‘Worse than half-baked’: Johnson’s food strategy
fails to tackle cost or climate
Labour says leaked white paper suggesting more fish
farming and venison ‘borders on preposterous’
The white paper proposes an increase in the use of
‘responsibly sourced wild venison’.
Helena
Horton, Rowena Mason and Patrick Butler
Fri 10 Jun
2022 19.35 BST
Boris
Johnson’s new food strategy for England contains virtually no new measures to
tackle the soaring cost of food, childhood hunger, obesity or the climate
emergency, a leaked version of the white paper shows.
The
strategy, seen by the Guardian and due to be published on Monday, was supposed
to be a groundbreaking response to recommendations from the restaurateur Henry
Dimbleby, who wrote two government-commissioned reports on obesity and the
environment.
Dimbleby
made a number of high-profile suggestions, including the expansion of free
school meals, increasing environment and welfare standards in farming, and a
30% reduction in meat and dairy consumption.
But the
slim 27-page document makes few recommendations, and declines to address the
contribution of food prices to the cost of living crisis or address calls for
consuming less meat and dairy.
Among its
few policy proposals are the suggestion there could be more fish farming, which
is environmentally controversial, and an increase in the use of “responsibly
sourced wild venison”.
The
strategy was described as “bordering on preposterous” by Labour over its lack
of concrete proposals on food prices and “worse than half-baked” by the
environmental campaign group Greenpeace.
Johnson
recently delayed measures to tackle obesity and has come under fire for failing
to do enough help families with the cost of living, with inflation running at
9%.
Although
the white paper accepts food prices are a major part of the squeeze facing many
families, and that many people on low incomes struggle to afford to eat, it
suggests this is not the business of a government food strategy.
The white
paper instead focuses on “longer-term measures” to support the food system
rather than “duplicating work on the cost of living” – citing the Treasury’s
£15bn support package focused on lowering energy bills. It sidesteps growing
calls from teachers and others for an extension of eligibility for free school
meals to an extra 1 million children in poverty, although it says the idea will
be “kept under review”.
It boasts
it “has made it easier” for young low-income families to apply for and use the
Healthy Start fruit and vegetable voucher scheme – though it ignores Dimbleby’s
critique of the scheme’s inadequacies, his call for it to be expanded, as well
as overlooking recent problems with the digital part of the scheme.
“The
government is committed to a sustainable, long-term approach to tackling
poverty and supporting people on lower incomes, helping them to enter and
progress in work and lead fulfilled lives,” it says.
The white
paper also ignores Dimbleby’s proposals for a tax on sugar and salt used in
processed foods as a way of escaping what he called the “junk food cycle”.
Dimbleby insisted bold regulatory measures, rather than relying on educating
consumers and voluntary agreements with the food industry, were needed to
tackle the huge and growing market for unhealthy foods.
But while
the white paper accepts that obesity is prevalent, with 64% of adults and 40%
of children overweight, it makes clear there is no great desire for state
intervention, and insists on the importance of individual responsibility and
choice in influencing demand for healthy foods.
Experts had
also urged the government to cut meat and dairy consumption in order to improve
land use and tackle the climate emergency. Dimbleby called for a 30% reduction,
and Greenpeace a more ambitious 70%. In his executive summary, Dimbleby stated:
“Careful livestock farming can be a boon to the environment, but our current
appetite for meat is unsustainable: 85% of farmland is used to feed livestock.
We need some of that land back.”
However,
the government makes no such commitment, instead opening a consultation about
new technologies to help cattle produce less methane. There is also a focus on
regenerative livestock farming, which uses more land than intensive farming to
produce less protein.
It says:
“Sustainable sources of protein do not have to be new or novel or displace
traditional sectors. Regenerative farming will also provide a more sustainable
production of traditional protein sources. Using livestock to benefit the
environment in balance with food production is already being championed by many
small-scale farmers.”
One new
announcement made in the white paper is regarding animal welfare. Ministers
plan to make it easier for countries to trade with the UK if they have strong
animal welfare legislation.
The report
also mentions an expansion of aquaculture – fish farming – to potentially
replace some meat in the diet. This is despite fish farming being found to be
often very damaging to the environment.
Deer
stalkers will also enjoy a boon from the report, as one of the few new
announcements it makes is that the government will “look to increase the use of
responsibly sourced wild venison, which would have otherwise been disposed of,
in the food chain”.
Environment
experts who fed into the strategy said it was “worse than they expected” – and
they did not have high expectations.
There are
also fears that the report signals a watering down of the environment land
management scheme (ELMS) as there are no targets for land use change mentioned.
Jim
McMahon, the shadow environment secretary, was heavily critical of the leaked
strategy. “The UK is in a cost of living crisis with food prices spiralling,
real wages falling, growth plummeting and taxes up. It is clear now that the
government has absolutely no ambition to fix the mess they have created,” he
said.
“A food
strategy is of vital importance, but the government has dithered, delayed and
now failed to deliver. This is nothing more than a statement of vague
intentions, not the concrete proposals to tackle the major issues facing our
country. To call it a food strategy is bordering on the preposterous.”
Tim Farron,
the Liberal Democrat spokesperson on environment, food and rural affairs,
added: “The Conservatives’ food strategy has no solution to solve the cost of
living crisis and nothing for the millions of people struggling to put food on
the table.
“By failing
to do anything to help farmers across the country the government are all but
guaranteeing a generation of higher food prices.”
Louisa
Casson, the head of food and forests at Greenpeace UK, said: “The government’s
food strategy isn’t just half-baked, it’s flatter than a pancake and missing
most of the crucial ingredients needed to truly ensure our long-term food
security. Instead of listening to the warnings from climate scientists on the
urgent need to reduce meat production, ministers seem to be goading UK farmers
into producing even more of it.”
Ben
Reynolds, the deputy chief executive of the food and farming charity Sustain,
added: “Our understanding is that the government’s food strategy white paper
will acknowledge the many issues facing our food system but fall short on
strong policies, underpinned by legislation, needed to make wholesale change.
“The
Dimbleby review generated considerable understanding and appetite for change.
Health campaigners, businesses, food enterprises and investors have all called
for government intervention to help avert the health, climate and nature crises
caused by our food system. We would welcome any mandatory responsibilities on
industry and the public sector that help make healthy and sustainable diets the
norm, but if the government publishes a white paper with little more than
reheated commitments, consultations and reviews, this will just kick the can
further down the road.”

Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário