Here are the latest publicly reported updates on the Novo Nordisk Foundation.
Core updates
- The Foundation marked its 100th anniversary in 2024 and awarded a record near DKK 10.1 billion (about €1.35 billion) in grants and philanthropic investments for nearly 1,800 projects aimed at health improvements and sustainability. This exceeded the previous year’s total and underscored a growing international grant footprint.[1]
- In 2024, the Foundation emphasized ambitious global reach, launching collaborations and expanding geographical presence beyond Denmark, including initiatives that broaden funding through international partnerships.[1]
- The Foundation announced the Challenge Programme expansion outside Denmark for the first time and signaled substantial increases in grant size for 2026, with four themes guiding the 2026 edition to drive long-term scientific depth and cross-border collaboration.[2]
Institutional context
- The Novo Nordisk Foundation is an enterprise foundation established in Denmark with a mission to advance health and sustainability through research and innovation, supported by the Novo Group/ Novo Holdings ecosystem, and maintains an active newsroom with ongoing press updates and statements from its leadership.[3][5]
- The Foundation has formed partnerships and initiatives targeting cardiometabolic and infectious diseases, antimicrobial resistance, and green transformation of society, including collaborations with major global health funders and research institutes.[3]
Recent public statements and leadership messages
- CEO Mads Krogsgaard Thomsen has publicly highlighted the Foundation’s commitment to global health challenges and the intentional expansion of international collaboration to maximize impact, including new grant commitments and international program expansions.[2][1]
- The Foundation’s communications circulated through its official channels (website, press releases, and social posts) emphasize a dual focus on health outcomes and sustainability/governmental collaboration to accelerate progress.[4][5]
Examples of notable 2024-2024 initiatives (highlights)
- BRIGHT: The Biotechnology Research Institute for the Green Transition at DTU was announced with up to DKK 1.05 billion over seven years to advance biotechnology for the green transition.[3]
- Global partnerships: A major multi-organization funding collaboration involving Wellcome and the Gates Foundation (US$300 million over three years) was announced in 2024 to support global health research with a focus on low- and middle-income countries.[3]
- The Foundation’s grantgiving reached its peak in 2024, funding a broad spectrum of health and sustainability projects across Denmark and internationally.[1]
Would you like a concise side-by-side comparison of 2023 vs 2024 grant totals, or a brief timeline of the Foundation’s major 2024–2026 initiatives with key dates and themes? I can assemble a quick chart or a bulleted timeline if you’d prefer. Citations for the above come from Foundation press and news items and related summaries cited inline.