When Oscar Ekponimo was only 11 years old, his father had a partial stroke and was unable to work. This was Oscar’s first experience with hunger – eating only one substantial meal every two days.
This experience is what led Oscar, now a skilled software engineer, to create Chowberry – an app that connects supermarkets to NGOs and low-income earners, allowing them to buy food that’s about to expire at a discount.
How does it work?
As packaged food in registered supermarkets near their expiry date, the Chowberry app initiates discounts that grow larger the longer the products remain on the counter.
NGOs and low-income earners are then alerted about these discounts (or when the supermarkets are giving away the food for free). So, food that would otherwise have been thrown out is instead distributed to orphanages and underprivileged families.
Speaking with CNN about how his experiences growing up inspired him to create Chowberry, Oscar said:
“I remember most times there was little or no food in the house. I had to go to school without food and got by with snacks friends shared with me.
I always said in the future I would do something to ensure others wouldn’t go through what I went through.”
A three-month beta test involving 20 supermarkets reached about 300 people in Lagos and Abuja, feeding about 150 orphans. Oscar is hopeful that more retailers will eventually join the scheme – and we are too.
You can learn more about Chowberry on their website.
Source: Naijalife Magazine