Christopher Elias leads the foundation's efforts to combat extreme poverty through grants as president of the Global Development Program. In March 2006, the foundation announced a $5 million grant for the
International Justice Mission (IJM), a human rights organization based in
Washington, D.C. to work in the area of
sex trafficking. The office was opened for three years for the following purposes: "conducting undercover investigations, training law enforcement, rescuing victims, ensuring appropriate aftercare, and seeking perpetrator accountability". The IJM used the grant money to found "Project Lantern" and established an office in
Cebu City in the
Philippines. In 2010, the results of the project were published, in which the IJM stated that Project Lantern had led to "an increase in law enforcement activity in sex trafficking cases, an increase in commitment to resolving sex trafficking cases among law enforcement officers trained through the project, and an increase in services—like shelter, counseling, and career training—provided to trafficking survivors". At the time that the results were released, the IJM was exploring opportunities to replicate the model in other regions.
Gates Cambridge Scholarships In October 2000, William Gates established the
Gates Cambridge Scholarships which allow students and scholars from the U.S. and around the world to study at
Cambridge University, one of the top universities in the world. The Gates Cambridge Scholarship has often been compared to the
Rhodes Scholarship, given its similarly international scope and substantial endowment. In 2000, the Gates Foundation endowed the scholarship trust with $210 million to help outstanding graduate students outside of the
United Kingdom study at the
University of Cambridge. The Gates Foundation has continued to contribute funds to expand the scholarship, making it one of the largest and best-endowed scholarships in the world. The Gates Cambridge Scholarship accepts less than 0.3% of applicants and remains extremely competitive. Each year, approximately 100 new graduate students from around the world receive funding to study at Cambridge.
Financial assistance •
Alliance for Financial Inclusion (AFI): A $35 million grant for the AFI supports a coalition of countries from the developing world to create savings accounts, insurance, and other financial services that are made available to people living on less than $2 per day. • Financial Access Initiative: A $5 million grant allows Financial Access Initiative to conduct field research and answer important questions about
microfinance and financial access in impoverished countries around the world. •
Pro Mujer: A five-year $3.1 million grant to Pro Mujer—a microfinance network in
Latin America combining financial services with healthcare for the poorest women entrepreneurs—will be used to research new opportunities for the poorest segment of the Latin American microfinance market. •
Grameen Foundation: A $1.5 million grant allows Grameen Foundation to approve more microloans that support Grameen's goal of helping five million additional families, and successfully freeing 50 percent of those families from poverty within five years. • Grant worth $1.3 million
Lawrence Muganga for his book ''You Can't Make Fish Climb Trees''. • Support for
Mojaloop Foundation with a 2020 grant of $4.7 million, and a 2023 grant of $8.5 million.
Agricultural development The Gates Foundation's goal for agricultural development is "to support farmers and governments in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia that are seeking a sustainable, inclusive agricultural transformation—one that creates economic opportunity, respects limits on natural resources, and gives everyone equal access to affordable, nutritious food". The foundation's agricultural investments include: •
International Rice Research Institute: Between November 2007 and October 2010, the Gates Foundation offered $19.9 million to the International Rice Research Institute. The goal of the aid was to support the increasing world demand for rice. The Gates Foundation claims: "To keep up with worldwide demand, the production of rice will have to increase by about 70 percent in the next two decades." The International Rice Research Institute has developed
Golden Rice, a genetically modified rice variant developed to combat
Vitamin A deficiency. •
Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA): The Gates Foundation has partnered with the
Rockefeller Foundation to enhance agricultural science and small-farm productivity in
Africa, building on the
Green Revolution that the Rockefeller Foundation spurred in the 1940s and 1960s. •
Deutsche Gesellschaft für Technische Zusammenarbeit (GTZ): In 2009, the Gate's Foundation donated $25 million to GTZ to help develop Africa's
cashew industry through improving yield and investing in local processing capabilities. GTZ would partner with the
African Cashew Alliance, FairMatch Support, and
Technoserve with the goal to increase the incomes of farmers in
Benin,
Burkina Faso, the
Ivory Coast,
Ghana, and
Mozambique by 50% by 2012.
Water, sanitation and hygiene value chain" used by the Gates Foundation to illustrate their approach to sanitation, showing collection, transport, treatment and
reuse s and everything they are connected to. – prototype on display at Reinvent the Toilet Fair in Delhi, India The Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (
WASH) program of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation was launched in mid-2005 as a "Learning Initiative", and became a full-fledged program under the Global Development Division in early 2010. Their grant-making focus has been since 2011 on sanitation science and technology ("transformative technologies"), delivery models at scale, urban sanitation markets, building demand for sanitation,
measurement and evaluation as well as policy, advocacy and communications. About one billion people have no sanitation facility whatsoever and continue to defecate in gutters, behind bushes or in open water bodies, with no dignity or privacy. This is called
open defecation and it poses significant health risks. India is the country with the highest number of people practicing open defecation, with around 157 million people or approximately 11% of the total population in 2022, although the situation has improved significantly since then. The foundation has been funding many sanitation research and demonstration projects in India since about 2011.
Reinvent the Toilet Challenge In 2011, the foundation launched a program called "Reinvent the Toilet Challenge" with the aim to promote the development of innovations in toilet design to benefit the 2.5 billion people that did not have access to safe and effective sanitation. This program has generated significant interest of the mainstream media. It was complemented by a program called "Grand Challenges Explorations" (2011 to 2013 with some follow-up grants reaching until 2015) which involved grants of $100,000 each in the first round. stack that converts
urine into electricity (research by the
University of the West of England, UK) Since the launch of the "Reinvent the Toilet Challenge", more than a dozen research teams, mainly at universities in the US, Europe, India, China, and South Africa, have received grants to develop innovative on-site and off-site waste treatment solutions for the urban poor. The grants were in the order of $400,000 for their first phase, followed by typically $1 million—three million for their second phase; many of them investigated resource recovery or processing technologies for
excreta or
fecal sludge. The "Reinvent the Toilet Challenge" is focused on "reinventing the
flush toilet". The aim was to create a toilet that not only removes
pathogens from human
excreta, but also
recovers resources such as energy, clean water, and
nutrients (a concept also known as
reuse of excreta). It should operate "
off-the-grid" without connections to water, sewer, or electrical networks. Finally, it should cost less than 5 cents per user per day. The Reinvent the Toilet Challenge is a long-term research and development effort to develop a hygienic, stand-alone toilet. This challenge is being complemented by another investment program to develop new technologies for improved
pit latrine emptying (called by the foundation the "Omni-Ingestor") and
fecal sludge processing (called "
Omni-Processor"). The aim of the "Omni Processor" is to convert
excreta (for example
fecal sludge) into beneficial products such as energy and soil nutrients with the potential to develop local business and revenue.
Examples of transformative technologies research • About 200 sanitation projects in many different countries and at various scales—some with a technology focus, some with a focus on market development or policy and advocacy, have received funding from the foundation since 2008. • The
University of KwaZulu-Natal in Durban, South Africa Gates Foundation was awarded $1.6 million in 2014 to act as a hub for sanitation researchers and product developers. • One example of an
Omni-Processor is a
combustion-based system designed to turn fecal sludge into energy and
drinking water. The development of this particular prototype by U.S.-based company
Sedron Technologies (formerly Janicki Bioenergy) attracted media attention for the sanitation crisis and the work of the foundation after Bill Gates drank water produced from this process. • Examples for the Reinvent the Toilet Challenge include: Scientists at the
University of Colorado Boulder were given funding of $1.8 million to develop a prototype
toilet that uses solar heat to treat the
fecal matter and produce
biochar. Funding has been provided to
RTI International since 2012 to develop a toilet based on electrochemical disinfection and solid waste combustion.
Other global initiatives Some examples include: •
2004 Indian Ocean earthquake: The foundation made total grant donations of $3 million to various charities to help with the aid effort for victims of the earthquake. These charities include:
CARE international,
International Rescue Committee,
Mercy Corps,
Save the Children, and
World Vision. •
2005 Kashmir earthquake: The foundation made a donation of $500,000 for the earthquake. • In 2014, the Gates Foundation released "flexible funds" in the order of $50 million to United Nations agencies and other organizations involved in the work against the deadly disease
Ebola in West Africa. • 2021 Emergency Funding. The foundation, with a group of philanthropists, has pledged £93.5m funding to cover UK foreign aid cuts. The foundation is a donor to the
National Geographic Society. The foundation is working with
Mastercard,
GAVI and TrustStamp to create the Mastercard Well Pass. This program, being tested in 2020 in
West Africa, will integrate vaccination records with
cashless payment capability. ==Global health division==