Esther McVey (Tatton) (Con) I beg to move, That this House
recognises that food security is a major concern to the British
public and that the impact of the covid-19 pandemic, the cost of
living crisis and the conflict in Ukraine has made UK food security
more important than ever before; further recognises the strain on
the farming sector due to rising farming and energy costs; supports
the Government’s ambition to produce a National Food Strategy white
paper and...Request free trial
(Tatton) (Con)
I beg to move,
That this House recognises that food security is a major concern
to the British public and that the impact of the covid-19
pandemic, the cost of living crisis and the conflict in Ukraine
has made UK food security more important than ever before;
further recognises the strain on the farming sector due to rising
farming and energy costs; supports the Government’s ambition to
produce a National Food Strategy white paper and recognises the
urgent need for its publication; notes that the UK food system
needs to become more sustainable; and calls on the Government to
recognise and promote alternative proteins in the National Food
Strategy, invest in homegrown opportunities for food innovation,
back British businesses and help future-proof British
farming.
The motion is in my name and that of the hon. Member for Bristol
East (). I pay tribute to her for
all her help in co-ordinating this debate, and I particularly
thank the Backbench Business Committee for finding time for
it.
Food security is a perennial concern. Even the meaning of “food
security” causes concern and disagreement, but I will use this
definition as a starting point—being able to feed the population
at a reasonable cost, even in the face of future shocks such as a
global pandemic, massive harvest failure or a general crisis of
agricultural productivity caused by climate change. However,
colleagues may well wish to expand on that definition and talk
about a whole array of issues, for this is such a vast topic with
so many important implications for farmers and for families and
household food bills, particularly now that we see them rising
with the cost of living crisis.
The UK is addressing the issues of food security by using new
approaches to agriculture such as vertical farming, precision
agriculture and genome editing. It is cutting food waste with
Government policies and new technology, producing alternative
proteins from cultured insects and algae—not for the
faint-hearted—as well as producing plant-based meat, on which the
UK leads the way, and packaging food in innovative ways to reduce
damage, prolong freshness and fight off bacteria.
However, with the shocks we have suffered to our food security
over the last two years—the consequences of covid and lockdowns,
and now of the war in Ukraine —there is much more the Government
need to do, particularly to help our local farmers. In the
north-west, our 12,815 farming and growing community quietly go
about their business, collectively producing a wealth of food
commodities and contributing more than £726 million to the
economy. Our UK farmers and growers are world leaders in food
safety, animal welfare, traceability and environmental
enhancements, and these values are reflected through our UK
annual food and drink export value of £2 billion.
I want to focus on my little corner of the world. Over 70% of
Cheshire county is still agriculture-producing, with large
swathes given to dairy, sheep and cattle farming. More than 7,000
people are employed on 2,804 farm holdings covering nearly
160,000 hectares of land. We are home to some of the country’s
leading dairy farms and dairies—for example, Grosvenor’s Eaton
Estate in Cheshire produces more than 35 million litres of fresh
milk a year, which is enough for half a million people every day.
In Tatton, we have County Milk, which is a family-run business
and the largest privately owned dairy ingredient company in the
UK. We have the award-winning Delamere Dairy, located in
Knutsford, and Bexton Cheese in Knutsford. We have the
award-winning Lambing Shed, run by the Mitchell family, and
Cheshire Smokehouse in Morley Green, Wilmslow. We have Mobberley
Ice Cream, Great Budworth Ice Cream and Seven Sisters Farm Ice
Cream—there are lots of ice creams—and Roberts Bakery. I meet my
local farmers regularly, assisted and facilitated by the local
National Farmers Union team.
There have always been concerns in farming, for livestock and the
Great British weather are temperamental fellows to work with, but
of late these issues have got bigger and they need to be
addressed if we want our food strategy to work. In Tatton, our
farmers, like those across the country, are facing labour
shortages, energy price increases of up to 400%, fertiliser cost
increases of over 150% and red diesel increases, as well as
increases in rural crime. Only the other week, I met a group of
local farmers at Shepherd’s farm in Aston by Budworth, which has
just invested £300,000 in a new milking shed of the new cubicle
type, and they all concurred that we are now seeing particularly
tough times.
My farmers are renowned for good husbandry, good farming and good
farming techniques, and they go to great lengths to look after
their animals and land, for high-quality care leads to
high-quality meat, milk and produce, but they need help to find
staff and to offer competitive training and apprenticeships. New
farmers entering the profession need to have a chance to get a
farm, and those leaving it need a chance to relinquish a farm at
a price that will provide for their retirement. Can the Minister
please look into these matters as a matter of urgency? I know
significant work has been done, but certainly more work needs to
be done. If the Minister cannot provide a full answer today, I am
more than happy for him to write to me.
Another of my constituents is Philip Pearson, who, along with
other members of his family, runs a family business called the
APS Group. Set up by his grandfather after the second world war
in Alderley Edge, it is now the biggest tomato producer in the
UK, producing approximately 650 million tomatoes a year. He has
explained quite clearly that the horticulture sector in the UK is
desperately short of staff to look after crops and to cope during
the harvest. He would have expected 1,500 workers, out of a peak
total of 2,500, from central and eastern Europe each year—from
March to Christmas—but this has not been possible this year.
A question for the Minister is: can these farmers have more visas
for seasonal agricultural workers—the number must rise from the
current 30,000 to at least 50,000 as soon as possible—and can
farmers employ Ukrainian nationals and other migrants now housed
in the UK to help deliver an increase in the number of seasonal
agricultural workers?
(Orkney and Shetland)
(LD)
The right hon. Lady is making a very powerful case, very little
of which I would disagree with, but the food strategy is not all
about agriculture. The fishing industry also needs visas for
crews in particular, which has been a problem for years. Through
her, can I add to the Minister’s list to take to the Home Office
the plight of the fishing industry as well as that of
farmers?
The right hon. Member absolutely can, and indeed he has. I expect
other Members to talk about the farming in and the produce coming
from their parts of the country. As I said, I am focusing on
Cheshire, but I believe we all share the same concerns.
In my patch, farmers are leading the way in technology, too. In
the case of APS, it is developing robotics for tomato production,
starting with harvesting and going right the way through to
packaging. It is putting significant money and research into this
development to cope with the lack of people now coming forward to
work in the farming sector. However, these robots will not be
ready for four to five years, so it needs short-term help now to
be able to deliver on its commitment to supply tomatoes for the
country.
Farmers also care deeply about the environment. This particular
farm is working hard to deliver compostable packaging. It uses
its tomato plant waste to develop packaging, and it is using it
for other sectors, including fake leather for car seats, coffee
cups and even bactericidal treatment for the NHS. It is charged a
packaging tax, yet it is developing green, biodegradable
alternatives, so can the Minister let me know what incentives
there are for such great British technology to help the companies
providing these terrific developments, which will be used not
just here, but right around the world?
(Strangford) (DUP)
Robotics is very important in my constituency of Strangford in
two ways. First, for the dairy sector, it is a seven-figure sum
to set up a new robotic milking dairy—my neighbours are doing
that—and, secondly, it is a significant six-figure sum for those
wanting to have tomato houses, as the right hon. Lady has
mentioned. To make such vast investments happen, the Government
must be involved, so the Department for Environment, Food and
Rural Affairs here and the Department of Agriculture, Environment
and Rural Affairs back home will have to be very much part of
that process.
I thank the hon. Member for joining in and adding that pertinent
point.
We could not have this debate without talking about the high
energy prices at the moment, with an increase of 400%, and what
is happening to farms having to cope with those increased costs.
For APS, this has resulted in reduced production of UK tomatoes
and other foods, because the costs of production are not
recovered through higher prices. Farmers must be mindful of
passing on higher prices to customers—if they can, as the
supermarkets and shops the food goes to will not accept them—so
we must be mindful of how we support farmers.
That company has even developed a combined heat and power plant,
which supplies 3 MW of power to Alderley Edge, and it uses the
waste heat and the carbon dioxide from that to grow their crop. I
wonder whether it can get some recognition that it uses carbon
dioxide from power generation to produce food, because that would
help it to offset the huge increases in energy cost. I know the
Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy is
reviewing the move from the European Union energy trading scheme
to the ETS UK equivalent post Brexit, but can the Minister liaise
with his ministerial colleague at BEIS and give me the latest
news on that?
Food production is essential for the delivery of the
environmental benefits on which the Government plan to centre in
their agricultural support policy, but unless we recognise the
dual role of farmers as food producers and conservationists, we
risk turning farmers into environmental contractors with little
incentive to continue farming. That would do enormous damage to
the jobs and communities that depend on farming, as well as
weaken our food security. The strategy needs to be clearer in
linking food production to action against climate change and
enhancing the natural environment.
My final plea is for greater clarity on food labelling, so that
the high standards of British food are known and recognised—so a
shopper knows the quality of the produce and where it is from.
Buying British and locally, for me that means buying from
Cheshire, is important not just because of the high husbandry
standards of UK food but the low transport mileage to get from
field to fork. That low transport mileage is particularly
important if we are concerned about the environment. As my beef
and sheep farmers say, it is better to have high-quality beef and
lamb from Cheshire than chickpeas from halfway around the world.
[Interruption.] I thank Members for the cheers for that.
On food standards, it is important when the Government are
negotiating and implementing free trade agreements to avoid
undermining the domestic sector for farmers and growers and
reducing standards. In its report on the UK-Australia free trade
agreement issued on Friday 17 June 2022, the Environment, Food
and Rural Affairs Committee concluded:
“In practice it appears unlikely that food produced to lower
animal welfare standards will enter the UK as a result of this
deal.”
That is positive news, but my farmers are calling for greater
transparency on food labelling. Like me, they believe in choice,
but we only have choice when we have knowledge of what we are
choosing and what we are choosing from.
(Swansea West)
(Lab/Co-op)
I sit on that Committee and we observed that the average size of
a sheep farm in Australia is 100 times the size of one in Wales,
and they practise mulesing—shearing the back- sides of sheep in a
painful way without anaesthetics—and transport cattle for 24
hours. So there is a clear problem of British producers being
undercut by inhumane welfare practices and massive intensity of
production.
That relates to the transparency that some people are calling for
to know what they are eating and enjoying, to appreciate the
difference in cost and the treatment the animals have gone
through. Fair competition can only really come from accurate
labelling and transparency on produce. The UK produces some of
the best food in the world, with the highest standards of safety
and animal welfare, and it is only right that people in this
country know what they are getting.
Tatton farmers and producers are hard-working, dedicated to the
sector, industrious and experts in their field, with many
generations of experience. They want to help solve the food
security issues that this country is facing, but along with this
strategy, which goes some of the way, and along with awareness of
what is happening around the world, more assistance is needed to
help our farmers here and now with the problems the world is
facing.
1.34pm
(Bristol East) (Lab)
I thank the right hon. Member for Tatton () for that comprehensive
introduction. It means, I hope, that I can keep my remarks quite
short. I agree on a lot of what she said, although she may not be
surprised to hear that I do not agree with her about chickpeas.
Hodmedod, a really good British pulse grower, has been growing
them in Norfolk for the past few years and I urge her to support
it in its efforts. There is so much potential and growing pulses
here is really good for the soil. I can wax lyrical about things
like chickpeas.
I want to explain that I make a fabulous chickpea soup and stew.
If anyone would like to know the recipes, I will be more than
happy to share them.
I make a very good chana dal.
The debate is about food security, which the right hon. Lady
covered in detail, but also about the national food strategy. I
pay tribute to Henry Dimbleby, who put a huge amount of work into
the strategy. I have a well-thumbed copy of the strategy
document; it is almost like a Bible to me, giving an overview of
all the different aspects of food policy and what we need to
do.
I think Henry should feel let down by the inadequacy of the
Government’s response to that document. I want to highlight some
of the things the Government should be doing more on. The work
was commissioned by the Department for Environment, Food and
Rural Affairs, and he was an executive director there. It is
disappointing that the Government are not treating that as the
Bible for how to take things forward.
Food poverty is now far worse than when Henry Dimbleby started
that work. We have seen frightening figures from the Office for
National Statistics this week showing how prices of basic
foodstuffs have shot up: vegetable oil by 65%; pasta by 60%;
bread by 38%. The Food Foundation recently reported that 18% of
households, and 26% of households with children, have experienced
food insecurity in the past month. That is nearly 10 million
adults, and around 4 million children. Many of those surveyed
said they have cooked less, eaten food cold, turned off fridges
and washed dishes in cold water because of concern about energy
bills and rising inflation. Many were buying less fruit and
vegetables.
On “Newsnight” last week, the former Children’s Commissioner,
Anne Longfield, said she had never seen child food poverty on
this scale before. She called, as did Henry Dimbleby, for Cobra
to be convened. I raised that at Cabinet Office questions this
morning and got a response about how the Prime Minister wanted
compassion to be at the heart of what he did, but I did not get a
response on how a cross-departmental approach to tackling food
poverty could be steered by the Cabinet Office. A
cross-departmental approach is needed. As Henry Dimbleby said
when giving evidence to the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs
Committee last week, we need a structural mechanism to drive
progress. If it is not Cobra, I would like to know from the
Minister what mechanism he envisages would work.
Cobra is also very good at looking at granular detail, which is
important because this calls for a localised response. We can
express some generalities about food poverty, but Bristol, for
example, which is known to be quite a foodie place, also has two
of the top five food deserts in the entire country. There are
estates in south Bristol where it is very difficult to access
affordable and healthy food. So this needs to be done at a local
level. My first question to the Minister is about how he sees
that overarching response. Would DEFRA be leading? Does he see a
role for Cobra?
In terms of swift action, the national food strategy is clear
that extending eligibility for free school meals is one of the
best levers we have. Extending it just to families on universal
credit would feed an extra 1.4 million children. Healthy Start
and holiday hunger schemes are also important.
(Stretford and Urmston)
(Lab)
I am grateful to my hon. Friend for drawing attention to the
importance of families being able to afford healthy food—all the
more important given the rising cost of living. In relation to
Healthy Start, she will know that take-up of these essential
vouchers that provide fresh fruit and veg, and milk and vitamins
to pregnant and new mums and their children is at only about 60%
across the country. Will she support me in calling on the
Government to work across Departments so that those applying for
universal credit who are also eligible for Healthy Start are
automatically registered for that Healthy Start support?
I thank my hon. Friend for that intervention. As I understand it,
next week she will introduce a Bill, which I very much support
and I hope that the Government will, too.
I do not have much time to talk about the importance of healthy
diets, but does the Minister know what has happened to the health
inequalities White Paper? Will we see that soon?
The national food strategy approach on junk food is quite
straightforward: it is about restricting advertising and
promotions, and targeting ingredients. Some people I know are
concerned that that will mean increased costs for consumers, who
can ill-afford to feed their families as it is. However, the
suggestion is not to tax food in the shops but, for example, to
tax sugar in the huge quantities bought by the food
manufacturers, so it would be in their interests to reformulate
their products to avoid that tax. We saw that happen with the
soft drinks levy. I would be interested to know what the Minister
thinks about that.
There is all this concern about the nanny state and not wanting
to dictate to people what they do and do not eat. However, we
accept that action on smoking is important for public health
reasons and that action on alcohol abuse is important. When we
look at the cost to the NHS of diet-related diseases and ill
health, it seems a no-brainer to me to take an interventionist
approach on this, too. It is not about telling people what they
can and cannot eat; it is about helping them to make the right
choices for themselves and their families, making sure that the
education is out there and giving financial incentives such as
the Healthy Start scheme.
In terms of other levers that could be used, public procurement
could make a huge difference. The DEFRA consultation on public
sector food and catering closed on 4 September. Could the
Minister tell us when we will hear the results from that?
This may be going back to chickpeas, but the Mayor of New York,
Eric Adams, who describes himself as an imperfect vegan—I suppose
that is better than nothing—has introduced a scheme whereby the
default option for catering in New York hospitals is plant-based.
That does not mean that people cannot choose meat-based options
or things that are not plant-based, but apparently it is proving
to be really popular and there is good take-up. Again, that is a
way of encouraging people down the path of taking a healthier
option. I hope the Minister agrees that much of the food served
in our hospitals—regardless of whether it is of animal origin—is
not the sort of food we should be serving people we are trying to
make healthier and better.
In that regard, my hon. Friend will be pleased to know that
Healthy Start does support the provision of plant-based
meals.
I am glad to hear that; it is a good step. I will not go into the
environmental arguments. I hope that people accept that I am not
trying to force people down a particular path, but the Climate
Change Committee, the UN and several Cabinet Ministers have
accepted that, for environmental and health reasons, we could do
with reducing meat consumption.
I turn to the need for a land-use framework. I understand that
the Government intend to publish one next year. Land is a finite,
scarce resource, but we do not always treat it as such. We need
to be strategic about how we use it for food, carbon
sequestration, biodiversity and fuel. Where possible, “best and
most versatile” land should be used for food growing,
It is nonsense for the Government to seek to reclassify
poorer-quality soil as BMV as part of their war on solar farms.
Is that ill-thought-out proposal still Government policy? It was
a few weeks ago; I hope the Minister understands that I am
finding it quite difficult to keep up. Could he tell me whether
the proposal to reclassify poorer-quality land as BMV is still
going to be brought through?
After yesterday’s Prime Minister’s questions, I am also not sure
where the Government stand on onshore wind. Will the Minister
clarify that? I am glad, however, to see that the fracking ban is
back, but that one U-turn—or two U-turns—has left many casualties
on the road in its wake. Again, that goes to the whole issue of
what land is best used for. As Henry Dimbleby told the EFRA
Committee last week, over the seven or eight decades since the
war, we have been steadily producing more and more food on the
same amount of land. He said:
“That is making the land sick, destroying the environment and
driving out nature.”
What he said about the need for the land to be
carbon-negative—not net zero—was spot on. The potential for
carbon sequestration is huge, and by taking some of the least
productive agricultural land out of production, we could enhance
biodiversity at the same time as creating natural carbon
sinks.
Some 20% of our farmland—mostly peatland and upland—produces only
3% of our calories. Henry Dimbleby argued that about 5% of that
should come out of farming. The rest of the farmland would be
higher yielding, with lower inputs and lower environmental
costs.
Mr Carmichael
May I warn the hon. Lady about the law of unintended
consequences? By way of illustration, I offer the example of my
own family farm on Islay, not in my constituency but on the west
coast. Our farm sits in a site of special scientific interest
designed to protect choughs, which are a highly endangered
species. However, chough numbers continue to decline because the
way in which land is farmed discourages the presence of cattle
and, to encourage chough, both sheep and cattle need to be on
that land. If she is not careful, the sort of blunt tool that she
is talking about could work to the detriment of the chough
population.
I do not know why the right hon. Member says that I am suggesting
a blunt tool.
Mr Carmichael
You mentioned talking land out of production.
Yes; Henry Dimbleby suggests that that 5% should come out of
production. However he does not dictate that that should be
anywhere that, perhaps, does not have certain productivity levels
or does not do this or that. That brings me neatly to my
concluding point.
(The Cotswolds)
(Con)
Will the hon. Member give way?
I think that the hon. Gentleman will make a speech, so I will let
him make his comments then.
This is where the environmental land management scheme comes in,
which is a sophisticated approach and not a blunt tool. It is
about looking at everything taking place on the land, including
what is being done to support nature and biodiversity. I would
think that the farmland mentioned by the right hon. Member for
Orkney and Shetland (Mr Carmichael) would very much come under
those criteria; I hope so. My final question to the Minister is:
where are we now with ELMS? Farmers are desperately seeking
certainty on it. Will he confirm that the public money for public
goods approach will still underpin support for our food and
farming system?
1.47pm
(Stoke-on-Trent Central) (Con)
It is a particular pleasure to follow the hon. Member for Bristol
East (), with whom I sat on the
all-party parliamentary group on the national food strategy,
which has been disbanded. She covered a comprehensive range of
issues that needed to be spoken about, so I will try not to cover
some of them.
I have consistently highlighted the need for a robust food system
to ensure that every one of our constituents has access to
nutritious, affordable food. In achieving that, we must safeguard
our countryside and restore the balance of nature. We need to
reduce the health problems that result from poor diets, and we
can accomplish that only by working together—both across all
Government Departments and more widely in society—from field to
fork.
The food system underpins our economy and security, and the
health of our planet. Without restoring equilibrium to our food
system, we will continue to have food production that depletes
nature and makes us unwell. As the world faces ever more
environmental and social challenges, ensuring a well-functioning
and equitable food system becomes a matter of strategic
importance. Food security depends on global peace, stability, and
a healthy planet and population. We have been facing a threat to
all three of those.
The war in Ukraine has seen millions across the world put at risk
of starvation. Ukraine is commonly referred to as the breadbasket
of the world. It boasts some of the most fertile land on Earth,
with rich black soil—chernozem—perfectly suited to growing grains
and producing and exporting vast amounts of barley, corn, rye and
wheat. Ukraine ranks first in the world in global sunflower
production and export. Even after the war is over, it is likely
that up to 50% of the land will have been rendered unproductive
by landmines, which will take many years to clear.
As buyers have looked to find alternative supplies, international
commodity markets have faced turbulence and prices have risen.
That affects the price of basic foods in shopping baskets in our
local supermarkets.
Russia is one of the biggest exporters of fertilisers. Farmers in
the UK have concerns about input costs—particularly about
fertilisers and animal feed—as well as energy costs. Indeed,
agricultural commodity prices have always been strongly
correlated to the price of energy. We forget that energy prices
were increasing before the war in Ukraine, and as a net importer,
the UK is exposed to the increasing volatility in gas prices.
Energy inputs for farms increased by 34% between January and
April 2022, and farm motor fuel costs increased by 30% over the
same period. That comes at a period of significant economic
turmoil following the effects of a global pandemic, when the food
supply chain has had to respond to a surge in demand due to panic
buying. A cluster of hot, dry summers has led to crop failure and
nature loss, making our land less productive. We will all notice
the impact on familiar products. I read recently that there is a
challenge with tomato ketchup, which is a key ingredient of
Staffordshire oatcakes. It may become a rarer commodity as
climate change threatens to halve the harvest in the coming
years.
Fear of food shortages from multiple fronts has changed our
attitude towards food. Increasingly, purchasing decisions are
based on affordability and choosing the healthy option is more
difficult than before. Lack of money means cold food and cold
water. Some 71% of households who experienced food insecurity in
the past month said they have cooked less, eaten food cold,
turned off fridges and washed dishes in cold water.
When families are being faced with the question of whether to eat
or heat, it is more important than ever that we should have a
national food strategy in place, aligning the nation’s hunger and
health with UK climate goals and UK farm sustainability. Access
to good food is essential to improving life chances and health
must be a focus of our food production. Whatever the cause, we
must recognise that the challenges around access to a healthy
diet are major indicators of inequality. As I think the hon.
Member for Bristol East mentioned, 18% of all households
experienced food insecurity last month, compared with 54% for
households on universal credit, so any Government policy
developed needs to address that disproportionate impact.
Foods that are bad for our health should not be the cheapest
foods on the market, yet people are having to compromise the
quality of their diets to cut food costs. The Food Foundation
suggests that of those experiencing food insecurity, 58% said
they were buying less fruit and 48% said they were buying fewer
vegetables. One young person from Bite Back 2030 said:
“There’s two chicken shops about a one-minute walk from my school
that sells two wings and chips for £1. A school dinner is
£2.40.”
This is a serious issue. People are being forced to choose the
cheapest calories, which are typically the least healthy.
Families with lower incomes are not going to be driven by whether
labels say food is high in calories, fat, sugar and salt. We
should probably check those things, but we do not because the
driver is money and that is what is affordable and within budget.
Good food policy needs to reduce and rebalance the bombardment of
unhealthy food and use the revenue raised to make more
affordable, accessible, easy and appealing food for those on low
incomes.
We see the need to work closely with the food and drink industry
to ensure that our whole population can afford good food, but
tackling obesity is also central to our commitment to levelling
up. We need to support healthier options and behaviours by
addressing social factors that lead to obesity and making them
more conducive to healthy living. Underpinning any economic
levelling up must be a levelling up of diet-related life
choices.
Because I care passionately about the importance of fixing our
food system from the triple challenges of climate change,
biodiversity loss and diet-related ill health, I am hosting a
food summit at Staffordshire University in Stoke-on-Trent on 4
November. I am delighted that the author of the national food
strategy report, Henry Dimbleby, will be opening the summit. We
will have a big conversation about food, and about inspiring new
thinking and embracing new expectations of our food system,
celebrating innovators and shining a light on the great work
already under way. I think my right hon. Friend the Member for
Tatton () mentioned some of that work
on innovation already.
Under the current food system, the amount of food being produced
from a given area of land has increased and the amount of other
life occupying that same area of land has decreased. Data from
the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs shows that
wheat yields in the UK have doubled from 1970 to today. Yet
through that time, we have also seen the number of farmland birds
decrease by 54%. We have touched on land use, so I will skip over
it, but it is very important that we have a clear understanding
of how we should use land.
We need to recognise the dual role of farmers as food producers
and conservationists, but we have to be careful not to turn
farmers into environmental contractors with little incentive to
continue food farming. Therefore, the food strategy could be
clearer in linking food production to action against climate
change and action to enhance the natural environment. Without
such action, climate change further threatens to cause crop
failures and nature loss, which makes our land less productive.
Our priority must be looking at how we can reduce the
environmental impact of the foods we consume, while making it
easier and cheaper for people to consume healthier and more
nutritious food. To build national resilience to food insecurity,
we need to grow—quite literally—our local food production and
enable smaller food businesses to thrive.
The strategy is right to recognise that promoting local food and
drink can also increase cultural identity and community pride.
That, in turn, makes an area a more attractive tourist offer,
while also ensuring the resilience of the local food supply and
supporting farmers and small producers. Growing community
involvement in the redistribution of food will help us to
minimise food waste and ensure that food surplus from the supply
chain is not wasted.
I welcomed the emphasis that the Prime Minister placed on
delivering the 2019 manifesto commitments. The manifesto has high
aspirations for agriculture, food standards, children’s dietary
health and levelling up opportunities, which are impacted
directly by access to good food. Research has already been
conducted on health disparities, and this could be considered
within the compassionate framework that the Prime Minister has
committed to, so the motion has my full support.
Several hon. Members rose—
Madam Deputy Speaker ( )
Order. I hope we can manage without a time limit this afternoon.
It is a good-natured debate and everybody appears to be behaving
quite well. If speeches are around eight minutes, then everyone
will get a fair chance.
1.56pm
(Orkney and Shetland)
(LD)
Thank you very much, Madam Deputy Speaker—I will see what I can
do about that!
First of all, I remind the House of my entry in the Register of
Members’ Financial Interests. I congratulate the right hon.
Member for Tatton () on securing the debate and I
thank the Backbench Business Committee for granting it. This is
an enormously important and timely subject for the House to be
debating.
The cost of food and where people put their money at the moment
is probably the uppermost consideration in the minds of all our
constituents. I hope the Government will bear that in mind when
they think about the wider policy and strategy, because the
implications for some of what we are seeing at the moment could
be profound for both producers and consumers. When people are
primarily driven by price—I think that is their primary
consideration at the moment—and they go to a supermarket and are
looking for the cheapest food on the shelf, they are not
necessarily going to find it with a Union Jack, red label or
saltire on it. At a time when the Government are seeking to
increase, through the variety of trade deals we have, the range
of foods coming into this country, which may not have been
produced to the same environmental and welfare standards that we
are accustomed to, the damage that could be done to our own
producers could be long-term and profound.
I do not want to detain the House for too long today, not least
because the right hon. Member for Tatton was comprehensive in her
introduction to the debate. I can say that there was really
nothing with which I disagreed in her speech—I am agnostic on the
question of chickpeas, but apart from that. It is right that we
should consider for a moment the role of our food producers in
food strategy and food security, and particularly our fishermen,
farmers and fish farmers. Aquaculture is one area of food
production that offers a real opportunity for producing
high-quality protein at affordable prices, but which also brings
with it a number of challenges and opportunities.
This issue also strikes at the heart of the role of Government.
There are things that the Government can do, such as on food
labelling and encouraging people to eat more or different fish or
to use food in a different way—that is perfectly legitimate.
There is an obvious role for the Government, for example in the
production of support payments for farmers. At other times,
however, the role of Government is to get out of the way and
allow food producers to get on and do what they do best. The
Minister, with his background, will be alive to that tension in
Government.
For farmers, fishermen and fish farmers, the many challenges
result in a perfect storm. The rising cost of energy has had a
wide range of impacts; the cost of fertiliser is the one that is
spoken of most frequently, but the costs of running machinery,
such as tractors, are also affected. With the agricultural
industry facing an uncertain future, in particular, regarding the
future of support payments, there is real anxiety in the industry
about what the future holds.
Let me say parenthetically that the suggestion of support
payments being subsidies for farmers has to stop. Support
payments for farmers are actually support payments for, probably,
consumers and supermarkets. It is their route to ensuring that
cheap food keeps being produced in this country—it is not just
farmers who benefit from support payments. One thing that the
Government could do as part of the food strategy is to look at
how the big supermarkets have a real, adverse impact on how
farmers can get their food on to the shelves. There is a massive
imbalance of power. A few years ago, we started the Groceries
Code Adjudicator. It has not had the effectiveness that I hoped
it would, but that issue has to be revisited through whatever
means we can.
One of my frustrations relating to the future of support payments
is that we see that as being about either agriculture and food
production or environmental goods. From my experience as somebody
who lives in and is part of an agricultural community and who was
brought up on a farm, that is not an either/or—it is both.
Farmers are working the land in a way that would maintain the
richness of our countryside’s ecology, especially in many areas
that are less productive, where the land is not of such good
quality. I offered an example from my experience to the hon.
Member for Bristol East (), but there are others from
my constituency. I see the damage that is done to crops grown in
Orkney by barnacle geese, and Orkney is not a great cropping
county. The balance between what farmers can do and the
challenges of nature has really fallen out of kilter there.
Our food strategy needs to be holistic; we cannot allow it to be
silent on things. It is very well to say that we will have visas
to bring in workers to pick fruit or to work on fishing boats, or
whatever else it may be, but that is of absolutely no use if we
have no housing in which to accommodate them. Housing in our
rural communities is a massive issue. My hon. Friend the Member
for Westmorland and Lonsdale () speaks about that issue frequently.
On transport, it frustrates me beyond measure that it seems to be
a massive surprise to our shipping companies every year that
suddenly in October, crofters start wanting to sell their lambs
and to export them to the Scottish mainland. We need extra
capacity in our ferries at that time. A bit more joined-up
thinking in Government, wherever that is, would allow us to put
food policy at the heart of Government and Government strategy.
In that way, there would be a win for us all.
2.03pm
(Hendon) (Con)
It is a pleasure to speak in this debate, and I congratulate my
right hon. Friend the Member for Tatton () and the hon. Member for
Bristol East () on securing it. I have been
calling for a national food strategy for many years. Like the
hon. Member, I agree that the food strategy is not about the
nanny state; it is a road map, putting a spotlight on the path
that we should tread as a nation.
The national food strategy mentions food security a lot. Many of
us are concerned about that, but what is food security? Academic
research on that issue found that there are more than 200
definitions of “food security”. The NFS, however, defines
self-sufficiency as the ability of a nation to produce its own
food, but under that definition the UK has not been
self-sufficient in food security for the past 176 years. We are
all aware of the problems with the blockades during the first and
second world wars. The Agriculture Act 1947 was designed to
improve food security, but I am not convinced that we have since
achieved that.
Many people say that food security is all about shortage, but we
have to ask ourselves, “Is there actually a shortage of food?”
No, there is not. Global food production is forecast to be higher
this year than last. If England’s 2019 wheat crop had been used
for human consumption alone, it would have provided 2,500
calories per person per day for 63 million people while using
less than 20% of our agricultural land.
Globally, a large share of crops are used to fuel cars and feed
livestock. In the US, a third of the maize crop is turned into
biofuels in a process that is worse for the climate than burning
fossil fuels. Grain is expensive not because it is scarce, but
because we feed most of it to livestock. Animals consume a
disproportionate amount of feed to supply a small amount of meat.
That ensures that 70% of farmland produces just 10% of the
calories manufactured in the UK each year.
Some hon. Members will be able to see where the debate is going.
The issue of meat consumption is important to many people in the
United Kingdom, and the popularity of vegetarianism and veganism
is more important than ever. I will declare an interest: I have
been a vegetarian for 39 years—not for moral or ethical reasons,
but simply because I do not like eating meat. The hon. Member for
Bristol East is a vegan, probably for the same reason, so I share
her love of chickpeas rather than of Cheshire lambs. There are
alternatives. I would never stop anyone eating meat, and I feel
that everyone has the right to do so. It is important to many
people and they enjoy it, so we should let them continue to eat
meat.
However, the food strategy has one area in which the Government
have missed a trick: sustainable protein. The Government have the
opportunity to become a global leader in the sustainable protein
space. When I say protein, I mean plant-based or
fermentation-made and cultivated meat, eggs, dairy and seafood.
If we establish the UK at the forefront of the protein
transition, we will help to make the UK’s food system more
resilient, healthier and more sustainable. At the same time, the
industry would align with many of the UK’s existing policy
commitments, including reaching net zero carbon emissions by
2050, addressing the looming threat of antimicrobial resistance
and championing animal welfare. It would also further cement the
UK’s reputation as a climate leader and a global scientific
superpower.
Making meat from plants and cultivating it from cells presents
enormous opportunities to provide the British public with the
familiar foods that they want, but at a fraction of the external
cost to the environment and planetary health. Plant-based meat
production results in up to 90% fewer greenhouse gas emissions
and uses up to 99% less land than conventional meat. When
produced with renewable energy, cultivated meat could cut the
climate impact of meat by 92% and use up to 95% less land. In
addition, those sustainable proteins are free from antibiotics
and involve no risk of the emergence of zoonotic diseases, which
is associated with raising and killing animals for food.
Back in June, I asked the Government whether they would consider
sustainable protein as part of the national food strategy. They
said that it was a very important issue, on which they were very
keen, but they decided not to include it as part of the national
food strategy. I therefore ask the Minister to do so today. This
is an opportunity not to prevent people from eating meat, but to
give them a choice. As a vegetarian, I would have the choice to
eat such a product, whereas other people would have the choice of
eating what is considered freshly reared meat or something that
has been created. That could also help to address some of the
issues surrounding food labelling. I know that many colleagues
share concerns about production methods in certain religious
communities, so the alternative protein market would allay some
of those concerns.
I ask the Minister to do four things: establish a strategy to
make the UK a global leader in the sustainable protein space;
invest in open access research and development for sustainable
proteins; ensure a fair and robust regulatory plan for the
market; and invest to ensure a dynamic industry ecosystem. That
could help many parts of the world, and the UK could really take
its place as a global leader in the market. Rather than cutting
down on choice, it would extend choice to our constituents.
2.10pm
(Swansea West)
(Lab/Co-op)
In 2010, when the Labour Government left office, there were
26,000 people getting food from food banks. By 2021, that had
increased a hundredfold to 2.6 million, and that was before the
Ukraine war. Now, one in four children and one in five adults—4
million children and 10 million adults—are in food poverty, in
the sixth richest country in the world. That is a catastrophe.
The number of people who are in food poverty, who cannot afford
to eat nutritious food and who are freezing in their house, is
much, much higher than it was during the pandemic.
I am a member of the Co-operative party and the Labour party. We
agree with the right to food. The right to life is in the UN
charter and the UN convention on human rights, and obviously an
intrinsic part of the right to life is the right to food. I
support Co-op party initiatives such as Healthy Start vouchers,
and it is important that they be rolled out and index-linked to
keep up with inflation, but we need much more.
The co-operative movement was started by the Rochdale pioneers to
stop adulterated food. It is about food, and everybody should
have the right to daily nutritional food. Winston Churchill
famously said that the most important asset of a country is its
health; a country’s health is predicated on having enough healthy
food, and the reality is that people do not have enough money to
buy healthy food after taking account of the housing costs and
the heating costs that they face. Amartya Sen, a famous Nobel
prize winner, wrote about famines: he was focused on the
developing world, but he argued that famines are not about a
shortage of food, but about the conjunction of high prices with
low wages in particular communities, leading to starvation.
That is what we are now on the brink of seeing in Britain. High
prices are coming in—yes, because of Ukraine, but also from
Brexit. The price of imports is going down as the value of
sterling has gone down. We have shortages in our own production:
a quarter of our fruit is not picked, we have had a mass culling
of 40,000 pigs and we do not have enough people to work in
abattoirs. We have problems with food production locally and with
sterling being further pushed down, which is driving prices up.
Some of those problems were avoidable political problems.
Alongside high prices, we have low wages. Since 2010, we have had
very low growth and pay freezes. In the previous 10 years under
the Labour party, or certainly in the 10 years to 2008, the
economy grew by 40%. The Institute for Fiscal Studies has shown
that if that trend in growth had continued, average wages would
now be £10,000 higher. The country would be much more resilient
to the external shocks that are now causing this catastrophe of
localised famine.
The Government need to act, and act quickly. They need to think
carefully about how to manage the upcoming new Budget. I know
everybody thinks the national insurance abolition idea is great
on the face of it, but the reality is that it will give £7.60
back to the lowest 10% and more than £1,000 back to the richest
10%. At a time when half of people on universal credit are in
food poverty, we need to think very carefully about how we
sustain our people and about what is right and what is effective
for our nation.
We have talked about the quality of our food, but the truth is
that people in poverty are often obese because they have to
resort to low-nutrition, high-fat, high-salt, high-sugar products
that keep them going for a long time but are not particularly
good for them. That is storing up a time bomb for the NHS of
obesity, diabetes, heart attacks and strokes. Health inequality
is a real problem for us. Famously, in a 2014 study of many
countries over many years, the OECD found a relationship between
inequality and growth, namely that less inequality means higher
growth and a bigger cake.
Health inequality is also linked to income inequality. I look
forward to the White Paper, but we need to be serious. We need to
feed our people to get a productive economy and a fair economy
that we can all be proud of. I am from Wales, and I am very
pleased about the initiatives in Wales that are providing
universal free breakfasts and are now rolling out universal free
lunches. For all children—for all the adults who sign their
children up—that will be free in Wales. Henry Dimbleby, whose
strategy I very much welcome, has welcomed that. When questioned
by the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee, on which I
serve, about universal credit and levels of payment to make food
affordable, he said:
“That is beyond my pay grade.”
But it is not beyond the Government’s pay grade to realise what
the issues are. If children have affordable, nutritious food,
their performance is better, their life chances are better,
future tax revenues are better and NHS costs are lower. From UK
plc’s point of view it makes a lot of sense, quite apart from
being morally right.
I spoke only this week to an online audience of student unions
across Wales. That was one group, of course, and I am not saying
that they are the only group, but as hon. Members might expect,
they face high rents, they live in houses in multiple occupation
and their food costs and energy costs have gone up. A large
proportion of them have something like £10 a week or less to live
on after paying for utilities. They cannot afford their student
learning materials. More than 90% of them face mental health
problems. There is a cost of living crisis, and they also face an
uncertain future in the jobs market and the mortgage market. We
need to think very carefully about that.
Finally, I turn to food security. Having invaded the Crimea,
Russia is now producing 15% more food. We should think about our
food security. The cost of fertiliser has gone up, and we are
reliant on too much. Our home production should be organic. We
need spatial planning. We need a proper plan so that we do not
end up with another wave of austerity that costs 300,000 lives.
Instead, we should focus on the opportunity to provide all our
people with decent food. We need a healthy and productive economy
that is more equal and fairer, and a stronger, greener future for
all, but I fear that that will only come with a Labour
Government.
2.18pm
(The Cotswolds)
(Con)
I am grateful to have caught your eye in this important debate,
Madam Deputy Speaker. May I say how delighted I am to see the
Minister of State, Department for Environment, Food and Rural
Affairs, my right hon. Friend the Member for Sherwood () back on the Front Bench? That
is great news, because he really does know a great deal about the
subject.
I congratulate my right hon. Friend the Member for Tatton () on opening the debate. I look
forward to being invited to have some of her excellent chickpea
soup, preferably garnished with some excellent Tatton beef. I
also congratulate the hon. Member for Bristol East (). Having spent years
disagreeing with her in rural debates, I agreed with nearly
everything she said. On chickpeas, I hope that she agrees that
one of the great challenges for British agriculture is to produce
more pulses and a greater variety of them. That is absolutely
possible with new varieties.
The national food strategy is an important milestone, and Henry
Dimbleby was an important contributor. This week, as hon. Members
have said, the price of staple foods including bread, tea,
potatoes and vegetable oil has absolutely soared. Data from the
Office for National Statistics collected thousands of prices from
items available on supermarket websites, and food price inflation
is staggering. When we look at the percentage changes in the
prices of the lowest-cost products between September 2021 and
2022 we see that vegetable oil is up by 65%, pasta by 59.9%, tea
by 46%, bread by 37%, and milk by 29.4%. These price increases
are huge, making the weekly shop for many people simply
unaffordable. The differences in price seem to be starkest in the
case of food staples as opposed to luxury items: for example, the
price of orange juice is actually down by 8.9%, while the price
of wine has increased by only 2%. The impact on food staples will
be catastrophic for those living on the breadline, who are
already having to budget tightly to feed their families each
week.
Food and energy prices are highly regressive, causing more of
those on low incomes to pay much more as a percentage of their
budgets than those higher up the income scale. Increasing food
prices will soon become as big a problem as the increase in
energy prices, to which much more attention has been paid in the
House and elsewhere. As has already been said, 18% of all
households have experienced food insecurity in the last
month.
Supermarkets should be doing more to compete with each other and
try to hold prices down, even if it has an impact on their
profits. After all, that is what they are dictating to their
suppliers—often small suppliers, some of whom will not survive
this latest bout of cost and food inflation. The country’s
largest supermarket, Tesco, has taken steps to ease the costs for
its customers. Despite falls in profits, it is freezing prices on
more than 1,000 products, while at the same time increasing the
hourly rate of pay in its stores to £10.98 to help its
workers.
While costs in supermarkets are soaring, the increased costs of
fertiliser and feed, exacerbated by Russia’s war in Ukraine, will
cause a crisis for some farmers who will undoubtedly cease to
trade. The cost of potatoes in the supermarkets has recently been
hiked by 13.2%, whereas farmers have seen only a 5% rise this
year. I know that the hon. Member for Bristol East will
disapprove, but British Sugar is to increase its wholesale sugar
price by 40% by the end of the month, while sugar beet farmers
have seen a substantive increase of only 30% this year, which is
the first increase in three years. All this is happening in an
environment where the price of fertiliser—the main cost to
farmers—has increased by 300% in the last 18 months.
DEFRA urgently needs to discuss this matter with the
supermarkets. They should not be raising their prices for
customers by more than the increase for their suppliers, and they
certainly ought not to be increasing shareholders’ profits on the
back of the poorest in the country. In short, they should be
exercising restraint for a short period to get us over this
financial crisis. They should also continue the policy that some
began during covid, and buy British wherever possible.
It is important for the Government to continue with their
environmental land management scheme re-evaluation to see whether
taking land out of food production for environmental schemes such
as tree-planting and rewilding balances with the need to maintain
the land to grow food sustainably, and to protect our own food
security. In the current circumstances, in which the cost of food
is so high and the poorest in our society —as has already been
said—are having to rely on food banks to feed themselves, it is
our duty to ensure that we can produce as much of our own food as
possible to meet demand.
(Macclesfield) (Con)
My hon. Friend is making a powerful case, because he knows a
great deal about this subject—as does my right hon. Friend the
Minister. Does he agree that, given the challenges we are facing,
it is right to start focusing on tackling food waste? I recently
met representatives of a potato business in my constituency, E.
Park & Sons, and Sodexo, one of one its major clients. That
focus will not just help them and their bottom line, but ensure
that food is more available in these difficult times.
My hon. Friend has raised a point that is important in two
respects: it applies not only to the food retailers and
processors but to individuals in their homes, where far too much
food waste goes on.
As an island nation, we should not be over-reliant on imports or
the global market with the shocks that can come with that, the
most recent case being the war in Ukraine. In the 1980s, our
self-sufficiency in food was 75%; it has now fallen to only 60%.
We need to encourage as much food production in this country as
possible, so that more of the food we eat is grown in this
country to keep prices at a sustainable level. Since August 2021,
imports of food and live animals have increased rapidly, while
exports have barely moved.
I fully recognise that environmental schemes such as
tree-planting and soil improvement schemes to prevent our rivers
from being polluted will help to slow climate change and improve
our natural environment. However, it is also the case that as
global temperatures warm, vast swathes of countries near the
equator will inevitably produce less food, which means that
temperate countries such as ours will have to produce more to
feed the world.
Environmental and animal welfare issues are often forgotten.
Either animals are having to be transported for long distances to
be slaughtered, or environmental damage is caused by shipping or,
worse still, flying food for vast distances across the world. The
way to improve the situation is to ensure that animals are
slaughtered as humanely as possible close to the farm where they
are kept, and to ensure that all food around the world is
consumed as close as possible to the point of production whenever
that is practicable.
Let me say this sincerely to my right hon. Friend the Minister:
we need to be very careful about taking land out of production.
It makes no sense for a 2,000-acre good-quality arable farm in
Essex which was formerly growing wheat, barley, rape and field
beans to be encouraged to put all its land down to grass under
the countryside stewardship scheme. Let me also say to the hon.
Member for Bristol East that while I fully accept that we should
be taking some of our poorest land out of production for
environmental schemes, we should be very careful about taking our
best land—particularly grade 1 and 2 land, in the old parlance
that was used when I was training —out of production for
non-food-producing schemes.
No one is keener on improving and protecting the natural
environment than I am. Those of us who are lucky enough to live
in the Cotswolds are eager to protect its natural beauty, and I
pay tribute to my Cotswolds farmers for not only producing some
of the best lamb in the country but participating fully in
environmental schemes to improve biodiversity. On the other hand,
everyone in the world is reliant, wherever possible, on a good
supply of food at a reasonable price. If we are to reduce the
amount of food that we import and have a long-term sustainable
food policy, we must do more to grow and process our own food.
That will help to bring down the cost of our basic food staples,
helping individuals and families to shop for food without fear of
what it will cost. I imagine that so many are unable to do that
at present. Equally, we in the UK have the most beautiful
countryside and rivers in the world, in which we need to be
careful to preserve our biodiversity.
2.27pm
(Ceredigion) (PC)
It is a pleasure to follow the hon. Member for The Cotswolds
( ). I agreed with a
great deal of what he said, and I should like to elaborate on
some of the themes of his speech, particularly his exhortation
for us to grow more of our own food in the United Kingdom. That
is not only good for UK farmers and growers, but good for the
health of people across these islands. It will also help us to
reduce our climate footprint when we lessen our dependence on
imports and global supply chains.
I do not want to labour the point, but this will be the focus of
my speech. I believe that self-sufficiency plays an important
part in food security, and we need to concentrate on that. A
DEFRA report on food security published in 2021 stated that the
UK was about 75% self- sufficient in foodstuffs that could be
produced domestically. The actual consumption of UK-produced food
was about 54%, which means that we were importing some 46% of the
food that we consumed. When I first came across that statistic, I
was interested and, indeed, shocked by the discrepancy between
the two figures, but it makes much more sense when we recognise
that there is a considerable variance in the level of
self-sufficiency in different types of food. For example, we are
100% self-sufficient in oats and barley and lamb. That is an
important statistic for me, as a proud Member for a Welsh
constituency. It then goes up to 90% self-sufficiency in wheat—we
heard from the hon. Member for Hendon (Dr Offord) about the real
contribution that wheat growers on these islands have made in the
past year—and 80% in oilseed. However, the figure stands at only
54% for fresh vegetables and 16% for fresh fruit. In discussing
food security, we need to consider the foodstuffs—fruit and
vegetables in this particular example—of which we clearly need to
grow more.
The dependence on global supply chains for so many of our imports
means that, as the hon. Member for The Cotswolds ( ) explained, we are
vulnerable and exposed to shocks—be they geopolitical, climate,
production or logistical—that are completely beyond our control.
This Parliament has perhaps experienced a few unprecedented
global shocks, the first being the covid pandemic, which wrought
havoc on a lot of our food production and imports, and then, more
recently, the Russian invasion of Ukraine, which has had a
significant impact not only on grains, wheat and sunflower oil,
but on many of the import costs for domestic production—I will
talk more about that.
When we look to the future of our food security, increasing
climate change poses a significant risk. I mentioned that we are
self-sufficient to the tune of only 16% of the fruit that we
consume. DEFRA’s food security report notes that:
“There are concerns about water availability for fruit and
vegetable production in many of the countries on which the UK
currently depends”,
particularly on the equator, but also in the Mediterranean
region.
When we discuss food security, we need to think about growing
more of our own. Other Members have mentioned the shocking impact
that food inflation is having on families across the country. I
do not wish to labour that point further, but for a number of
foodstuffs, the problem could be alleviated to some extent if we
had greater self-sufficiency in the categories that they relate
to.
The hon. Member for The Cotswolds, who I hope will forgive me for
referring to him so often—I thought he made an excellent
speech—mentioned the Groceries Code Adjudicator and the power of
the supermarkets. It is not right for them to balance their
books, or indeed to profit, on the backs of the nation’s poorest
families. We know that some of their increasing costs are not
being fed back to the primary producers. As we have discussed
this afternoon, rising import costs—particularly for fertiliser
and feedstock—and high fuel and energy costs are having an impact
on primary producers, who are not getting higher prices for their
goods from the supermarkets and their suppliers. The Government
need to look again at how they can make the system fairer.
Personally, I think there is much to be said for moving away from
the more globalised food system to a more local one. In that
regard, I recognise that a great deal of work needs to be done to
reinvest in the processing facilities that were once very local
but have now been lost, such as mills, abattoirs and the like.
They were once a feature of every village in rural areas; now,
they are seldom found.
The rising costs on farmers are being fed through the system and,
in turn, into shopping bills, but are not being recompensed by
the major supplier and supermarkets. That is a serious issue that
could be addressed by greater self-sufficiency. The food strategy
is an opportunity to consider a holistic way of ensuring that
more of the food that we consume is produced on these
islands.
Does the hon. Gentleman agree that consumers also need to be
re-educated on the fact that strawberries do not grow for 12
months of the year, for example, and supermarkets will inevitably
have different offers of our own produce at different times of
the year?
I entirely agree. We should set an ambition not only to be
self-sufficient in the food that we produce, but to move down to
a more local and seasonal food system. One of my peeves is that
it is still possible to buy fresh strawberries on Christmas
Eve—consider the environmental cost, if nothing else. We as a
society are sadly ignorant to that, and we need to learn it
again.
I am conscious that I am running out of time, so I will finish
with a warning to the Government: in our move—I hope—to becoming
more self-sufficient in our food production, we must remember
that we need producers to do the work on the land and, as the
right hon. Member for Orkney and Shetland (Mr Carmichael) said,
in our seas. I am afraid that in a recent survey, NFU Cymru found
that of the 700 farmers it spoke to, 71% intended to reduce
production in the next year, and a significant number of them
were also questioning whether to continue farming in the years to
come, as a result partly of higher costs, yes, but also of the
cumulative impact of many years of not getting a fair deal from
some of the larger supermarkets for the price of the goods that
they grow and rear.
Finally, I am very concerned—I think the Government can return to
this—about the need for proper land-use planning and
consideration. I know that the administrative burden would cross
the four nations of the United Kingdom, but we know exactly the
types of land that we have, down to the field level. At the
moment, I fear that when it comes to certain carbon-offsetting
schemes, prime agricultural land is being sold, often to
corporations that intend to greenwash their own emissions rather
than contributing to the nationwide effort to reduce our carbon
footprint.
Even the Green Finance Observatory has expressed concerns about
the current UK emissions trading scheme system. It states:
“The elephant in the room is that offsets are fundamentally not
about mitigating climate change, or even about removing past
emissions, but about enabling future emissions, about protecting
economic growth and corporate profits.”
Too often—and, I am afraid to say, in Ceredigion—too many farms
that were prime agricultural productive land have been bought by
such corporations not to reduce their emissions, but to greenwash
them so that they can continue business as usual. In so doing,
they reduce our own productive capacity.
2.37pm
(Twickenham) (LD)
Given all the chat about chickpeas, I feel compelled to join in
and recommend my mother’s chickpea curry or my very own
Moroccan-spiced lamb shank with chickpeas. Hon. Members who want
the recipes may get in touch later.
I congratulate the right hon. Member for Tatton () and the hon. Member for
Bristol East () on securing this important
debate. The motion before the House notes the impact of the cost
of living crisis and calls for the urgent publication of the
national food strategy White Paper. I presume the White Paper
will build on the Government’s food strategy, which was published
back in June but was, as the hon. Member for Bristol East noted,
fairly disappointing and vague in its commitments, rather than a
detailed response to the Dimbleby review, which spanned two
volumes and more than 400 pages.
The most glaring omission from the Government’s food strategy is
how they plan to feed hungry children. That is even more glaring
given that the very first recommendation in part 1 of the
Dimbleby national food strategy was to extend free school meals
to all households on universal credit. As that report states:
“A hot, freshly-cooked school lunch is, for some children, the
only proper meal in the day, providing a nutritional safety net
for those at greatest risk of hunger or poor diet.”
In the majority of schools, however, only children from very
low-income households—meaning an annual income of £7,400 before
benefits—are eligible for free school meals after the age of
seven. That threshold is much too low—I completely agree with
Henry Dimbleby. That recommendation was so central to his
thinking that when it became clear that the Government were not
willing to make that financial commitment, he offered them the
less generous alternative—in part 2 of the report—of increasing
the household income threshold to £20,000, but the Government
still have not moved. All we got in the Government food strategy
was a vague commitment to
“continue to keep free school meal eligibility under
review”.—[Official Report, 8 September 2022; Vol. 719, c.
486.]
The Government’s position cannot hold much longer, because they
know it is economically, morally and politically unsustainable
amid this cost of living crisis. We know from the DWP’s own data,
published in part 2 of the Dimbleby report, that nearly half the
families living in food insecurity—those who are skipping meals
or not eating when they are hungry because they cannot afford
it—do not qualify for free school meals because the earnings
threshold is too low.
A few weeks ago, at one of my constituency surgeries, I met a
mother who had fled an abusive partner and was skipping her
mental health medication because she was trying to save the money
she would have spent on her prescription to enable her daughter
to have lunch at college. That is the reality of this policy.
(Perth and North Perthshire)
(SNP)
Like the hon. Lady, I hope free school meals are realised across
the rest of the United Kingdom. Will she congratulate the
Scottish Government on introducing free school meals for all
primary school pupils between primary 1 and 5, with a view to
expanding it to primary 6 and 7? Every child in Scotland living
in a household in receipt of universal credit gets a free school
meal. Does she acknowledge that it can be done if there is the
political will?
I am happy to congratulate the Scottish Government, as it has
long been Liberal Democrat policy to extend free school meals to
all primary-age children. I am happy to welcome that development
in Scotland.
The new Secretary of State for Levelling Up, Housing and
Communities—or the old one, because they keep changing—the right
hon. Member for Surrey Heath (), told a Conservative party
conference fringe event that he is in favour of expanding free
school meals to all children on universal credit. The case for
expanding free school meals is compelling because it is not just
a welfare intervention but a health and education
intervention.
The Dimbleby review reminds us:
“Children who are hungry at school struggle to concentrate,
perform poorly, and have worse attendance records. More
generally, children who experience food insecurity suffer worse
physical and mental health outcomes.”
I appreciate that I am making the case for greater public
spending when the Government are desperately searching for
efficiency savings, otherwise known as cuts, to pay for their
botched Budget but, as with much of education and children’s
policy and spending, I ask Ministers to view this as an
investment in our children’s future and our country’s future. A
PwC analysis found that, over 20 years, every £1 spent on free
school meals for all children on universal credit would generate
£1.38 in return, including £2.9 billion in increased lifetime
earnings.
The Government are keen to move people off social security and
into work, yet their current policy creates a huge poverty trap
that actively deters families with children from increasing their
hours. A single mum with three children would have to earn £3,100
a year more after tax to make up for the shortfall of crossing
the eligibility threshold for free school meals. That is
nonsense.
I am proud that Liberal Democrat Ministers fought tooth and nail
with Conservative Ministers in the coalition Government to
introduce free school meals for every infant pupil. I am proud
that Liberal Democrat Richmond Council has, this half-term,
prioritised free school meal vouchers, even though the Department
for Education does not fund free school meals during half-term. I
am proud that it was a former Liberal Democrat Education Minister
in Wales who, during the pandemic, led the way in ensuring that
children got free school meals in every school holiday when the
Westminster Government had to be shamed by Marcus Rashford into
doing the same for English children.
Liberal Democrat Members will continue to campaign for every
child living in a household receiving universal credit to get a
free healthy school meal. During the cost of living crisis, we
think there is a strong case for extending free school meals to
all primary schoolchildren. If that is too much for the Minister
to stomach, I beg him, as an absolute bare minimum, to agree to
speak to his colleagues in the Department for Education about
increasing the £7,400 threshold. The threshold has not increased
since it was introduced in 2018, yet prices have risen by almost
16%.
The Government’s food strategy reminds us that school food is an
invaluable lifeline for many children and families, especially
those on low incomes, but with 800,000 children living in poverty
not eligible for free school meals and with one in four
households with children now living in food insecurity, too few
children who need a free lunch are getting one.
One school leader in the north of England told me last week that,
for the first time ever, parents were coming into some of his
schools asking for a loaf of bread or a pint of milk. He is now
contemplating the introduction of a free evening meal for many
children in his academy trust. He is not sure how he will pay for
it, because we know that nine in 10 schools will be in deficit by
next September.
I read this morning that our new Prime Minister thinks education
is a silver bullet, and I agree. It is the reason why I am in
politics. I believe education can open doors and opportunities
for every child, no matter what their background, but a hungry
child cannot learn. The moral and economic case for taking action
on this issue is clear. Ministers must urgently intervene so that
no child goes hungry at school.
2.45pm
(Strangford) (DUP)
It is a pleasure to speak on this issue. We had a similar debate
in Westminster Hall yesterday morning, and I am pleased to see
the Minister in his place. He has a deep practical interest in
this subject, so I believe he will give us the answers to our
questions.
I thank the right hon. Member for Tatton () and the hon. Member for
Bristol East () for setting the scene, and
I thank every Member who has contributed to this debate. Madam
Deputy Speaker, you are right to say this has been a
good-humoured debate, and there is agreement on both sides of the
House about supporting the thrust of the national food
strategy.
I declare an interest as a member of the Ulster Farmers Union,
which is similar to the National Farmers Union over here, and as
a landowner and farmer. The world has been devastated by the
adverse effects of the pandemic and the ongoing war in Ukraine,
and we in Northern Ireland also have the Northern Ireland
protocol. The Minister will not be surprised that I bring it up,
because it clearly has an impact by continuing to subjugate
Northern Ireland and damaging small food producers.
The United Kingdom still imports 46% to 47% of its food. Many
people seem to be pushing reforestation, but we need to retain
productive agricultural land, so I seek confirmation from the
Minister that good land will continue to be used for food
production. I understand that we cannot produce all the food we
consume, but we need to address that issue, too. The inescapable
detriment to us of the Northern Ireland protocol has been left to
fester. Food and drink entering Northern Ireland from Great
Britain could be hit with hundreds of pages of paperwork, hours
of border checks and millions of pounds of extra cost.
In my constituency, Lakeland Dairies, Willowbrook Foods, Mash
Direct and Rich Sauces all produce goods that they export.
Lakeland Dairies exports almost 70% of its products, across the
whole world. It has four factories in Northern Ireland and five
in the Republic of Ireland, so it faces a delicate and complex
issue when it comes to continuing to produce; it services a large
number of dairy farmers across the whole of Northern Ireland. In
my constituency, there are almost 3,000 jobs in those sectors and
across the whole of Northern Ireland 100,000 jobs depend on
agriculture for their future. So the situation with the protocol
is the very antithesis of food security and it has the potential
to severely damage supply chain resilience in Northern Ireland.
That highlights the need for the smooth passage of the Northern
Ireland Protocol Bill to ensure that we in Northern Ireland to
continue to produce.
The House cannot ignore and disregard the invaluable
contributions of the Northern Ireland farming industry. About 75%
of Northern Ireland’s countryside is farmed in some way and 80%
of Northern Ireland’s produce is exported. The industry is vital
for the Northern Ireland economy, employing more than 3.5% of the
total workforce, which surpasses the UK average of 1.2%. Again,
that underlines the true importance for us in Northern Ireland of
the agriculture sector. The right hon. Member for Orkney and
Shetland (Mr Carmichael) is not in his place, but he referred to
fishing, which is so important for us. I know that the Minister
knows that, but if he gets the opportunity to come to Northern
Ireland, we will show him some of the factories I mentioned and
perhaps arrange a visit to Portavogie as well.
There are measures in the Northern Ireland Protocol Bill that are
needed to address concerns in agri-industry, such as on
veterinary certificates and on country of origin. As many Members
are aware, my constituency has prolific farming, and I have
already mentioned the fishing communities in Portavogie; we are
seeking to increase those numbers. We face some workforce issues,
which the Minister is aware of. We wish to contribute to and
increase the UK’s national food security.
The right hon. Member for Tatton referred to robotics, and in
farming of all types, be it cattle or tomato production, we see
vast steps forward that will reduce the number of people we need
to be involved. Robotics will be brought more into play. Again, I
ask the Minister for more clarity on that and more help for
farmers, who may have a lot of money to find. We must also
combine productive farming, in order to sustain livelihoods and
meet the growing demand for food, with sustainable methods.
I should also make a point to the Minister about partnerships
involving universities. For example, Queen’s University Belfast
has a partnership with business to produce new varieties of
cereals and so on, which can give a 20% bigger yield. That is
another thing that we need to look at—how what we put in the land
can produce more. That will help us across the world. The title
of this debate is “National Food Strategy and Food Security”,
which makes it clear that this is about the national position,
but we also have an obligation to look after other parts of the
world.
However, we cannot reap the true benefits of the Northern Irish
farming and fishing industries if the protocol continues to erect
a border down the Irish sea, preventing trade between Northern
Ireland and Great Britain. We need the fit-for-purpose Northern
Ireland Protocol Bill, as it is, in order to secure food for the
entire UK and not simply to fix the protocol for the people of
the Province, although that really should be enough of a reason
to implement it. I look to the Minister to be committed to it, as
it will put us on an equal status with everywhere else. That is
as it should be.
2.52pm
(Leicester East) (Ind)
I thank the right hon. Member for Tatton () and the hon. Member for
Bristol East () for proposing this
important debate, and the Backbench Business Committee for
granting it.
The first job of Government is to keep people safe and well. No
debate on food strategy and food security is worth its name if
the issue of hunger within this country caused by the UK’s gross
structural inequality is not addressed. In the UK, in September,
4 million children did not have enough to eat—that is one out of
every four households with children. About 3 million of those
children have working parents and still face hunger, according to
the Joseph Rowntree Foundation. An even higher number, one in
three of our children, live in poverty and could tip into hunger
at any moment. At the same time in our country, one in seven
adults—about 8 million people—were forced to miss meals because
they could not afford food as well as other essentials.
In my constituency, 42% of children have been living in poverty,
a percentage that will only have risen as household bills rocket.
The UN special rapporteur for extreme poverty visited the UK only
four years ago and was shocked at what he saw then. He said that
the issues of poverty, hunger and inequality were not expensive
to fix, and that the Government could easily put them right if
they chose to. Instead, the situation has been allowed to become
much worse. Some would say that it has been knowingly
accelerated. No food strategy adopted by the Government that does
not address these issues is fit for purpose.
Equally, if the national food strategy does not protect the most
vulnerable in society from food price increases, it may do more
harm than good. There is no guarantee that the corporate giants
in the food industry will not pass on tax costs to consumers. The
Government must take steps to ensure that these businesses are
not simply passing the cost of any future tax on sugar or salt on
to consumers in order to maintain profits to pay excessive
shareholder dividends and senior staff bonuses. There is no
honour in making the poor pay for the rich.
The Government’s obligations under the international covenant on
economic, social and cultural rights states that citizens must
have access to affordable food without compromising other basic
needs. But we already know that people are forced to
compromise—forced to choose between eating or heating their
homes. What work has been done to assess the imposition of a
regulatory obligation on supermarkets, which wield incredible
power, so as to protect the price of food staples to provide
quality, nutritious foods to consumers on a cost recovery-only
basis? I hope that the Minister can advise on the work that has
been done in that regard. The Government have the power to stop
allowing the UK to be a food bank nation and to stop forcing
citizens to make such choices. The nation’s poverty and hunger is
a political choice made here.
The hon. Member for Liverpool, West Derby () is running a campaign for
adequate nutrition to be recognised as a human right in the UK,
which would force the Government to take responsibility for
ensuring that everyone in this country is well fed, regardless of
their financial circumstances. This is a duty that this
Government have shamefully neglected—just ask any teacher how
many of their pupils come to school hungry each morning and
struggle to study as a result, which damages their prospects of
any kind of improvement in their situation.
My constituents will want to know why the Government are allowing
this situation not only to continue but to explode, and why
having enough to eat and decent wages to allow people to feed
their children is not a human right in this country. Tragically
for such people, under this Government the disaster is only set
to get worse. Ultimately, I believe that the primary
recommendation of the national food strategy must be to make
healthy food available to the nation on supermarket shelves,
priced without profit and on a cost-recovery basis only, in order
to honour the Government’s obligation to ensure that everyone has
the right to food.
2.58pm
(Perth and North Perthshire)
(SNP)
I congratulate the right hon. Member for Tatton () and the hon. Member for
Bristol East () on raising this important
issue. This has been a largely consensual debate. I will try not
to spoil that tone, perhaps unsurprisingly, Madam Deputy Speaker
—not by much, anyway.
It is almost unbelievable that here we are in 2022 discussing
food security, but such is the range of issues we face that we
now have to confront the fact this is becoming an increasingly
pressing problem. There is no doubt that the war in Ukraine has
had its effect, just as recovery from covid has forced us all to
look at this agenda. Governments throughout the world are now
looking at their strategies to deal with what is clearly an
emerging crisis.
However, it is not just here in the developed world; we also have
to look at what is happening in the developing world. The
International Development Committee reminded us of that, because
we have not just the war in Ukraine and the recovery from the
covid pandemic, but the climate crisis. Some of the biblical
scenes that we have seen, particularly from the Horn of Africa,
would chill any Member of this House to the bone.
In the UK, though, we have a particular and distinct problem, and
it has not been mentioned at all today, which is really
surprising. It is the thing that has caused most of the issues
that we have in this country—Brexit. Brexit has made sure that we
in the UK have a range of issues and problems that are not shared
by any other comparable country in the world. It has led to a set
of circumstances, which are not seen elsewhere, that have
negatively and adversely impacted this country. It is just so
surprising that, in all the contributions that we have had today,
Brexit is the one word that has not been mentioned.
As well as Brexit, there are the economic policies that have been
implemented by this Government, which have made things so much
worse. Inflation in this country is running at 10.1%, which is
way above anything that we see in Europe and the rest of the
developed world. We have negative GDP, when GDP everywhere else
is growing. Food prices are way above the 10.1% headline
inflation rate. They have jumped by 14.6%, led by the soaring
cost of staples such as meat, bread, milk and eggs.
We now have a term for what is going on in households across the
United Kingdom. It is called “low food security”, which is where
households reduce the quality and desirability of their diets
just to make ends meet. Worse than that, we also have the term
“very low food security”, which is where household members are
reducing their food intake because they lack money or other
resources for food. I know that it gets said an awful lot in this
House, but it is probably an understatement to say that this
winter many households will face the uncomfortable choice of
whether to eat or to heat. This, in one of the most prosperous
countries in the world, should shame us all.
However, it is Brexit that remains the biggest homegrown issue
that has singled out the UK for particular misery, and has
hampered the UK’s food production, acquisition and security.
Brexit has meant that we have had to deprioritise our domestic
food production, because we now have to secure these free trade
deals, supporting cheaper, imported food. We have now got to the
stage where the UK’s food self-sufficiency is below 60%, compared
with 80% two decades ago.
In 2020 the UK imported 46% of the food that it consumed, 28% of
which came from Europe. This means that the UK imports more than
it exports, particularly when it comes to fruit and vegetables.
That is something that will only increase unless it is addressed.
In days such as these, particularly given the experience of the
Ukraine war, we should be building resilience in domestic food
production, but instead we are threatening it with these
unbalanced trade deals.
We need only look at the deals that were struck with Australia
and New Zealand to see how the market has become vulnerable to
lower standards and open to cheap imports. The NFS addresses some
of these issues. What it says, which I hope the Government will
take on board, is that Governments should agree only to cut
tariffs on products that meet our standards here in the UK.
Cheap imports are such an issue now that a farmer in my
constituency has said to the BBC today that he is giving away a
crop of blueberries, which would normally be worth £3 million, to
the charity sector and to food banks. He reckons that that crop,
which would usually get £3 million, has lost £1 million in value.
It is not economically worth it for him now to take that crop to
market. Donating that crop shows incredible generosity, but how
have we got to this situation? This is a farm that has been in
business in a very productive area of Strathmore in my
constituency for more than 100 years. It is having to give away a
crop because there is no value in harvesting it.
All over the UK, farmers and food producers are concerned about
the pressures of rising input costs on their businesses. The
National Farmers Union says that while growers are
“doing everything they can to reduce their overheads…double or
even triple digit inflation”
continues to cripple the sector.
This is agflation, and it is so bad that fruit and vegetable
growers face inflation rates of up to 24%. Those rapidly rising
costs could lead to a drop of 10% in production and more produce
being left unharvested. I know the NFU has written to the
Government to call for urgent action to help UK farmers to
produce enough food to keep supermarkets stocked and prices
affordable.
I like the strategy; I think it is a very good thing, and I hope
the Government implement it and take its recommendations
seriously. Recommendation 8 calls for a guarantee that
agricultural payments will stay in place until 2029. That must
now happen to create a semblance of certainty. Recommendation 11
also says that £1 billion should be invested
“in innovation to create a better food system.”
So far, the Government have not committed to that, and all we
hear about is closing budgets.
Thankfully, agricultural support in Scotland is entirely
devolved, and we are crafting a new agriculture Bill as we speak,
consulting with the sector on the way forward. Unlike the UK’s
approach to farm subsidies, the Scottish Government are
maintaining a singular fund that will maintain pre-Brexit levels
of support for farmers. The Scottish Government are doing
everything they can within their limited powers and their budget
envelope to ensure food security, and are consulting on the Bill
to ensure that happens. At the heart of the Bill will be support
for active farming, delivering high-quality, sustainable,
affordable food while meeting climate change and biodiversity
goals.
But the Scottish Government are doing so much more; I want to
touch on free school meals, which the hon. Member for Twickenham
() raised, because we have the
most generous universal free school meal entitlement of any UK
nation. In Scotland, all children from primary 1 to primary 5 are
entitled to free school meals during term time, as well as all
children from households in receipt of universal credit, saving
them an average £400 per year. That combines with the Scottish
child payment, which has just been doubled to £20 a week and will
be increased to £25 in November, which will also help Scottish
families.
We are doing what we can to ensure that we help our constituents
and the people of Scotland through this time, but we need the
recommendations in this strategy—this very good piece of
work—implemented as quickly as possible, and we must do more to
ensure that we are food secure and doing what we can to help and
serve our constituents.
3.07pm
(Cambridge) (Lab)
I, too, congratulate the right hon. Member for Tatton (), my hon. Friend the Member
for Bristol East () and the Backbench Business
Committee on enabling this debate. I thank all hon. Members
across the House for their excellent contributions and
congratulate the Minister on his reappointment. I also pay
tribute to all those who produce our food—the farmers, the
fishers, the people in the processing sector, the retail workers
and the delivery workers who keep Britain fed.
This debate is timely, but frankly it is very late—astonishingly,
the UK has not had a proper food strategy since the last days of
the Labour Government. As my hon. Friend the Member for Bristol
East and others pointed out, we do at least have the widely
welcomed Dimbleby report, called “The Plan”, which is significant
in the absence of any plan from this Government—and not just the
absence of a plan, but an abrogation of responsibility. It is the
same old approach from this Government, leaving the food system
to the supermarkets and saying, “Let them sort it out.” That is
not good enough —not good enough at all.
The reason that is not good enough is because of what we have
been hearing from hon. Members across the House. I will not
repeat all the statistics, but the hon. Member for The Cotswolds
( ) outlined some of
the figures from the Office for National Statistics, as did my
hon. Friend the Member for Bristol East. The appalling rise in
staple prices is hitting people hard and the knock-on effect, as
outlined by the Food Foundation, is that one in four households
with children experienced food insecurity in September. That is a
very bad place for this country to be in.
I will turn briefly to the furore around environmental land
management plans for the future, which came about after the
previous Secretary of State, the right hon. Member for North East
Hampshire (Mr Jayawardena), instigated a review. That review gave
rise to a whole train of concerns, with people speculating about
just how committed the Government were to the “public money for
public goods” approach. On the Labour side, we have consistently
warned that complexity in those schemes would lead to low
take-up. That is why we joined calls to move at pace to make them
work, but it would be helpful if the Minister could give us some
clarity about what the position now is. Perhaps he could today
give precise details on the number of farmers who are taking up
the schemes. He was reluctant to answer that question on Tuesday,
although he admitted that sustainable farming incentive take-up
was low, which confirmed what we had learned from the answer to a
recent written question. If the money is not allocated, where
will it go? I asked that question during the passage of the
Agriculture Act 2020.
Moving back to the food strategy, we are two iterations of
Government further on since it was produced, so perhaps the
Minister can confirm where we stand on that. I am grateful to my
hon. Friend the Member for Swansea West () for raising school food and
obesity. The new Secretary of State has just come from the
Department of Health and Social Care, but we need a strong
anti-obesity strategy. Some of the mood music coming from the new
Secretary of State in her previous job did not exactly convince
me that she is an interventionist on such issues, so will the
Minister at least tell us where the current measures in the
anti-obesity strategy stand?
Will the Minister also tell us where the Government are on supply
chain fairness, on Dimbleby’s very important suggestions on data,
and on the future of the Groceries Code Adjudicator? At a time of
such pressure on producers, the notion that in the name of
deregulation the role of the GCA will be subsumed into the
Competition and Markets Authority rightly caused huge alarm.
Given the CMA response a couple of days ago, which was subtle
but, I thought, damning of the Government’s responses, perhaps
the Minister could tell us where that has got to. Where is the
review of the dairy sector? Where has the review of the pork
sector got to?
Let me move briefly on to food security and land use. There is an
e-petition attached to the debate, and these issues have clearly
been much discussed. We have been arguing for a long time now
that we need a national land use framework. We note the work of
the Lords Committee, and that the previous Secretary of State
admitted that he did not much like plans in general, so what is
the Minister’s view? Will he explain the Government’s
position?
Briefly, I will raise the issue of bird flu. We raised it in the
debate on Tuesday, and we know that it is very serious. I
genuinely hope that the Minister will come back to the House with
a statement soon. There are a range of important issues around
housing orders, the supply of catchers, culling capacity, Animal
and Plant Health Agency resource, and compensation. Without
compensation, producers will not have the confidence to restock.
Relying on imports would be pretty risky when other neighbouring
countries are suffering similarly. This is really important in
terms of food security. Chicken and eggs are pretty basic
components of what we eat. It is a horrible disease, and it is
dreadful to see what has happened to the wild bird population. It
is awful for those working in the industry, and it is worthy of
the Government giving it some attention on the Floor of the
House.
When we look at the whole area of food policy, the conclusion
that we come to is that there is a series of unconnected
initiatives, whether in farming, fishing or food, and a lack of
an overall plan. In particular, as has commented in the other
place, there is no overall plan to meet the vital climate
targets, which are so important given the issues we face.
The Government may not have a plan, but the Opposition do. We
have a plan for the future of the country’s food strategy and
security. We want to make, buy and sell more in the UK. We stand
by the principles of public funds for public goods, but we see
delivering food security harmoniously with the environment as a
public good in itself. We will use public procurement contracts
to drive the purchase of locally sourced food. We will introduce
breakfast clubs to help to tackle some of the school food poverty
and obesity challenges that people have referred to. With Labour,
every public body will be tasked with securing more contracts
with local producers, and we will legislate to require reporting
on how much they are buying from domestic sources with taxpayers’
money, which we believe will help British farmers and local food
producers.
Labour is committed to fixing the food system in order to meet
the health and environmental challenges identified by Henry
Dimbleby in his national food plan, to end the growing food bank
scandal, to ensure that all families can access healthy,
affordable food, and to improve our food security as a country.
With Labour, Britain will buy, make and sell more here, and
ensure that our schools and hospitals are stocked with more
healthy food produced locally. We will change the food system to
meet the health and climate challenges of our age, and we will do
it by having the plan that the current Government so sorely
lack.
3.14pm
The Minister of State, Department for Environment, Food and Rural
Affairs ()
I congratulate my right hon. Friend the Member for Tatton () and the hon. Member for
Bristol East () on securing this important
debate, and I thank the Backbench Business Committee for allowing
the time for it.
We are fortunate in the United Kingdom to have a highly resilient
food supply chain that is built on strong domestic production and
imports via sustainable trade routes, but it is worth
acknowledging that food security has become a very hot topic
politically. When I was elected in 2010, I highlighted food
security as a very important topic in my maiden speech. It is not
new to me; it is something I have been worrying about and
concentrating on for most of my political career.
But we can meet these challenges. Domestic production figures
have been very stable for most of this century. We produce 61% of
all the food we need and 74% of that which we can grow in the UK.
Those figures have changed little over the past 20 years. When
food products cannot be produced here, or at least not on a
year-round basis, British consumers have access to them through
international trade. That supplements domestic production and
ensures that any disruption from risks such as adverse weather or
disease does not affect the overall security of the UK’s supply
chain. I acknowledge that, as many Members have said, educating
our consumers on what is seasonal and what is grown in the UK is
a very healthy thing to do.
Across the UK, 465,000 people are employed in food and
non-alcoholic drink manufacturing. We are proud to have a
collaborative relationship with the industry, which allows us to
respond to disruption effectively, as demonstrated in the
response to the unprecedented disruption to supply chains during
the covid-19 pandemic. DEFRA monitors food supply and will
continue to do so over the autumn and winter period. We work
closely with the industry to keep abreast of supply and price
trends, which will be particularly important in the run-up to
Christmas.
We recognise that rising food prices are a big challenge for
household budgets. The latest figures for year-on-year food and
drink prices show an annual rate of inflation of 14.6% in the
year to September 2022, up from 13.1% in August 2022. While we
remain confident in sectors being able to continue to deliver
products to consumers, my Department continues to work to
identify further options that will help businesses to reduce
costs and pass on those savings to consumers.
The Government have committed £37 billion of support to
households with the cost of living. That includes an additional
£500 million to help with the cost of household essentials,
bringing total funding for that support to £1.5 billion. In
England, this is in the form of an extension to the household
support fund, running from 1 October 2022 to 31 March 2023.
We must be prepared for the future. That is why we published the
Government’s food strategy in June, setting out our plan to
transform our food system, and I have a copy of it here. The hon.
Member for Cambridge () said we had not given any
thought to that; I hope he has had an opportunity to read the
Government’s food strategy, to which the hon. Member for Bristol
East referred. The strategy puts food security right at the heart
of the Government’s vision for the food sector. It sets out our
ambition to boost food production in key sectors and to create
jobs, with a focus on skills and innovations, ensuring that those
are spread across the whole country. Our aim is to broadly
maintain the current level of food we produce domestically and
boost production in sectors where there are the biggest
opportunities. Setting this commitment demonstrates that we
recognise the critical importance of domestic food production and
the role it plays in our food security.
As the Prime Minister said only this week, at the heart of this
Government’s mandate is our manifesto, which includes our
commitment to protect the environment. The Government are
introducing three environmental land management schemes that
reward environmental benefits: the sustainable farming incentive,
local nature recovery and landscape recovery.
Our farming reforms are designed to support farmers to produce
food sustainably and productively, and to deliver the
environmental improvements from which we will all benefit. I
assure the House that boosting food production and strengthening
resilience go hand in hand with sustainability—we can do all
those things. We can make sure that we increase biodiversity, we
can improve the environment and we can continue to keep ourselves
well fed in the UK.
Although our food supply chains remain strong, some specific
commodities have been affected by the invasion of Ukraine,
especially sunflower oil. The Government are supporting industry
to manage those challenges. For example, DEFRA worked closely
with the Food Standards Agency to adopt a pragmatic approach to
the enforcement of labelling rules, so that certain alternative
oils could be used in place of sunflower oil without requiring
changes to the labels. DEFRA will continue to engage with the
seafood sector, including the fish and chip shop industry, to
monitor the impacts and to encourage the adoption of alternative
sources of supply, which will be of great importance to the right
hon. Member for Orkney and Shetland (Mr Carmichael).
The food strategy announced our intention to publish the land use
framework, to which several hon. Members referred. We will set
out our land use change principles to ensure that food security
is balanced alongside climate, environment and infrastructure
outcomes. We are seeking to deliver as much as we can with our
limited supply of land to meet the full range of Government
commitments through multifunctional landscapes.
We also need to recognise that the production of food and the
support of our farmers have an impact on those landscapes. It is
no coincidence that the beautiful stone walls in North Yorkshire,
which tourists enjoy going to see, are there to keep sheep in. If
we remove the sheep—
And the Cotswolds.
And the Cotswolds, I hear an interested hon. Member say from a
sedentary position. Similarly, it is worth recognising that the
beautiful rolling moors of Exmoor and Dartmoor look as they do
only because of the food that is produced and the sheep that
graze on them.
The food strategy also sets out the significant investments that
are already being made across the food system, including more
than £120 million of joint funding with UK Research and
Innovation in food systems research and innovation; £100 million
in the seafood fund; £270 million across the farming innovation
programme; and £11 million to support new research to drive
improvements in understanding the relationship between food and
health. That is vital; agritech and investment in new
technologies will help us on the way.
We are taking steps to accelerate innovation by creating a new,
simpler regulatory regime to allow researchers and breeders to
unlock the benefits of technologies. My right hon. Friend the
Member for Tatton talked about her constituent who is producing
an awfully large number of tomatoes—I forget how many.
Some 650 million.
That could produce quite a lot of ketchup. New technologies in
harvesting and production will assist those industries as we move
forward. I hope that hon. Members on both sides of the House will
be here to support the Genetic Technology (Precision Breeding)
Bill as it passes through the House on Monday.
In the eight minutes that I have been allowed, it has not been
possible to answer all the questions of Back Benchers. I think
there were 11 speakers, which would have given me 40 seconds to
respond to each contribution. If there are comments or questions
that I have missed, however, I would be more than happy to write
to hon. Members; I understand that this is a topic of great
interest to hon. Members on both sides of the House.
Food has rarely been as high on the Government’s agenda. It is a
critical issue and the Government are prioritising it
accordingly. We have already seen the high resilience of our food
supply chains, but my Department will continue to work closely
with the industry to address any evolving issues. We will prepare
for the future by investing in research and innovation. Our
farming reforms will help to support farmers to maintain higher
levels of food production, and we will protect the environment at
the same time.
Mr Deputy Speaker ( )
The Minister’s speech prompts me to heap praise on the great
farmers of the Ribble Valley. We have a lot of stone walls there
too.
3.24pm
I want to thank all Members in the House for coming here today
and taking part in this debate on food security and the national
food strategy. It has been wide-ranging and timely, there has
been much consensus across the House and it has been highly
constructive. It has only been possible because of the hard work
of the hon. Member for Bristol East () in making sure so many
people were here.
A lot of Members, including the hon. Member for Swansea East and
the hon. Member for Leicester East (), focused on food poverty,
and securing food for children at school and families right
across the country. The hon. Member for Stretford and Urmston
() wanted support for her Healthy
Start scheme (take-up) Bill, which is coming forward. The hon.
Member for Twickenham () focused on free school meals
and how we can help those most in need.
Looking for solutions and moving forward, my hon. Friend the
Member for Cirencester and Tewkesbury ( ) also focused on the
cost of living and food price increases, but also on how we are
going to grow more in this country and utilise our land more to
bring prices down. The hon. Member for Strangford () talked about partnerships, with universities,
businesses and farmers coming together to get healthier crops,
again so that we can bring food prices down.
My hon. Friend the Member for Macclesfield () had a close eye on food waste
and what we can do there. I want to take a moment to talk about
my hon. Friend the Member for Stoke-on-Trent Central (), who talked about affordability, healthy options and
the sacrifices people are making to feed the family. Most
importantly, she has a food summit coming up on 4 November, and
Henry Dimbleby will be there to open it. My hon. Friend the
Member for Hendon (Dr Offord) focused on the future technology of
food—a passion I share—as well as sustainable proteins and
plant-based protein alternatives to meat. That is something this
country does very well, and it is an expertise we should really
push and drive forward to help our country, but also other parts
of the world.
I cannot forget the right hon. Member for Orkney and Shetland (Mr
Carmichael), who spoke so passionately about his fish farmers,
and the hon. Member for Ceredigion (), who talked about exposing the
geopolitical shocks that we have suffered.
I want to thank the Minister, who is knowledgeable in this
matter—he has spent his life in this area—but I want him to know
that there will be constant pressure coming from all Members of
this House on food security and on looking at what we need to do
to make sure we have it. I again thank all Members for taking
part in this debate.
Mr Deputy Speaker
Just for accuracy, the right hon. Lady referenced the hon. Member
for Swansea East, but did she mean the hon. Member for Swansea
West ()?
Yes.
On a point of order, Mr Deputy Speaker. I hesitate to correct my
right hon. Friend the Member for Tatton (), but she referred to my old
constituency of Cirencester and Tewkesbury. It is of course now
The Cotswolds.
Mr Deputy Speaker
Wonderful—two corrections for Hansard.
Question put and agreed to.
Resolved,
That this House recognises that food security is a major concern
to the British public and that the impact of the covid-19
pandemic, the cost of living crisis and the conflict in Ukraine
has made UK food security more important than ever before;
further recognises the strain on the farming sector due to rising
farming and energy costs; supports the Government’s ambition to
produce a National Food Strategy white paper and recognises the
urgent need for its publication; notes that the UK food system
needs to become more sustainable; and calls on the Government to
recognise and promote alternative proteins in the National Food
Strategy, invest in homegrown opportunities for food innovation,
back British businesses and help future-proof British farming.
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