News Sustainable Food

Why we need a new recipe for farming, wildlife, food and public health

Ten UK food, farming, conservation and academic organisations collaborate to challenge the current and future governments to fix our broken food system, aiming to start a conversation that affects us all.

Square Meal: why we need a new recipe for farming, wildlife, food and public health’ is a new report published today by The Food Research Collaboration, the RSPB, Friends of the Earth, the National Trust, the Food Ethics Council, Sustain, the Wildlife Trusts, the Soil Association, Eating Better and Compassion in World Farming. 

The Square Meal Report menu focuses on four key connected areas:

  • Improving Health: Getting a grip on a growing crisis. 33% of under 18’s in the UK are overweight or obese. There are soaring costs to the NHS due to diet-related ill-health. More must be done to tackle health inequalities, promote healthier sustainable diets, ensure food and water safety and enable people to reconnect with nature.
  • Good food for all: Food prices have risen by 12% over the past six years, and more rises are expected. On 913,138 occasions in the year to the end of March 2014, people in crisis across the UK were provided with three days emergency food by the Trussell Trust alone. Tackling poverty and inequality must be a priority - alongside ensuring transparency, traceability and fairness in supply chains - so that we all see the benefits, from field to fork.
  • Sustainable farming: 75% of the protein fed to our livestock in the EU is imported. 25% of all UK farmers live in poverty. Investing in a resilient farming system is crucial to securing our food supply in the face of the shocks to the system likely from climate change, rising populations and dwindling resources.
  • Enhancing nature: In less than 50 years we have lost over 44 million pairs of breeding birds. We need to bring back colour to the countryside by protecting the soil upon which we all depend, creating a strong and connected ecological network and championing effective regulation and rural and urban planning policies.   
Download the Square Meal report at: http://foodresearch.org.uk/square-meal 

The organisations involved have joined forces to highlight the overwhelming evidence that demonstrates the need for major changes to national food and farming policy. Square Meal aims to start a collaborative discussion in the run up to next year’s general election and to influence future government policies on these issues.

It calls for stronger government leadership in planning the future use of land, food policy, farming and conservation in England and for wider public engagement on issues that affect the whole of society.

Tim Lang, Professor of Food Policy at City University London and Chair of the Food Research Collaboration said: “The evidence of food’s impact on health is overwhelming, but not enough questions are being asked about whether UK food and farming industries are part of this problem. It’s often put down to consumer choice. But is it? Half of UK cereals are fed to animals. We grow ridiculously small amounts of fruit and vegetables when our shops and markets ought to have mountains of good fresh produce. Square Meal raises big questions: what would the UK food system look like if it was designed around health and eco-systems, not just economics? The answer is surely: well, it wouldn’t look like it does now.”

Dan Crossley, executive director of the Food Ethics Council, says: “It is a scandal that in a world where we produce more food than we need, hundreds of millions of people are going to bed hungry at night, and even more are suffering from diet-related diseases like obesity and type 2 diabetes that give the lie to ‘cheap’ food. Ensuring transparent, traceable and fair supply chains, investing in environmental sustainability and taking a long-term view are all crucial steps to achieving sustainable food and farming systems. And acknowledging the links between poverty, inequality, the environment and poor nutrition is another crucial step in providing good food for all.” 

Helen Browning, Chief Executive of the Soil Association says: “The future of our farming industry depends on meeting consumers’ expectations for healthy food, a thriving, beautiful, and wildlife friendly countryside, while cutting pollution, resource use and greenhouse gases.  Quite a challenge!  This report sets out some of the solutions, and aims to start a debate on how we achieve them.”

Abi Bunker, Head of Agricultural Policy at the RSPB says: “We know how deeply people care about nature. The ongoing disappearance of iconic and much-loved wildlife from our countryside, set out so clearly in the recent State of Nature report, needs to stop. We hope this report stimulates a wider conversation that will help us devise better food and farming policies to get what we all want and need in the future.”

For a copy of the report and to contribute to the discussion please visit the Food Research Collaboration website

To speak to any of the organisations involved, please contact: Helen Merrills, Communications Officer, City University London. on behalf of the Square Meal Report collaboration. Email: Helen.merrills.1@city.ac.uk; Tel: 020 7040 4191; Mob: 07878 871480

 

Published Monday 14 July 2014

Sustainable Food: What you can do - and ask others to do - to help make our food and farming system fit for the future.

Latest related news

Support our charity

Donate to enhance the health and welfare of people, animals and the planet.

Donate

Sustain
The Green House
244-254 Cambridge Heath Road
London E2 9DA

020 3559 6777
sustain@sustainweb.org

Sustain advocates food and agriculture policies and practices that enhance the health and welfare of people and animals, improve the working and living environment, promote equity and enrich society and culture.

© Sustain 2024
Registered charity (no. 1018643)
Data privacy & cookies

Sustain