project Aasha.
We are grateful for their continued support as we work towards ensuring no
child in India is deprived of education because of hunger."
The Right
Now Climate Fund (RNCF) is Amazon’s $100 million global commitment to restore
ecosystems, protect biodiversity, and help communities where Amazon operates. Since
its launch in India in 2023, RNCF has allocated $3.28M for the country as part
of its $15M commitment to Asia-Pacific.Through RNCF, Amazon is collaboratingwith
the Centre for Wildlife Studies' Wild Carbon project in the UNESCO-listed
Western Ghats to support 10,000 farming households, planting one million trees,
thereby reducing human-wildlife conflict while creating sustainable income
opportunities. Additionally, Amazon is investing $1.2 million to restore
Mumbai's Thane Creek ecosystem by planting 400,000 mangroves and removing 150
tons of plastic waste from the city's waterways, protecting a critical Asian
flyway for hundreds of bird species. This initiative protects critical habitats
for Mumbai's flamingos while creating employment for local women.


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