Connected Food: First Steps for an Ambitious National Food Strategy

Nutrients. 2024 Oct 3;16(19):3371. doi: 10.3390/nu16193371.

Abstract

Background: The global food system faces growing pressure from population growth, climate change, wealth inequity, geo-political instability, and damage to the ecosystems on which our food supply depends. Fragmentation of the priorities and needs of food system stakeholders-citizens, food producers, food industries, governments-compounds the problem, with competing or misaligned interests increasing the risk of failure to adequately meet the needs of those that form, and are served, by the food system. Growing consensus on the need for transformative system level change to address the problems facing the food system is yet to be significantly reflected in strategic action. Methods: The national food strategy of the UK is offered as an exemplar to discuss the need to promote more coherent and ambitious visions of transformative change that acknowledge the complexity of the food system as a whole. We draw upon cross-sectoral experience to distil the needs, priorities, and key food system tensions that must be acknowledged to promote transformative systems change that equitably delivers healthy sustainable diets, contributes to a resilient global food system, and protects the environment. Results: Greater coherence, ambition, and consideration of the food system as a whole are needed if a UK national food strategy is to contribute to significant transformative change. Conclusions: To promote this, we advocate for (1) a food system digital twin to model and test potential food system interventions or legislation; (2) a citizens' forum to inform and co-develop a cohesive national food strategy; and (3) increased cohesion and integration of food system governance within government to drive a coherent, ambitious national food strategy.

Keywords: food policy; food system; food system change; food system stakeholders; national food strategy.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Climate Change
  • Diet, Healthy
  • Food Industry
  • Food Supply*
  • Humans
  • Nutrition Policy*
  • United Kingdom

Grants and funding

N.B.B. and L.D. are partly funded by the UKRI-SPF ‘Transforming UK food system’ programme-funded H3 project (Grant No: BB/V004719/1). M.A.M. is part funded by the UKRI-SPF Transforming UK food system programme-funded FIO-FOOD project (Grant No: BB/W018020/1), the ESRC-Funded Consumer Data Research Centre (Grant No: ES/L011891/1), and the IGD-funded Healthy and Sustainable Diets programme Evaluation.