AfricanCITYFOODMonth 2026 - ICLEI Africa

1-31 July 2026

Local Plates, Healthy Future

Cities shape how and what people eat, which in turn shapes their health outcomes. As urbanisation accelerates, the challenge for cities shifts from how people grow food to ensuring they can access affordable, safe nutritious and healthy diets that are also rooted in local cultures. Across many African cities, households are facing a dual burden: persistent undernutrition and micronutrient deficiencies alongside rising overweight levels, obesity, and diet-related non-communicable diseases. Within this sobering reality lies both a great urgency and a valuable opportunity to reimagine and strengthen urban food systems in ways that create healthier diets and more prosperous cities for current and future residents. Local and subnational governments are at the heart of this transformation, playing a decisive role in shaping how food is produced, distributed, sold, and consumed within urban spaces.

This year’s African CITYFOOD Month theme explores the intersection of urban food systems, public health and food culture, highlighting how cities can actively shape healthier food environments for all. Good nutrition underpins health, supporting child growth and strengthening population wellbeing by reducing vulnerability to infectious and non-communicable diseases. From school feeding programmes that establish lifelong healthy eating habits to strengthening fresh food market infrastructure for access to better nutrition, improved food safety, and to support hubs of cultural life, cities play a critical role in influencing everyday choices. Community health workers, teachers, savings groups, informal traders, and local food champions are also key actors for co-designing urban food systems that actively support public health.
The campaign also looks at the link between urban food governance and health, and how coordinated action across health, food, urban planning, and energy can unlock more effective, inclusive interventions. African food cultures are also central to this as everyday practices such as preparing traditional dishes, using indigenous ingredients, and eating foods tied to identity can support healthier diets while celebrating culture.
By uplifting African food cultures, investing in market infrastructure, prioritising nutrition in the first 1,000 days of life, amongst other interventions, cities can build food systems that nourish both people and place.

Be part of the campaign by participating in the webinars, and sharing case studies, resources and images on sustainable urban food systems that support health with the hashtag #AfricanCITYFOODMonth on X, Bluesky, Instagram and LinkedIn.
#AfricanCITYFOODMonth is convened in alignment with AfriFOODlinks, a four-year European Union-funded project which proposes a new approach for equitably feeding and nourishing cities through safe, nutritious, and affordable meals.
#AfricanCITYFOODmonth is brought to you by ICLEI’s African City Food Centre in partnership with: African Centre for Cities, Milan Urban Food Policy Pact, Rikolto and the South African Urban Food and Farming Trust. It is supported by the AfriFOODlinks project, coordinated by ICLEI Africa, delivered by 26 partners across 65+ cities, and funded by the European Union.

2026 events, activities and resources:

#AfricanCITYFOODMonth 2026 Photo Competition showcase

Theme: My Food, My Health, My City

 

Participants are invited to capture what healthy eating looks like in everyday urban life. From home kitchens to street corners, markets to cafés, we’re looking for real moments that show how people choose, prepare, and enjoy food that supports their health and wellbeing in the midst of busy city routines. 

Submissions should highlight healthier food choices in urban contexts, reflecting how people balance convenience, affordability, and nutrition. This could include fresh foods from local markets, minimally processed foods, home cooking, local snacks, or thoughtful alternatives to highly processed options.

This competition aims to spotlight how everyday food choices can support healthier urban lifestyles, while recognising the realities of time, access, affordability and changing food environments.

 

Competition period: Entries open on 21 May 2026 and close on 17 June 2026

Webinars

  • Network Cities webinar
  • School Food 4 Cities webinar
  • Discussion based on clinic nutrition pilot at Masiphumelele (15 July – TBC)
  • Stunting and local government (TBC)
  • FAO – Kisumu exchange with LatAm (TBC)
  • Salt and hypertension webinar by INNTA (TBC)

Sharing resources

ICLEI Africa partners are invited to share resources, project updates, and content relevant to the campaign theme. This may include blog posts, videos, publications, and newsletters. Partners are encouraged to submit materials to the ICLEI Africa team for inclusion on the African CITYFOOD Month campaign webpage or for amplification on social media.

 

Examples of partner content to feature:


Under the AfriFOODlinks project, INNTA is implementing a food environment intervention in Tunis in which a reformulated subsidised bread reduces salt content by 30% and boosts nutritional value by increasing flour extraction rates – making an everyday staple work for public health. Millers and bakers are central partners in scaling this initiative across the city. One of the latest developments is the city adopting a new regulation of subsidised bread reformulation.

 

The State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World 2025 by FAO which also explores addressing high food price inflation for food security and nutrition

 

Rikolto’s workon the AfriFOODlinks project in Ouagadougou providing access to healthier and safer street food, school meals, and food markets.

ICLEI Africa Resources

Infographics on strengthening urban nutrition and how urban food markets contribute to the food security pillars. These present key recommendations to strengthen fresh food markets, making them more nutrition-sensitive and resilient. The actions aim to improve market functionality, empower traders and consumers, and enhance nutrition and food safety outcomes, contributing to healthier and more inclusive urban food systems.

 

Article on designing healthier cities, spotlighting designing health into urban food systems, and the carousel on 10 urban health risks, focusing on food and nutrition  and infographic.

 

Cleaning cooking campaign in Uganda resources to highlight the benefits of clean cooking for health. 

 

Recording of Network Cities webinar exploring how different cities are developing policies and initiatives that drive health through local food and food cultures. Featuring experiences and insights from two city officials from Kisumu, Kenya  and Bacarena, Brazil.

ICLEI Africa

ICLEI - Local Governments for Sustainability is a global network working with more than 2500 local and regional governments committed to sustainable urban development. Active in 125+ countries, we influence sustainability policy and drive local action for low emission, nature-based, equitable, resilient and circular development.

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