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News Release ref :/08
Date:7 July 2008
The Cabinet Office today publishes the results of a ten-month Strategy Unit project looking at food policy
across Government – and concludes that rising demand, climate change,
and trade and productivity restrictions must all be addressed.
Commissioned by the Prime Minister, the report focuses on food issues in the UK
and puts them in a global context. It draws together evidence about
long-term trends in food production and consumption, and how food
safety and nutrition impact on the health of the UK.
Some key recommendations are:
- Building
on the Stern Review and drawing on the UK's world class science base,
the UK should take a leadership role in looking at how the world can
meet the twin challenges of climate change and global food security.
The Government's Chief Scientific Adviser is commissioning a major new
project on this, which is announced today. It will explore how the food
system and its associated policies will need to mitigate and adapt to
climate change.
- The Government should launch a public
engagement about a more joined-up approach to UK food policy that
pursues fair prices, safer food, healthier diets and better
environmental performance; Defra will work in partnership with DH and FSA,
to develop and engage the public and food businesses in a new shared
vision to guide future food strategy. This work will be completed by
autumn 2009.
- The UK must continue to focus on fair prices,
access to food and food security through competitive markets; Defra
will shortly be issuing a discussion paper that takes forward this
important debate.
- We must work with other European countries to
promote the role of agriculture in mitigating and adapting to climate
change; Defra will take this forward with other major partners, such as
Germany and France, to build consensus on priorities and secure
effective action.
- A new scheme should be launched to get the
public sector in England providing healthier, more environmentally
sustainable food. The Department of Health will take forward the
development and launch of a new Healthier Food Mark for public food.
- We
need to help consumers to access healthier choices when eating out, and
need to provide information that considers both the health and
environmental aspects of food.
Key findings include:
- World
food output must rise to feed a growing, wealthier population. The
World Bank estimates that cereal production needs to increase by 50%
and meat production 80% between 2000 and 2030 to meet demand. But this
will need to be achieved in a changing climate and in a world where
natural resources – especially water – are becoming more scarce;
- For
the world and for households, cutting waste would help – in the
developing world up to 40% of food harvested can be lost due to
problems with storage and distribution, and in the UK consumers waste
£10 billion worth of food each year
- In farmgate value terms, half of the food eaten in the UK is home-grown, nearly 70% of the rest comes from elsewhere in the EU. Everything else, from tea to pineapples to prawns is sourced from across the world;
- The
food chain creates 18% of UK greenhouse gas emissions. Farming and
fishing contribute around half of this total. Changes to farming
practices, such as more efficient use of fertiliser and providing
animals with diets that specifically match their nutrient requirements
could reduce emissions from agriculture;
- A third of the food
bought for home consumption is wasted – 6.7 million tonnes. Most of
this could have been eaten. Wasting food costs the average UK family
£420 a year. Eliminating the unnecessary greenhouse gas emissions that
this wasted food produces would be equivalent to taking one in five
cars off UK roads. By using 60% of food thrown away by households,
enough energy could be generated to provide power for all the homes in
Glasgow and Edinburgh.
- If UK diets met nutritional guidelines,
70,000 premature deaths could be prevented each year. On average,
adults and children eat more salt, fat and added sugar than is good for
their health, and too few fruit and vegetables despite high awareness
of the ‘5 a day’ target. A new push on the 5 A DAY campaign is needed.
The Prime Minister Gordon Brown said:
“The
rise of popular interest in food policy issues, and growing public
awareness of the impact of what we choose to eat on everything from
animal welfare, to our health and the protection of the environment has
seen a massive transformation in Britain's food culture over the past
ten years. This cultural change, along with more recent events in
global food markets, has brought new and urgent policy challenges to
the fore, which governments must act to meet.
“Recent food price
increases are a powerful reminder that access to ever more affordable
food cannot be taken for granted, and it is the family finances of the
poorest in our society that are hit hardest when food prices rise. But
the principal food security challenge for the UK is a global one. We
cannot deal with higher food prices in the UK in isolation from higher
prices around the world. Attempting to pursue national food security in
isolation from the global context is unlikely to be practicable,
sustainable or financially rational.
“So to tackle higher prices
both here in Britain and in developing countries, where food often
accounts for more than half a family's spending, we will continue to
play a leading role in combating instability in commodity markets and
building a more resilient global food chain, as well as maintaining a
supportive environment for competitive UK food producers. If food
production in Africa and elsewhere in the developing world reached its
potential, global food output would be much higher, far fewer people
would go hungry and the threat of food-related political and social
instability around the world would recede.”
As a
first step, the Department for the Environment, Food, and Rural Affairs
(Defra) will shortly be publishing a paper entitled ‘Ensuring the UK's
Food Security in a Globalised World’. This report will set out the key
factors which affect food supply and pricing, and encourages discussion
with stakeholders including producers and retailers about ensuring
long-term food security
The Strategy Unit report also calls for a
clearer view of how the food system should adapt to feeding a growing
global population at the same time as the planet is experiencing the
effects of climate change.
So today Hilary Benn has announced
that Professor John Beddington, the Government's Chief Scientific
Adviser, will commission a new Foresight project on future global food
production and farming and the implications for the UK
Hilary Benn said:
“Recent
events in world food markets have shown that continued access to
affordable food is not something that can be taken for granted. The
long term challenges in this area are significant but can be overcome.
“The
lessons of the ‘Green Revolution’ of the last century need to be learnt
as we work to achieve food security in this century. In the future our
planet will be adjusting to the effects of climate change with
economies that need to significantly reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
It is in this context that we must base our efforts.
“By 2050 we
will need food for a world population that is wealthier and several
billion larger. We will need to do this at the same time as adapting to
a warming and less predictable climate. And, in addition, we will need
to cut the greenhouse gas emissions associated with food production.”
The
report also recommends that the Food Standards Agency takes forward
work to make it easier for consumers to access integrated government
information and advice on a healthy, environmentally sustainable diet
and confirms that the Agency should work with food businesses to
improve information and healthier choice options when eating out. The
report also endorsed further work on food safety through developing a
‘whole food chain approach’ to food safety risks.
The report
commits the Government to consulting the public and stakeholders on
many of its conclusions. This work will be led by DEFRA
and completed by Autumn 2009. Annual reports of progress against the
report's recommendations will be published in Summer 2009 and 2010.
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