Mrs Paulette Hamilton (Birmingham, Erdington) (Lab) I beg to move,
That this House has considered global Food security It
is a pleasure to serve with you in the Chair, Mr Pritchard, and I
want to thank all Members for attending the first debate I have
ever hosted in this place. I will start by setting out what we mean
when we use the term “global Food security . The UK
Government define it as “stable global production and a...Request free trial
Mrs (Birmingham, Erdington)
(Lab)
I beg to move,
That this House has considered global Food
security
It is a pleasure to serve with you in the Chair, Mr Pritchard,
and I want to thank all Members for attending the first debate I
have ever hosted in this place.
I will start by setting out what we mean when we use the term
“global Food security . The UK
Government define it as
“stable global production and a well-functioning global trading
system that reliably, efficiently and sustainably meets the needs
of the UK and the world.”
It is about the security of our food system and our ability to
ensure that people do not go hungry, both at home and abroad. But
this issue stretches way beyond tackling hunger.
Global Food security involves
education, international aid, tackling poverty, the impact of war
and the climate crisis. I want to touch on each of those issues,
looking at the worldwide situation first.
The United Nations has a global target to end hunger,
achieve Food security and
improve nutrition by 2030 as part of its sustainable development
goals, but the UN has said that we are not on track to achieve
that, with the latest estimates showing that between 702 million
and 828 million people—10% of the world population—are currently
going hungry. The UN estimates that that number could rise to 840
million people by 2030. If we look specifically at famine, the
World Food Programme has said that a record 345 million people
across 82 countries are facing acute food insecurity, including
up to 50 million people in 45 countries who are at risk of
famine. Over 970,000 people are already living in famine-like
conditions in Somalia, Afghanistan, Ethiopia, South Sudan and
Yemen.
(Rutherglen and Hamilton
West) (Ind)
Does the hon. Member agree that farmers and agricultural workers
across the world are the backbone of the globe’s access to food,
despite smaller rural farmers often having to overcome the
barriers of poverty and inequality? Does she agree that providing
those smaller, poorer farmers with the support and technology
they need is vital to every country’s Food
security
Mrs Hamilton
I thank the hon. Member for her intervention, and I absolutely
agree.
Famine is also projected in parts of Somalia this month. Up to 60
million children worldwide could become acutely malnourished by
the end of this year. Evidence from previous famines shows that
young children are the most vulnerable in times of crisis. During
the Somalia famine in 2011, more than half the deaths were among
children under five. International aid is an extremely important
part of the solution, but short-sighted cuts to the aid budget by
the Government have left us isolated on the world stage. No other
G7 country cut aid in the middle of the pandemic; Britain sadly
stands alone in having turned its back on the world’s poorest. We
are already seeing the impact of the cuts to international aid.
The Government have paused all non-essential aid spending to
ensure the budget does not push above their new target of 0.5% of
our national income. That is yet another broken Tory manifesto
promise. I join my hon. Friend the Member for Rotherham (), the Chair of the
International Development Committee, in calling for more
clarification on what the spending pause means in practice.
The climate crisis is one of the leading causes of the rise in
global hunger. The World Food Programme estimates that if average
global temperatures rise by 2°, an additional 189 million people
could be pushed into food insecurity. The Climate Change
Committee has warned that global warming could lead to a 20% rise
in food prices globally by 2050, hurting the poorest wherever
they live on our planet. I hope to hear some reassurances from
the Minister that the Government will finally deliver on their
promise of providing international climate finance to help
developing countries fight the climate crisis and to protect food
supply.
Although there are many factors causing global food insecurity,
we cannot ignore the role that Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has
played in increasing food prices around the world. Before Putin’s
invasion in February, Russia and Ukraine were responsible for
about 29% of the world’s wheat exports. Ukraine grew enough food
to feed an estimated 400 million people, despite having a
population of only 44 million. Both countries are also
significant suppliers of fertilisers.
The World Food Programme has warned that rising food and energy
prices due to the war are likely to exacerbate humanitarian
crises around the world, particularly in the middle east and
Africa, which are some of the most dependent regions on Ukrainian
and Russian food imports. More than 80% of the wheat supply of
countries such as Egypt and Somalia comes from those two
countries. Russia’s blockage of grain exports from Ukraine has
fuelled an international humanitarian crisis. The UN-backed Black
sea grain initiative, an agreement between Ukraine, Russa and
Turkey, is essential in combating rising food prices. Russia must
continue to meet its commitments under the agreement in full. I
hope the Minister will tell us that international pressure is
being applied to make sure that happens. The war in Ukraine
affects us all. In the UK, we may not be experiencing problems
with our food supply in the same way that many poorer nations
are, but we are seeing the impact of the war through higher
energy costs and inflation.
I now turn to food insecurity in Britain. Recent research by the
Food Foundation shows that 18% of British households experienced
food insecurity last month, and that 4 million children live in
households that experience food insecurity. Food prices are
reported to be rising at their fastest rate in 42 years. That
means it is more important than ever to ensure healthy,
nutritious food is affordable and accessible by the most
vulnerable through policies such as free school meals and by
investing in healthier sustainable urban food systems. I will
draw on one particular example that is close to my heart; it is
something I worked on in my previous role as the Birmingham City
Council cabinet member for health.
In Birmingham, we developed an eight-year strategy, in
partnership with the Food Foundation, that put sustainable food
at the heart of our local economy and used the power of education
to transform people’s diets and help them to eat more diverse and
nutritious food. I am particularly proud of our focus on
nutrition in the work that we did in Birmingham. Food Foundation
research shows that only half our city’s population eats five
portions of fruit and veg per day, and that fruit and veg make up
only 11% of expenditure, while 34% of money is spent on food high
in fat, salt and sugar and takeaways. We can end food insecurity
only by focusing on nutrition, to ensure that people have
healthier diets. I hope the Minister can give us some assurances
that nutrition will be a central part of the Government’s
approach to this issue.
Let me finish by pressing the Minister to take on board three key
points about Food security First, I
hope the Government will acknowledge the simple fact that there
is no shortage of food in our world today. The problems we face
with food insecurity, both at home and abroad, are down to food
being made unavailable as a result of economic and political
factors shaped by people. We can change this, and we must work
together to make food available for all.
Secondly, we hear a lot about the cost of living crisis and its
devastating impact on our economy in Britain, but it is a global
crisis that is increasing poverty everywhere. People everywhere
are getting poorer, and when people get poorer they eat less
food—and, crucially, less nutritious food.
Thirdly, I urge the Minister to acknowledge that food insecurity
hits women and children the hardest, wherever they live in the
world. All the available research points to this being a gendered
issue. I hope the Government’s strategy will take that into
account.
By working together internationally to reduce poverty, invest in
local food production and improve nutrition, we can end global
food insecurity. I urge the new Government to put these
priorities at the heart of their approach to this issue.
9.43am
(Strangford) (DUP)
It is not often that I get called immediately after the proposer
of the debate, so I am greatly encouraged and a bit taken aback
that that should be the case. It is a real pleasure to be here
and to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Pritchard. I commend the
hon. Member for Birmingham, Erdington (Mrs Hamilton) for setting
the scene in such an evidential and factual way. I am sure this
is the first of many debates that she will have in Westminster
Hall, and we look forward to her making many more
contributions.
This debate is incredibly important in today’s climate, for every
aspect of daily life is being drowned in the cost of living
crisis. It has engulfed us all; we read about it in the
newspaper, hear about it on the radio and see it on the TV. The
negativity that seems to permeate society about rises in the
price of energy, fuel and foodstuffs is real, in every sense of
the word. I commented last week about the price of some products
back home; for example, eggs that were £1 for 10 are now £1.89—an
89% increase. Milk, another staple, is up 79p since before the
crisis. Those are just two of the basics of life. The problems
that people face are real, and that has been especially true in
the last couple of weeks.
In addition, the devastating impact that the Northern Ireland
protocol is having on smaller food producers in both the mainland
and Northern Ireland often goes ignored. I will develop that
theme when I talk about how we in Northern Ireland are impacted
by global Food security
I am pleased to see the Minister in his place. I think this might
be a new portfolio for him. I know that he has been exceptional
in past portfolios, and I look forward to his reply to this
debate. I also look forward to the contribution of the shadow
Minister, the hon. Member for Birmingham, Edgbaston (), who is a good friend of
mine.
According to new research, 40% of the global commercial seed
market is owned by two companies, compared with 10 companies 25
years ago. Does the hon. Member share my concern that the lack of
competition in the global food market broadly risks leaving the
world’s Food security at the
mercy of a select few?
Yes, wholeheartedly. We are in a complex situation, and that has
implications. There are some who control what happens. I know
that the Minister and the Government do not always control
whether we can have the impact we want to have, but I know that
the Minister will address some of these issues when he
responds.
Our food industry has shown incredible commitment in
manufacturing, farming and fishing throughout the pandemic,
including during the panic buying. It has dealt with the impacts
of Brexit and the protocol, and our dedication to the Ukrainians
after the Russian invasion. Our Government have committed to all
those things. I fully support that, and I understand the need to
do those things. This is about the safety of the world. We are
not just individuals playing our own game; the rest of the world
impacts us all, so the title of the debate, “Global Food security ” is apt.
We are part of a team that work together as best we can.
We therefore have a need for greater resilience in the UK’s
entire food system. We are fully aware of the threats that can
damage our food systems, emphasising the greater need for systems
to be in place for our protection. Recent pioneering research
from the Institute for Global Food security at
Queen’s University Belfast in Northern Ireland has established us
as leaders in addressing global Food
security through our agritech industry partnering with
different industries to develop solutions. Elected
representatives often understand the need to partner with
universities. Queen’s University Belfast is one of those. Such
partnerships are replicated across the whole United Kingdom, and
I know that others will emphasise that. For us in Northern
Ireland, Queen’s University is a key partner to take this matter
forward.
We recognise how important the agrifood sector is in Northern
Ireland. Some 80% of what we produce in Northern Ireland is sold
overseas, so it is important for us to develop that sector. There
are many, many markets that we can develop. Lakeland Dairies, for
example, produces a milk powder that it exports all over the
world, and it is instrumental in growing that market. Even
through the hard times of covid, that market was growing because
the agrifood and agritech sectors have taken great steps
forward.
We have been somewhat left behind by ignorance—I say that with
great respect—as little consideration has been given to how the
Northern Ireland protocol has impacted our Food
security strategies. We want to grow our sector. We need
that protection and security. The Food and Drink Federation
surveyed 83 members, half of which were deemed large businesses
with over 250 employees, and found that food and drink imports
into Northern Ireland had decreased by 10% because of the
Northern Ireland protocol. I fail to see how we can possibly
encourage Food
security strategies when Northern Ireland has been left
behind. I always try to be constructive, but there is an anomaly
here that has to be addressed.
I am sure Members are aware that my constituency of Strangford is
rich in farming and fishing. I know the Minister has been to
Portavogie. His former portfolio as Veterans Minister prompted
him to visit Beyond the Battlefield there, so he knows the
village and exactly where I am talking about. It is the second
largest fishing village in Northern Ireland. Fishing is
incredibly important for us. The Northern Ireland agrifood sector
is imperative for our Food security system.
We produce food for five times our population and employ more
than 100,000 people in that sector alone, and it is our largest
manufacturing industry, so agriculture, the production line and
manufacturing are critical.
I have mentioned before the concerns that land could be
reforested, when it could be used further to advance the security
of our agriculture sector. I urge the Minister to ensure that
that is not the case. I appreciate his response to me and the
debate. Food poverty has been an issue in the past two years.
Local food banks in my area have been inundated with those
struggling to obtain food. My office refers at least 20 people
each week for assistance; that is more than 1,040 a year. That
gives an indication of the impact.
The Trussell Trust food bank was the first initiated in Northern
Ireland, in Newtownards in my constituency. That has grown
alongside the need and demand. There is also an issue with food
access, emphasised by the fact that more than 97,000 children are
entitled to free school meals. It is important that the
Government have responded to that, and made sure that those
children have free school meals, but the fact that so many—the
largest number ever—are in receipt of free school meals indicates
that things are not the way they should be. I make that point in
a constructive fashion. We must ensure that poverty is taken into
account when it comes to Food security
The UK imports 47% of our food. I know we cannot grow everything
here. It is not possible to grow some of the fruit, vegetables
and minerals that we bring in. There have been debates on this
issue in the past in Westminster Hall. I mentioned reforesting;
it is good to have more trees for the lungs of the world, but it
is also important to have land. Good, productive land should be
retained for production. Other land could be used for reforesting
and becoming the lungs of the world.
We must ensure that our imports are secure for the benefit of
local and global Food security
Our Food security strategy
falls within the UK and also externally, which is why the debate
title, “Global Food security ” is so
important. We must protect and encourage the alignment of the
four regional Administrations to pave the way for
global Food security When we
make decisions at Westminster, we must think about how they work
in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, so that we can do the
job better together.
I hope that the Department for Environment, Food and Rural
Affairs will do all in its power to preserve and protect our
agriculture sector, which has proved instrumental for
our Food security
especially the contributions for my constituency of Strangford,
as I am sure all Members will agree. I encourage the Minister to
consider the installation of a private body to oversee the UK as
a whole and our joint collaboration to achieve our Food security goals. I
say this often, but that does not lessen its impact: I believe
that the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland can
do great things together. I think the Minister will endorse that.
Let us do that.
9.53am
(Glasgow North) (Ind)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Pritchard.
It is a rare experience to follow the hon. Member for Strangford
(), rather than him following us. He said that we
cannot grow everything in this country, but anyone listening to
“Good Morning Scotland” earlier would have heard about the tea
plants that have just been harvested on Orkney.
(Stirling) (SNP)
And in Stirling.
My hon. Friend says that has also happened in Stirling. That
shows that, with a bit of ingenuity —and possibly as the result
of a changing climate, which we will come back to—it is
surprising what can be harvested when minds are put to it.
I warmly congratulate the hon. Member for Birmingham, Erdington
(Mrs Hamilton) on securing her first debate in Westminster Hall,
and on an incredibly powerful speech. I agree with pretty much
every word that she said, which makes it quite difficult to find
something new to add to the debate. It is slightly unfortunate
that it seems to be the case in Westminster Hall these days that
very few Government Back Benchers want to come along, contribute
and offer their perspectives. That leaves the Minister with a
slightly unenviable task. Perhaps we will hear in due course
which portfolio he is going to be addressing—I understand that
these are slightly uncertain times.
I welcome the appointment of the right hon. Member for Sutton
Coldfield (Mr Mitchell) as a Minister of State in the Foreign,
Commonwealth and Development Office. Perhaps it is understandable
that he is not right here right now, although it is unfortunate,
because I suspect he would have been here to speak from the Back
Benches if circumstances allowed. He has been a real champion of
global poverty and global justice issues, and that is a rare
thing to say about a Conservative Member. Out of all the chaos
and everything else that is going on, his presence at Cabinet
should be welcomed, but he has a very high standard to live up to
now. Those of us who have been in these debates over the years
will be looking to see whether development and justice issues
really do start to feature more prominently in the Government’s
foreign and development strategy.
As both previous speakers have said, Food
security is a challenge both at home and abroad. People
watching this debate might wonder why we are spending time
discussing Food security around
the world when there are people reliant on food banks in our own
constituencies —Glasgow North is no exception—but the hon. Member
for Birmingham, Erdington powerfully laid out precisely why that
is, why it is a common challenge for humanity as a whole, and the
range of steps that need to be taken to tackle the issue.
If food insecurity is a global challenge, it requires a global,
as well as a domestic, response. The reality is that it is the
same attitudes and philosophies among decision makers, whether at
home or abroad, that have left people queuing at food banks here
in the UK and queuing for emergency food supplies in famine-hit
countries in east Africa. The constituents I hear from in Glasgow
North, including supporters of the Borgen Project, who I hope to
meet in the next few days, do not want to live in a world where
anyone goes hungry, whether that is families down the street or
families halfway around the globe—especially not when they know
that hunger and food insecurity simply should not and do not need
to exist in the modern world.
The reality, though, is, as we have heard, that for too many
people, hunger continues to be all too real. We have heard about
some specific examples. The food crisis in east Africa is now
affecting about 50 million people. In particular, Somalia is on
the brink—or perhaps even past the brink—of the official
definition of famine. However, food insecurity is not only a
crisis or emergency situation, but a daily reality for hundreds
of millions of people around the world. As was said by the hon.
Member for Birmingham, Erdington, who introduced the debate, the
number, astonishingly and depressingly, seems to be rising. That
is particularly frustrating because the solutions are not
unknown. In my time as a Member of Parliament, I have had the
huge privilege of meeting farmers in Colombia, Zambia, Rwanda and
Malawi, and in Wellingborough and Scotland, and they all know
perfectly well how to farm sustainably. They know how to grow
crops that will feed themselves and their families and produce a
surplus for market, if only they have the right kind of support
and fair access to markets.
In the middle years of the 2010s, as we came close to the
deadline for the millennium development goals and negotiation for
the sustainable development goals was under way, a coalition of
international development and advocacy organisations, including
one that I worked for at the time, ran a campaign called “Enough
food for everyone IF”. It made the point clearly that we live in
a world that is more than capable of producing sufficient
nutrition for the global population—even taking into account the
rapid increase in world population numbers in recent
years—provided that we get the priorities and processes right,
and that is still true today.
First and foremost, as both previous speakers have said,
small-scale farmers all over the world have to be at the heart of
how we produce and distribute food, and they need support to grow
what works best for them—as I said, enough to feed their families
and enough surplus to sell at market. Too often, small farmers
become reliant on particular crops and particular fertilisers and
inputs, or are forced off their land altogether by multinational
monocroppers and agribusinesses. That is to slightly
over-simplify a whole range of interventions that are also
needed, from decent irrigation, to proper education on farming
techniques, to fair access to energy and fair access to
markets.
We have to change our own food habits here too. Reducing western
demand for meat and for out-of-season fruit and vegetables has
the potential to change demands for land use around the world. A
fantastic report was launched last week by campaigners for the
Climate and Ecology Bill, which looks at the paths towards net
zero through changing land use and changing global diets to more
sustainable, more nutritious, better diets that will make us all
healthier, thinner, fitter, more resilient to disease and more
resilient to climate change. It is a win-win-win situation, which
gets us closer to net zero into the bargain as well.
We have to address the root of the issue, and help people to
understand where food comes from. It comes not from packets in
supermarkets, but from the ground; we have to put things into the
ground to get it in the first place, and we have to work very
hard. We have to help more people understand how to cook and
prepare cheap, nutritious food for themselves. That is the whole
point of a holistic and rights-based approach to development that
tackles a range of problems all at once.
The UK Government have to rediscover the leadership that they
once showed in these areas and rebuild the consensus. The hon.
Member for Birmingham, Erdington said today’s debate was the
first Westminster Hall debate she has led; the first Westminster
Hall debate I led was in 2015, on the sustainable development
goals. In those days, there was a consensus. Members from all
parties would speak together and would congratulate the
Government on achieving the 0.7% target and on taking a leading
role in shaping the SDGs. Now, the SDGs seem to have been
forgotten, the aid target has been slashed to 0.5%, and the
Government have announced that non-essential aid spending will be
frozen. What on earth is non-essential aid? Surely, by
definition, all aid is essential. All aid meets a vital need that
cannot be met by a domestic Government.
Cutting the aid budget and diverting funding away from long-term
sustainable development projects that boost food and other
security is ultimately a false economy. Perhaps, for example,
fewer people would be tempted to get on small boats and cross the
English channel if their countries of origin were not being dried
up or flooded by climate change, with their families and
communities going hungry as a result. There would certainly be
less need to spend vast amounts on emergency intervention and
famine relief if there was proper investment in long-term
sustainability.
I was thinking back to my days in the international development
sector and was reminded of a saying that was attributed to the
late Brazilian archbishop, Dom Hélder Câmara:
“When I give food to the poor, they call me a saint. When I ask
why the poor are hungry, they call me a communist.”
I think that attitude still pervades in a lot of the world today.
Investing in global Food security is
perhaps the ultimate in preventive spending policy. If people at
home or abroad have access to good quality, nutritious,
affordable and culturally appropriate food, they will live
longer, happier and more successful lives.
(Coventry North West)
(Lab)
The hon. Member is making an important point. Given that
malnutrition plays such an important role in a child’s
development, that 45% of all deaths of under-fives are due to
malnutrition and that we are in the midst of a
global Food security crisis,
does he agree that Food security should
play an integral part in the Government’s international
development strategy?
Absolutely. The hon. Member makes a valid point. Children will
not be able to study at school, either in the UK, in a developing
country in sub-Saharan Africa, or in a middle-income country in
Latin America, if they are hungry. We recognise that in the UK;
we have free school meal programmes and campaign for free school
meals. The Government were embarrassed into extending the free
school meals programme during the pandemic, and I pay huge
tribute to the Scottish Government for their roll-out of free
school meals. We recognise that children who have a decent, good
quality, nutritious meal will be more able to concentrate at
school, and that will improve their education, which improves
society as a whole in the long run. It is the ultimate in
levelling up, and I hope the Minister might reflect on that.
All development processes are linked, and that is the route to
tackle instability. Hungry children are more likely to go out and
get radicalised. If they cannot grow their own food, if they
cannot get food in the local supermarkets or the local shops and
markets, and if they cannot rely on their own Governments to
provide them with support, of course people will end up getting
radicalised and seek more violent or extreme solutions to the
challenges that face them in their country.
I agree entirely with the hon. Member for Coventry North West
() that tackling the root
causes of poverty is in everybody’s interests; that was pretty
much where I was going to conclude. Food
security is at the root of a lot of the sustainable
development goals, and a range of different international
development interventions are aimed at achieving it, because that
is the basis for what we all need to survive. It is on that basis
that we can all live in a fairer, more peaceful and prosperous
world.
10.05am
(Coventry North West)
(Lab)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Pritchard,
and I thank my hon. Friend the Member for Birmingham, Erdington
(Mrs Hamilton) for securing this timely debate.
Global food networks are innately linked to our national
security. Throughout Putin’s illegal war, Russia has refused to
fulfil its commitment to export grains from Ukraine, which in
turn has poured fuel on the fire of an already serious
humanitarian emergency. Rising food prices across the globe are
having a devastating impact on the poorest communities, which
cannot continue. Yet at a time of such calamity for
global Food security what do
the Government decide to do? They continue to cut the UK’s aid
budget, with disastrous effect.
As the global community reels from conflict, hunger and climate
catastrophe, the Conservatives continue to heap damage on to our
global reputation. Britain should be at the forefront of
providing aid to the hungry, not turning our backs on the world
stage when help is most needed. Our allies are noticing, and they
will not forget this moment. Britain is a leader on the world
stage or it is nothing, so I urge the Government to think again
and provide the help that is so badly needed. The Conservatives’
own manifesto contains an explicit commitment to end
“the preventable deaths of mothers, new-born babies and children
by 2030”.
Given that malnutrition plays a role in 45% of all deaths of
under-fives, and with global food insecurity rising, it is
unacceptable that food receives only three mentions in the
international development strategy. This Government are showing
their true colours when it comes to fighting global food poverty.
They will not act when it matters, and that is truly
disgraceful.
The Government are breaking their own promise not only on
preventable deaths, but on the looming threat of climate change.
Global warming could lead to a 20% rise in global food prices by
2050, hurting the world’s poorest countries. The Government must
finally deliver on their promise on international climate
finance, to help developing countries fight the climate crisis,
and help to protect food supply. If Food
security is not connected for the world, it is not protected
for us at home. This, more than most, is an interconnected issue,
and if we do not deal with it on a global scale, there is minimal
chance of success. We cannot close ourselves off from the reality
of climate change; we must work together with those who will be
worst affected to find a solution now.
In the United Kingdom, we need a sustainable pivot towards
self-sufficiency, meaning a decisive shift towards a
farmer-focused food chain. We have a target to double the amount
of locally sourced food in our shopping baskets. We need to put
local farmers in Coventry, the west midlands and across the
country, and fishers, food producers and workers, at the heart of
plans to deliver healthy food locally. To support our farmers and
save our planet, locally produced food must be the future. To
achieve that, we need to boost the viability of small and
medium-sized enterprise producers of fruits, vegetables, dairy
and livestock, and increase the land area dedicated to
smallholdings. City gardens and other urban green spaces must
provide local populations with a much higher percentage of their
daily food. That is something that we need to urgently
address.
Unless the Government act, the UK’s reputation will continue to
wane as we are seen to be closing ourselves off. This is an
opportunity for our country to become a world leader in an area
that will only grow in significance in the years to come, and for
the Government to tackle a key issue that also affects the United
Kingdom. Food poverty is on the increase, and in my city of
Coventry many families now depend on food banks. If the
Government refuse to act, Labour is ready and willing to do what
is needed to provide food for the children of this country and
the world.
10.10am
(Stirling) (SNP)
It is a pleasure to see you in the Chair, Mr Pritchard, and to
wind up for the SNP in this very important debate. I warmly
congratulate the hon. Member for Birmingham, Erdington (Mrs
Hamilton) on securing it. She said it was her first Westminster
Hall debate; I hope it is not her last.
This important discussion is close to my heart. I was a Member of
the European Parliament from 2004 to 2019, when that Brexit thing
got in the way, and I sat on the Committee on Foreign Affairs and
the Committee on Agriculture and Rural Development. I was often
struck by the interconnected nature of those issues: climate
change, food insecurity and resource scarcity are drivers of many
of the issues that we traditionally view through a foreign
affairs prism, but which actually need to be viewed through a
much more coherent prism.
It is a pleasure to see the hon. Member for Strangford () in his place. I know that fishing and farming are
close to his heart; he has been a strong advocate of both sectors
for a long time. He made the point powerfully that the UK imports
46% of its food, so the UK’s Food
security cannot be viewed in isolation; it needs to be
viewed through a much wider prism, and our policies need to align
better.
My hon. Friend the Member for Glasgow North () made a very powerful point
on behalf of his constituents: they do not want to see anybody
suffering from food insecurity and hunger, whether in our own
communities or worldwide. That needs a far stronger response. In
a very powerful speech, the hon. Member for Coventry North West
() spoke about the
interconnectedness of climate change and international
development policy, and said that we need to do better than we
have managed to date.
I feel for the Minister, because there is an awful lot in this.
As I say, I was struck by the fact that food, agriculture and
foreign affairs are often interlinked, and the same is true
domestically. Call it agriculture and only so many people are
interested, but many are interested in food, nutrition, land
management, trade, climate change, animal welfare, development
policy and social justice. Food is at the heart of many of those
issues, and we do not have the policy coherence that we need. I
feel for the Minister, who has to cover all that.
To make a consensual point—this has been a cross-party,
consensual debate—these issues cut across party, country and
region. We all need to work on them together, because I am afraid
they are getting worse, and they are getting worse faster. The
developed world—I do not like that term—is in a position to help
other countries that are suffering the consequences of our
economic, trade and foreign policy.
I have some concrete suggestions. I am indebted to two
organisations: the National Farmers Union of Scotland has
produced a number of strong recommendations for
domestic Food security which is
part of the wider context, and the International Development
Committee’s “Food insecurity” report contains a number of strong
recommendations. I hope the Government take those recommendations
to heart, because if they tackle this issue seriously, no one
will applaud louder than me. It needs urgent attention and
cross-cutting solutions.
The biggest thing we can do to tackle short-term food insecurity
is to go back to the 2019 Conservative party manifesto and
reinstate the 0.7% international aid commitment. I appreciate
that the cut to 0.5% is temporary, but it means that a lot of
people in the developing world are suffering. On 6 May, the ONE
campaign published concrete data showing that the UK official
development assistance cut had caused 11.6 million children,
girls and women to lose out on nutritional support, 6.2 million
girls under two and 12 million babies to lose out on nutritional
support, 7.1 million children to lose out on education, 5.3
million women and girls to lose access to modern family planning
methods, and 3.3 million to lose humanitarian aid. In addition,
54 MW of clean energy has not been installed.
That relates to my wider point about policy coherence. We must
remember that food needs a farmer. We should not allow ourselves
to get tied up in short-sighted debates about meat versus
vegetables, and between competing land uses. Farmers will be
integral to how we feed ourselves now and in the future. Farmers
need to be at the heart of that policy. Policy coherence needs to
begin at home, and our policies are not as coherent as they need
to be.
I was struck by the point made by the hon. Member for Strangford
about forestry. We are dealing with that issue in Scotland as
well; the Scottish Government have recently brought out new
forestry guidelines. I remember when I helped to draft the
European Parliament’s common agricultural policy. It encouraged
farmers to diversify into energy crops, photovoltaic panels and
forestry, but it was always meant to be for the bits and bats of
land that farmers could not do much else with. It was never meant
to be taking prime agricultural land out of agricultural
production. We must get that back out of our agenda. Of course
there are going to be competing land uses—at home and
worldwide—but we must put food production far higher up our
national security and resilience agenda.
There has been a good debate and discussion. We have a lot of
suggestions. I again refer Members to the International
Development Committee’s report, which has a lot of concrete
suggestions and, in a spirit of constructive co-operation, I
offer the Minister our support; where we see positive
developments, we will be constructive. These points are not party
political. They are not limited to one country, however we define
country. They are not limited to the domestic, however we define
that too. We need to work together on this stuff.
10.16am
(Birmingham, Edgbaston)
(Lab/Co-op)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Pritchard.
I thank my hon. Friend the Member for Birmingham, Erdington (Mrs
Hamilton) for securing this hugely important debate, which is an
existential matter for many of our constituents and millions
around the globe.
I also thank the hon. Member for Strangford (), who cares about our role in the world and speaks up
for the most marginalised at home and abroad. I also thank the
hon. Member for Glasgow North () for his contribution, which
made the link between food insecurity at home and abroad. I thank
my hon. Friend the Member for Coventry North West () for making a powerful case
on the impact of aid cuts and the decimation of the Department
for International Development.
At a time of converging global crises, I look forward to working
with the new Minister for Development, who is not in his place,
in the interests of the world’s poorest and most marginalised,
and those of the British people, who expect us to play a leading
role in building a fairer, safer world, which is in our national
interest. Global Food security is
national security. The UK imports almost half the food it
consumes, exposing us to fluctuations in global prices. In the
year to September, food and non-alcohol beverage prices rose
nearly 15%—the highest rate in 40 years. For many basics, the
rise was even higher.
For our poorest constituents, the impact stings all the more, as
more of their disposable income is siphoned away on the
essentials. At this point, we can all cite shocking tales from
our constituency mailbag. I spoke to a headteacher from my
constituency recently, who told me they have children turning up
to school nervous wrecks, unable to concentrate. They have seen
their parents skipping meals, and are often hungry themselves.
One boy she spoke of was so hungry that they caught him trying to
eat from a pot of PVA glue.
This not just a national crisis, but an international crisis that
we have an interest in solving. Globally, food prices have soared
over the past year. Despite dropping over the summer with
harvests rolling in, the Food and Agriculture Organisation shows
that prices remain high, at 8% above last year’s levels. Global
wheat prices remain 10.6% above values in August last year.
According to the World Food Programme, 345 million people are
experiencing acute food insecurity.
The causes are multifaceted, but the consequences are invariably
stark, as many hon. Members have highlighted. Putin’s barbaric
war of aggression with Ukraine has poured fuel on the fire of
inflation. Earlier this year, the Russian block on grain exports
from Ukraine contributed to an international humanitarian crisis.
Across the House, we are united in standing up for Ukraine in the
face of Russian aggression. We welcome the UN-backed Black sea
grain initiative between Ukraine, Russia and Turkey, which has
been essential to get shipments out of Ukraine and to combat
rising food prices. The UK has to put its diplomatic weight
behind extending the agreement beyond November. Russia must
continue to meet its commitment under the agreement in full. I
hope that the Minister will continue to provide support to the EU
solidarity lanes programme, which is helping to ship millions of
tonnes of grain from Ukraine via land and river borders each
month.
Let us be clear: Ukraine is only one factor in the global hunger
crisis. Even before Russia’s invasion, food, fuel and fertiliser
prices were rising, and 70% of those facing acute levels of food
insecurity in 2021 were in conflict-affected countries.
Ukraine-related food price spikes are only the latest evidence
that the global agriculture system is broken. That reinforces the
global need to diversify our food sources and support developing
countries with a bottom-up approach to Food
security Households’ right to food is put under increased
pressure when they experience extreme events that are out of
their control. The hungry have few choices: they can migrate in
search of food, take food from others by force or die of
starvation. The question for us is how to work with partners to
stabilise and build resilient local food environments.
Rising global food prices are being felt by people from Nugaal to
Northfield. Like the pandemic before it, this crisis is a
reminder that island though we are, the greatest challenges
facing the world will also reach our shores. In these difficult
times, there is cause for solidarity and international
co-operation between allies and nations. It is a call that, in
times past, Britain has answered proudly.
As many colleagues have said today, the suffering across the
world is enormous. Labour has been ringing the alarm about the
hunger crisis for the best part of a year. From Afghanistan to
Yemen to sub-Saharan Africa, conflict, inflation and accelerating
climate change are creating a perfect storm. In June, the World
Food Programme warned that the number of people at risk of
succumbing to famine or famine-like conditions could rise to 323
million this year. The former Minister, the right hon. Member for
Chelmsford (), travelled to east Africa last
week, where she will have seen the human consequence of the
crisis at first hand. It is a shame that she cannot now turn that
into action.
Extreme hunger is driving mass displacement and conflict, and
putting hundreds of thousands of lives at risk. According to
Oxfam, more than 13 million people across Ethiopia, Kenya and
Somalia were displaced in search of water and pasture in just the
first quarter of 2022, while the UN warned that 350,000 children
could die by the end of the summer in Somalia alone.
After the catastrophic famine of 2011, which killed 260,000
people—half of them children—the UK and the international
community vowed “never again”. The UK learned lessons with a much
stronger response to the famine of 2017, when it succeeded in
saving thousands upon thousands of lives. However, despite the
current crisis outstripping those of five and 11 years ago, the
UK’s response this year has paled in comparison. The World Food
Programme director, David Beasley, said that it has put aid
workers in the unimaginable position of having to take food from
the mouths of the hungry to give to the starving.
At a time when we should be fortifying our alliances and building
international co-operation, the UK, under this Government, has
gone missing. Successive cuts to overseas aid and the chaotic
block on spending this summer, just weeks after the Foreign,
Commonwealth and Development Office budget was signed off, have
left the UK isolated. Repurposing aid away from poverty has not
gone unnoticed. In June, Samantha Power, chief of the United
States Agency for International Development —USAID—expressed
disbelief at this Government’s decision to strip back support
from east Africa:
“at just the time of this, arguably, unprecedented food crisis,
you’re actually seeing a lot of the key donors scaling back, if
you can believe it…assistance in places like sub-Saharan Africa.
And that comes on the heels of the British government…making
significant cuts”.
Last week, Abdirahman Abdishakur Warsame, the presidential envoy
for Somalia’s drought response, made these chastening
remarks:
“In the 2017 drought, the UK and its leadership was vital, its
advocacy and energy was great, and it encouraged people like me
to match that commitment. Britain was a great ally to Somalia but
that is all gone. The UK is still an ally, and they help with
security, but when it comes to humanitarian response they are not
there, not in leadership or in aid. It’s all gone.”
He is right to speak out because the situation is so grave. Some
700,000 people are now on the brink of famine in east Africa, and
many millions more are suffering from acute malnutrition.
Let me be as clear as I can. When I say famine, I mean mass
death. Under the integrated Food
security phase classification system, that means two in
every 10,000 adults or four in every 10,000 children dying every
single day. Oxfam has warned that across the region, someone is
now dying of hunger every 36 seconds. By the time this debate
finishes, that will be 150 people more.
The urgency of this crisis could barely be more stark. However,
earlier this month, when the Minister in the other place, , was asked how much of the
£156 million allocated to this crisis had been disbursed to date,
he said that less than half had been allocated. Let me impress on
the Minister that when 260,000 people died in the famine of 2011,
more than half died before the official declaration of famine was
made. What are we waiting for? We cannot wait until a formal
announcement to act.
On the steps of Downing Street, our new Prime Minister tried to
claim the mandate of the 2019 general election and recommitted to
delivering on that manifesto. In the context of this debate, I
remind the Minister what that manifesto said:
“Building on this Government’s existing efforts, we will end the
preventable deaths of mothers, new-born babies and children by
2030”.
Given that malnutrition plays a role in 45% of all deaths of
under-fives, and that in a food crisis it is women and girls who
eat less and eat last, we would expect Food
security to be a top priority for this Conservative
Government. Why was food mentioned only three times in the
Government’s 10-year international development strategy? Why did
Ministers turn up empty-handed to the Nutrition for Growth summit
in December and take two years to renew its pledge? Why did an
estimated 11.7 million women and children lose out on nutrition
support last year due to the cuts?
I will finish by referring to the single greatest long-term
challenge to global Food security the
climate emergency. This summer, droughts, floods and wildfires
wreaked havoc in the UK and across the world. In Pakistan,
devastating floods left a third of the country—equivalent to the
size of the United Kingdom—underwater. Acres of rice fields were
lost. In India, extreme heat decimated crop yields in Punjab and
Uttar Pradesh, leading to a domestic grain export ban. In the
horn of Africa, we face an unprecedented fifth failed rainy
season in a row.
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change has warned of the
impact of global warming on food security—not only from the
wanton destruction of extreme weather events, but as soil health
progressively weakens and ecosystems collapse, pests and diseases
become more common and marine animal biomass depletes. This is a
disaster for the world, including for us in the United Kingdom.
The Climate Change Committee has warned that global warming could
lead to a 20% rise in food prices by 2050. That is a reminder why
international co-operation and development is essential to
protect people at home and across the world.
The truth is that the UK has a unique role to play, but under
this Government we are falling woefully short. Our international
development expertise, decimated with the destruction of DFID, is
sorely missed here and abroad. Our research institutions and
universities have an incredible role to play in unlocking
long-term solutions to the global Food
security crisis, such as their role in developing
drought-resistant crops.
In the crises of years past, we stepped up as leaders on the
world stage to galvanise action and co-operation on the
challenges that we have in common, helping to develop early
warning systems so we can act decisively before tragedies strike.
What happened to that ambition? Will the Minister tell us why his
Government continue to invest in fossil fuels overseas? Why were
central projects for adaptation and mitigation indefinitely
paused this summer? When will the UK finally deliver on the
international climate finance that it promised as host of COP26
last year?
The Opposition know where we stand. We cannot keep lurching from
crisis to crisis. It is only long-term development that will help
us turn the tide on the greatest global challenges, and rebuild
trust based on our shared values and common interests. Global
crises demand global solutions. I hope that the new Minister for
Development will recognise that and will fight to return the UK
to the global stage.
(in the Chair)
There is usually a time limit of 10 minutes for Front Benchers.
Given that we have a little more time, I allowed the shadow
Minister to speak for a bit longer. In the spirit of fairness, if
the Minister wants an extra two minutes, that would be in perfect
order.
10.28am
The Minister for Europe ()
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Pritchard.
I am standing in at short notice after my right hon. Friend the
Member for Chelmsford () left her position. I wish to
put on the record our gratitude for everything that she did so
magnificently in the Department in recent months in her role as
the Minister for Development. Her work was much admired
throughout the House and her recent visit to Ethiopia showed the
compassion with which she conducted her duties and the extent of
her contribution. I put on the record our thanks to her.
In the same spirit, I congratulate the incoming Minister for
Development, my right hon. Friend the Member for Sutton Coldfield
(Mr Mitchell). He will need no introduction on this issue; he has
long-standing and deep expertise. I am sure he will fulfil the
role with alacrity and that he will be available for Westminster
Hall debates in the near future.
I congratulate the hon. Member for Birmingham, Erdington (Mrs
Hamilton) on her first Westminster Hall debate. She gave a
passionate speech full of information and I am grateful for the
issues and questions she raised. She set the issue
of Food security in the
global context very effectively, and mentioned the fact that food
insecurity is a function not of food shortage but of a lack of
access to food; I agree wholeheartedly. It is with great regret
that we see food being weaponised as a political means of
achieving certain outcomes around the world—indeed, we are seeing
that in mainland Europe right now.
The hon. Member mentioned the fact that we have a global cost of
living crisis; I will make some remarks about our contribution to
the World Food Programme in that respect. She rightly pointed out
that women and children are disproportionately affected by food
insecurity, and I assure her that that is why empowering women
and girls is one of the main pillars of our international
development strategy. We are in agreement on that issue. She also
made some remarks about climate finance, which I will cover
presently.
I thank all hon. Members for their contributions, not least the
Labour spokesperson, the hon. Member for Birmingham, Edgbaston
(); the hon. Member for
Rutherglen and Hamilton West (), who is no longer in her
place but talked about the importance of small farmers; and the
hon. Member for Strangford (), who talked about the importance of domestic food
production and the magnificent production of fish and beef in his
constituency, which is an extremely important contributor to UK
domestic production. The hon. Member for Glasgow North () talked about the importance
of sustainable agriculture and small farmers, which was a very
relevant set of remarks, and the hon. Member for Coventry North
West () mentioned the climate
impact of Food security which is
something we are serious about and which I will cover
presently.
The hon. Member for Stirling () made clear the connection
between geopolitics and agriculture and brought to bear his deep
experience in the European Parliament, which was welcome. He
referred to the IDC report; he will have seen the Government
response, which is cogent and lays out the fact that the
Government are doing a great deal. He should be reassured that
there is coherence across Government about bringing development
to bear throughout everything we do, and that it is linked into
the integrated review in terms of our being aware of climate
change and Food security as a
function of geopolitics, but I welcome his remarks.
The world faces an unprecedented food and nutrition crisis.
Conflict, climate change and the lasting impacts of covid have
had a devastating impact on local and global food systems and the
people who rely on them. On top of that, we have the insecurity
coming out of Putin’s outrageous invasion of Ukraine and the
extent to which he has sought to weaponise the flow of grain,
principally, but also other foodstuffs from Europe’s breadbasket.
We are keenly aware that up to 345 million people face acute food
insecurity. Close to 50 million people are one step away from
famine and, across the regions of most concern, some 9 million
children are suffering from severe malnutrition. Our focus is on
meeting humanitarian need, keeping food moving and working to
future-proof global food systems. We are working to resolve
conflict and address its root causes.
I gently say to the hon. Member for Birmingham, Edgbaston that we
have been constrained in our official development assistance
budget, given the reduction to 0.5%, but we should be proud that
it is still north of £11 billion annually. It is not a
decimation: development is still a very important part of our
political output through the Foreign Office, so we should be
upbeat about what we can achieve given—and despite—our budgetary
constraints. Helping those in acute humanitarian need is a top
priority. We are taking life-saving action. Our support to the
World Food Programme is helping it to reach 150 million people in
urgent need of food and nutrition assistance this year. We plan
to provide £156 million of bilateral humanitarian assistance to
east Africa this year, helping millions of people to access
essential services and supplies, including food, water, shelter
and healthcare.
Of course, the UK is combining aid with diplomacy, using our
political influence to bring others to the table and deliver a
greater impact. At September’s United Nations General Assembly we
co-hosted an event with the head of humanitarian affairs at the
UN, Martin Griffiths, the head of the United States Agency for
International Development, Samantha Power, and the Governments of
Italy and Qatar, to raise the level of alarm around the
humanitarian crisis in the horn of Africa.
Furthermore, we have been one of the first to respond to the
terrible flooding that has affected more than 33 million people
in Pakistan. Alongside the amazing response from the British
public to the Disasters Emergency Committee’s appeal, we have
provided supplies, shelter and essential water and sanitation
assistance to help to prevent water-borne diseases. Colleagues
have been hugely impressed with Lord Ahmad’s leadership on that
in the Department.
When it comes to multilateral finance, international co-operation
is paramount in addressing food insecurity. With the UK’s
support, the multilateral development banks are stepping up their
assistance. Of course, we remain one of the largest
shareholders—indeed, we are joint fifth—at the World Bank. The
bank has announced $36 billion-worth of support alongside a
further $9 billion from other multilateral development banks.
When it comes to Ukrainian grain, it is clear that Russia’s
invasion of Ukraine has been extremely harmful. We have pushed
hard for the Black sea grain initiative and are very grateful for
the leadership and co-ordination provided by the Turkish
Government, which has helped to stabilise food supplies by
increasing the flow of grain out of Ukraine. Since 1 August, more
than 8 million tonnes of food has been exported from Ukraine’s
Black sea ports and, importantly, more than 60% of the wheat
exported has gone to low and middle-income countries. That is
despite what Putin’s regime might say in its propaganda. It is
vital that Russia does not block the deal’s extension when the
initial 120-day period expires on 19 November. We are working
really hard through our diplomatic channels to ensure that that
does not happen, because the grain must keep flowing.
Several Members mentioned climate change and sustainable
agriculture, which is absolutely critical. Feeding the world must
work hand in hand with tackling climate change, biodiversity loss
and biological threats. I can confirm that our international
development strategy reaffirmed our commitment to doubling our
international climate finance to £11.6 billion between 2021-22
and 2025-26. At least £3 billion of that will be invested in
solutions to protect and restore nature, and we aim to ensure a
balanced split between mitigation and adaptation finance. We are
putting our money where our mouth is. We think that is important
because, as has been discussed in this debate, if the climate is
protected to allow small farmers to continue production, that
tackles the root cause of these sorts of issues.
Furthermore, under our COP26 presidency we helped to bring
agriculture and food systems to the centre of climate discussions
at that forum. We launched the agriculture breakthrough agenda,
which will help to accelerate the transition to sustainable
agriculture. At the World Bank annual meetings, we bought
partners together for our policy dialogue, to learn about and
collaborate on policies that work for people, climate and nature,
such as the repurposing of harmful subsidies.
For example, Vietnam is training farmers in the Mekong delta in
sustainable rice production, cutting the use of water resources
by 40% and reducing fertiliser use while increasing farmers’
incomes. Similarly, Sierra Leone is planting trees on degraded
lands to reduce the impact of climate change and to protect
farmers from flooding. I am sure Members will be pleased to hear
that in Malawi, Nepal, Rwanda and Ethiopia, our commercial
agriculture for smallholders and agribusiness programme is
helping farmers to adopt climate-smart technologies and improve
fertiliser use.
On science, technology and innovation, our investment in science
and research has been important to the Foreign Office’s work. Our
support enables bodies such as CIGR—the International Commission
of Agricultural and Biosystems Engineering, which is the world’s
leading agricultural science and innovation organisation—to
release new climate-resilient wheat varieties, which help
millions of farmers to increase the resilience of their crops to
drought and disease. Last year alone, our investments resulted in
the release of 59 climate-resistant and nutritious new
bio-fortified crop varieties, feeding more than 27 million
people.
I thank the Minister for his comprehensive response to the
debate. I and other Members have talked about the partnership
between the agrifood sector and universities, and how that
advances the technological opportunities that result. Does he
recognise that those contributions and those partnerships in
universities across all of this great United Kingdom of Great
Britain and Northern Ireland really point the way forward to
finding a new way to feed the world?
I agree entirely; that co-operation is extremely important. That
kind of research and co-operation has shown that the efficiency
of things such as photosynthesis in food crops can boost yields
by more than 20%. That is critical to drive up yield, improve the
efficiency of land use and, of course, feed the world, so we are
in agreement. We need such technological transformation to expand
global food supplies in a sustainable way without expanding land
use or damaging the environment.
I conclude by thanking all hon. Members for their thoughtful
contributions. We acknowledge the fact that feeding the world in
the face of such huge challenges demands the attention of us all,
and the entire effort of the Government is focused on that. I am
grateful for the contributions from all parties. We will continue
our extremely important work.
10.40am
Mrs
We heard from the hon. Member for Strangford (), who highlighted the important contribution of
agriculture in Northern Ireland to our Food
security We must ensure that no one feels they are left
behind.
I thank the hon. Member for Glasgow North (), who talked about the right
type of support for farmers and people having access to markets
to sell the products they produce. His experience of working in
the international aid sector made his contribution to the debate
really helpful.
As a fellow west midlands MP, I thank my hon. Friend the Member
for Coventry North West () for focusing on the
importance of locally produced foods in ending food insecurity. I
also thank the hon. Member for Stirling (), the Opposition Front-Bench
spokesperson, my hon. Friend the Member for Birmingham, Edgbaston
(), and the Minister; I am
grateful for his responses. This has been a really important
debate and I thank each and every person who has spoken.
Question put and agreed to.
Resolved,
That this House has considered global Food
security
|