ACS has responded to the publication of the Department of
Health and Social Care’s new Childhood Obesity Strategy, calling on
the Government to ensure that any new regulations are evidence
based and do not unfairly target small retailers over their larger
counterparts.
The new Strategy, following on from measures first announced in
August 2016, aims to halve the rates of childhood obesity by 2030
and reduce the gap between the health of children in the least
and most wealthy families.
Measures announced for consultation in the new Childhood Obesity
Strategy include:
- Mandating calorie labelling on products
- Banning promotions such as multibuys on what the government
considers to be unhealthy products
- Restricting the location that certain products can be sold in
within a store environment
- Introducing a 9pm watershed on the advertising of HFSS
products
ACS chief executive James Lowman said: “The convenience sector is
keen to work with the Department of Health and Social Care on the
delivery of their new strategy. We understand that convenience
stores do have a role to play in increasing access to healthy
foods and we will continue to engage with members about how they
can increase and promote healthier ranges in store. Any new
regulation must be evidence based and should not
disproportionately affect small stores. We have concerns about
any measure that would restrict where retailers are allowed to
display products, as many of our members operate very small
stores where layout changes would be difficult and costly. We
will continue to engage with the Department of Health and Social
Care and will be responding to their consultations on measures
set out in the strategy in due course.”
The Childhood Obesity Strategy also announced plans to consult on
a mandatory age restriction for the sale of energy drinks. ACS
research has shown that already over half of independent
retailers (53%) do not sell energy drinks to under 16s.
Mr Lowman continued: “Over half of convenience stores are
currently not selling energy drinks to under-16s, and convenience
stores are already at the front line of enforcing the law on
other age restricted products. If the Government sees fit to
introduce a regulatory age restriction on energy drinks, we will
work closely with retailers to ensure that the policy is
implemented across the sector appropriately.”
ACS has worked closely with the Food Foundation’s Peas Please
initiative, promoting best practice in the sale of fruit and veg
through the sponsorship of fresh produce awards at three major
events in the convenience sector. ACS also worked with Peas
Please on the production of a Veg Toolkit to help retailers sell
more healthy products in stores. The retailer toolkit is
available at https://foodfoundation.org.uk/retailer-toolkit/
The full Childhood Obesity Strategy document – Childhood
Obesity, A Plan for Action (Chapter 2) is available
here: https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/718903/childhood-obesity-a-plan-for-action-chapter-2.pdf