Category: Uncategorized

In the media Right to Food

Army of gleaners getting vegetables from field to food banks

Gleaning — collecting leftover crops from farmers’ fields and margins — is undergoing something of a renaissance in Britain.
March 12, 2022

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Campaign update Food Waste

UK policymakers urgently need to focus on integrating food waste policy with other social objectives

Policymakers should be thinking about how to maximise the social benefits provided by inclusive employment in the food sector.
March 9, 2022
Isabela Vera & Jessica Sinclair-Taylor

Foodrise published its policy recommendations based on the results of FLAVOUR, an innovative project funded by the EU’s Interreg 2 Seas Mers Zeeën 2014-2020 programme that aims to tackle food waste while supporting inclusive jobs in the social economy. Report authors Isabela Vera and Jessica Sinclair-Taylor explore the key findings.

High levels of food waste in the UK supply chain generate 5% of the UK’s total greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and undermine climate goals. It’s clear that for the UK to reach ‘net zero’, food waste must be prioritised — firstly by preventing food surplus, then by supporting the food surplus sector to redistribute food waste that cannot be prevented. In this second area of action, policymakers have significant opportunities to leverage the effective distribution of food surplus as a pathway to achieving other critical social objectives. This includes supporting the social economy and providing employment to people who face barriers to accessing meaningful work as a result of social or economic marginalisation.

The COVID-19 pandemic has been tough on the UK’s workers, particularly those in the food and service sectors. As the largest manufacturing sector in the UK, the food sector employed 4.1 million people in 2019 (amounting to 13% of total UK employment). The food sector already supports some of the UK’s most vulnerable workers, including women (who account for 56% of the positions in food retailing), people who work part-time (accounting for over half the jobs in the food sector), and non-national seasonal workers. The government’s furlough scheme and job placement programmes became critical for many who lost their jobs during this time. Although employment numbers in the UK are recovering, they’re still lagging behind their pre-pandemic levels. Policymakers should be thinking about how to maximise the social benefits provided by inclusive employment in the food sector, particularly in social organisations that prioritise people and the planet over profit. (Studies show that the UK’s social economy has an impressive track record of sparking social change: 47% of UK social enterprises are led by women, 31% have directors from racialised backgrounds, and 76% pay a real living wage.)

Inclusive employment was a goal of FLAVOUR, an innovative food waste project funded by the EU’s Interreg 2 Seas Mers Zeeën 2014-2020 programme. FLAVOUR has supported UK-based social organisations like the Brighton & Hove Food Partnership and Sussex Surplus to employ individuals from marginalised communities to redistribute food surplus to people living in food poverty or re-valorise food surplus into new, delicious products. The project’s findings have been clear: while we can’t rely on food surplus organisations to solve the problems of food waste and food insecurity, they can provide valuable employment to people who otherwise face barriers to accessing the labour market. However, many organisations in the sector struggle to access the capital they need for adequate staffing, infrastructure, and processing facilities. They report that hiring much-needed employees from job placement programmes (like the now-expired Kickstart scheme) is fraught with delays and bureaucratic hurdles.  

Along with targeted efforts to prevent food surplus from occurring, UK policymakers need to further support the social economy, including organisations fighting food waste, through:

  • Labour market policies that account for the needs of women, non-binary, neuro-diverse, and racialised job seekers; prioritise job placements in organisations with social objectives, and streamline job placement processes as much as possible
  • Policies that underpin a thriving social economy more generally: creating a national strategy to support social enterprise (as has been done in Scotland); providing new fiscal benefits for social enterprises, and integrating information on social enterprises and food waste in school curricula and public campaigns (modelled from similar programs in France)

“We need to reject the ‘win-win’ scenario that suggests redistributing food surplus to vulnerable individuals is a silver bullet for both food waste and food poverty,” says Carina Millstone, Executive Director of Foodrise. “Food waste first needs to be tackled through mandatory food waste reporting and reduction targets. But there are real opportunities for policymakers to integrate policies to effectively redistribute the lower level of food surplus that will always occur in a sustainable food system with other policies designed to provide employment to marginalised individuals and support a thriving social economy.”

“The biggest current challenge we are all facing is the climate crisis,” says Gareth Hart, an expert on the UK social economy who co-founded Iridescent Ideas CIC, a social enterprise that aims to help other social businesses succeed. “Social enterprises in the UK are committed to fighting it, but the social economy requires targeted government support in order to achieve its full potential.”

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Campaign update Fish Farming

What does a farmed salmon eat? Lots of nutritious wild fish…

Salmon are farmed using fish oil and meal made from millions of tonnes of wild-caught fish most of which are food-grade.
March 3, 2022
Lia ní Aodha

Based on current practices, farming salmon demands wild fish for feed. But what if we ate some of those wild fish directly instead and only used byproducts (the heads, bones and other trimmings) left over from fish processing in salmon feed? How about if we added some mussels or carp—aquaculture species that don’t rely on wild caught fish for feed—to our plates too?

Building on our previous work on farmed salmon, these are questions that Foodrise, along with a team of scientists from Cambridge, Lancaster and Liverpool Universities set out to answer in a study recently published in PLOS Sustainability and Transformation.

Highlighting some stark ecological and social inefficiencies surrounding the production of farmed salmon, the analysis shows that if we removed whole wild-caught fish from salmon feed and made some changes to the types of seafood we eat, we could leave millions of tonnes of fish in the sea and produce more nutritious seafood at the same time. We could even still eat a little farmed salmon.

Sounds like a win-win!

Often presented as a way of relieving pressure on wild fish stocks and providing much needed nutrition for a growing population, aquaculture is the world’s fastest growing food sector. But some aquaculture species, like Atlantic salmon, are farmed using fish oil and meal made from millions of tonnes of wild-caught fish, most of which are nutritious food-grade fish that could be eaten directly instead.

We know salmon farming’s (continued) dependence on wild caught fish is unsustainable—ecologically and socially—in terms of the quantities of wild fish it requires to grow a kilo of fish and the fact that, fueled by the industry’s rapid growth over the past two decades, fish for feed are increasingly caught off the coast of West Africa, where there is increasing evidence that this is impacting both livelihoods and food security.

Looking at Scotland’s salmon industry specifically, the third largest worldwide and the UK’s largest food export by value, what’s novel about this research is its focus on the transfer of micronutrients from the wild fish fed to farmed salmon. Placed fourth in terms of the ‘big five’ fish species (cod, haddock, tuna, salmon and prawns) consumed in Britain, (farmed) salmon is marketed as being a rich source of important vitamins, minerals and fatty acids. And it is. Interestingly, however, many of the wild fish fed to farmed salmon have even higher concentrations of key micronutrients than their farmed counterparts

So, what happens to those essential micronutrients when these ‘feed’ fish are eaten by salmon? It turns out a huge proportion are a lost. More than half (!), in fact. In some cases, up to 99%! In other words, farming salmon, from a nutritional perspective, is an inefficient way of delivering required micronutrients to human diets.

Prawns aside. the ‘big five’ fish species currently favoured by British consumers are all just that, big, high trophic species. In contrast, many of these ‘feed’ fish are small – think herrings, sprats, sardines, and anchovies. So, what if we were to eat some of these small ‘feed’ fish instead? To investigate this, three alternative production scenarios were developed whereby farmed salmon were only produced using fish byproducts, and then more wild-caught fish, mussels or carp were added for human consumption. All alternative production scenarios produced more seafood that was more nutritious than farmed salmon AND left 66-82% of feed fish in the sea.

Based on findings on the Scottish salmon industry, theses alternative scenarios were then applied at a global scale. One scenario shows that farming more carp and less salmon, using only feed from fish byproducts, could leave 3.7 million tonnes of wild fish in the sea while producing 39% more seafood overall. So now we’re talking a socio-ecological win-win-win! More and better fish on our plates, and more in the sea.

These findings show salmon farming, in its current form, is not only an inefficient way of producing good food but quite irrational from a social and ecological standpoint – in terms of human nutrition and food security, unnecessary pressure on fish stocks, and overall fish production. Removing whole wild caught fish from aquafeed would go some way to mitigating these impacts.

Aquaculture will have an important role to play in terms of meeting global food demands in a manner which is sustainable – indeed, a key aspect of this study is that it does offer more sustainable alternatives. However, until marine-fed aquaculture, such as intensive salmon farming, moves away from using whole wild fish questions will remain regarding the extent to which this can become a reality.

In its current guise certainly, the ‘unpaid’ environmental and social costs of farming salmon for high income markets means this mode of production is not only unsustainable but raises serious ethical questions as well.

 

 

 

 

 

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In the media Fish Farming

Wild fish stocks squandered to feed farmed salmon, study finds

Wealthy nations accused of depriving poorer ones of nutrient-rich food and wasting mackerel, sardine and anchovy stocks.
March 3, 2022

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In the media Fish Farming

Swap salmon for sardines to keep 4 million tonnes of fish in the sea

A leading cause of overfishing is, ironically, the demand for fish feed. Over 1/3 of all fish caught worldwide are fed to farmed animals.
March 2, 2022

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In the media Right to Food

Why the ancient art of gleaning is making a comeback across England

Volunteers are picking leftover produce on farms to reduce waste and help food banks
February 22, 2022

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The volunteers helping people cope with high energy bills

Training those on low incomes to use the best secret weapon for a frugal dinner - the humble slow cooker.
February 4, 2022

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In the media Meat and Dairy

UK councils investing millions in factory farming through their pension funds

Estimated £238m poured into industrial livestock companies, analysis shows
January 19, 2022

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In the media

Use art and literature to explain food and climate, students say

We need to consider the climate crisis and food system issues from an inter disciplinary basis and invite people from different backgrounds.
January 12, 2022

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In the media Fish Farming

Tale of a tiny fish

The tale of the disappearing yaboi - a tiny nutritious fish from Senegal.
January 11, 2022

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Campaign update Community Food Economies

Have yourself a merry, waste-free holiday!

Reflect on your food waste and wider consumerism. One simple way to reduce food waste is to scale back how much you buy to begin with.
December 20, 2021
Megan Romania

‘T’was the night before Christmas, when all through the house, not a creature was stirring, not even…’

Oh, a mouse.

Gnawing away your leftover holiday roast.

If you’re one of those people who has tossed out uneaten, but still edible, Christmas puddings, you’re not alone. Indeed, alongside the holiday festivities, with turkey, mince pies, and all sorts of puddings galore, comes the significant food waste in households. In fact, Unilever research estimates that every Christmas, British individuals throw away an estimated 2 million turkeys, 74 million mince pies and 5 million Christmas puddings. Yikes.

Even less joyous, this post-holiday waste is only part of the picture. WRAP estimates that British households throw away around 7 tonnes of food (worth around £720 per family) annually. Such wasteful practices are having both significant economic and environmental impacts – in fact, reducing food waste is one of the most effective ways we can reduce our greenhouse gas emissions.

‘It’s not what’s under the Christmas tree that matters but who’s around it.’ – Charlie Brown, A Charlie Brown Christmas

We ask that you reflect on your food waste practices and wider consumerism. One simple way to reduce holiday food waste is to scale back how much you purchase to begin with; if you know certain foods won’t be eaten, then reconsider their purchase in the first place. Reflecting on your broader consumerism practices might include opting to gift experiences rather than physical items, or re-gifting unused items, purchasing gifts from second-hand stores or charity shops, or gifting a currently owned sentimental item, such as your favourite book or jumper. After all, the holidays aren’t about things and stuff, they’re about spending quality time with the people you love, surrounded by delicious food and cheer.

Even if you tried your best to gauge how much food you’d need for the holidays, it’s possible you’ll still end up with too many leftovers. But, if you do have heaps of leftovers and don’t know where to start, have no fear! Foodrise’s Alchemic Kitchen has compiled a list of easy-to-make, delicious post-holiday recipes to help you re-purpose those extra parsnips – thus reducing food waste and saving you money at the same time.

Recipes

Roast Potatoes

If you haven’t gobbled up all of your roast potatoes, combining them with pickled onions and greens make a delicious Boxing Day breakfast.

Heat 3 tbsp of vegetable oil in a shallow frying pan, and add in the pickled onion, sliced in half. Toss over medium heat until the onions start to caramelise – allow about 10 minutes. Add a pinch of cayenne and some thyme. Then, add in your leftover roast potatoes (you want about 500g in total); you can also throw in any leftover parsnips and carrots. Stir well to keep from sticking. Finely slice your leftover greens (brussels sprouts are perfect) and add to the pan. Season with salt and pepper and then serve. The crispy bits are the best!

Stuffing hash with pigs in blankets

If (by some miracle) all the pigs in blankets haven’t been used up, make this Boxing Day hangover cure.

Heat a large shallow pan, add a little oil, then crumble in the leftover stuffing. Snip your pigs in blankets into 3 and add to the pan. Stir well. If you have a few roast potatoes or other veggies leftover, chuck them in as well. Add a tin of chopped tomatoes and stir well. A pinch of chilli works well at this point. Spread the mixture evenly over the base of your pan, use a spoon to make 4 hollows and then break an egg into each hollow. Cover the pan with a lid and keep on a low heat while the eggs set; this takes about 4 minutes. Serve.

Sandwiches – what Christmas leftovers are all about

The below are amazing combinations for toasted sandwiches:

  • Crumbled Stilton mixed with a dollop of mayo, sliced spring onion, and chopped dried apricots.
  • Brie and cranberry with a scoop of leftover red cabbage.
  • Gently cook a sliced onion in butter and add a tsp of curry powder, shred in leftover turkey or chicken, add a dollop of mango chutney and some crème fraîche. Also works very well with noodles or flat ribbon pasta.

Roast Parsnip Soup

If you have a few parsnips left over from your Christmas dinner, don’t bin them, make this delicious soup instead!

Halve and chop one onion and cook gently in 1 tbsp of butter (or vegetable oil) until soft and golden (it takes longer than you think!). Keep the heat low and stir occasionally; don’t let it brown or the soup will be bitter. Chop up your leftover roast parsnips, about 400g or so, and add to the pan with a sprig or two or thyme if you have it on hand. Stir well. Add 1.5 pints of stock (turkey is ideal, but you can use vegetable if you prefer) and bring it to a slow simmer for 10 minutes. Take off the heat, remove the thyme sprigs, and use a blender to purée the soup. If it’s too thick for your liking, add a bit more stock. Taste and add seasoning – lots of pepper is good. At this point you can start playing – if you have left over stilton, crumble some in, if you have cream, add a dollop. If nuts are more your thing, toast a handful of chopped hazelnuts or walnuts and scatter over the top. We have been known to fry up stuffing until crisp and then scatter that across the top. If Santa has been kind and brought you truffle oil, a drizzle or two works absolute magic.

Puddings

Leftover stollen or panettone makes an amazing baked pudding, especially with extra marzipan.

Chop up about 250g of either stolen or panettone into chunks. Grease a shallow baking dish with butter. Pile the sweet breads into the dish. If you have leftover marzipan to use up, glacé fruits or chocolate chop up and toss with the breads. In another bowl, whisk together 2 eggs, 225 ml of milk and 140 ml of cream, add a tbsp of caster sugar and a tsp of vanilla essence. Pour over the breads. Set the baking dish into a roasting tray and pour over hot water to halfway up the sides of the baking dish (not in with the bread). Carefully place in the oven at 140C fan or Gas Mark 3 and bake for about 35 minutes until lightly browned. Dust with icing sugar and serve with a dollop of ice cream.

Leftover mincemeat from pies is delicious added to halved and cored baking apples.

Place apples into a microwaveable dish. Spoon mincemeat (you can also use marzipan) into the middle of the apples, add a dot of butter, and cover with cling film. Pierce to let steam out and microwave for 4.5 minutes on high. Serve with custard.

Too much cream? Make citrus possets.

Place 600ml of double cream and 120g caster sugar in a pan. Heat gently, stirring to ensure all the sugar has dissolved and the cream just started to bubble. Allow about 5 minutes. Add the zest and juice of 1 large orange and 2 lemons (you can also use tangerines) and stir well. Set aside to cool down. Once cool, spoon into glasses and leave in the fridge for a couple of hours or ideally overnight. Serve with those leftover shortbreads.

 

 

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Foodrise campaigner wins BBC’s Community Food Champion award

Foodrise's Lucy Antal is this year's BBC Community Food Champion.
December 1, 2021

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Campaign update

Young Seeds For Your Thoughts – Towards a Just Food System

We brought a group of young people to COP26 in Glasgow to present their perspective on how to move towards a just & regenerative food system
November 25, 2021
EcoTalent

As part of our EcoTalent project, seven young people took part in a 4 month Participatory Action Research project. Reflecting on their own lives to see where they would focus to transform the food system to be more just and regenerative. We travelled with some of them to COP26 , for them to share their perspective. Here are their reflections.

“The COP26 Climate Summit 2021 seemed to fly by. It was good to spend more time with my fellow colleagues and meet some new people. This was my first time visiting Glasgow and what a beautiful city it is. Super excited to see so many people from all over the world coming together to help solve the climate crisis – a lot progress still needs to be made.” Marlon Opigo

Presenting the ‘One Pot Community’ Manifesto

Josh presented his manifesto at COP26 – you can view it here. Here are Josh’s reflections;

“It was an amazing experience attending COP26 with the PAR Foodrise group. I know that generally people were disappointed by the outcome of COP26 but it did feel empowering to be part of the discussion around the food and growing system, and at the ground level. Personally it was good for my confidence to feel I can speak out and be heard representing young people and also neurodiverse people. I liked showing my ideas for a more sustainable and fair food system, along with my colleagues. I hope that along with others saying similar things, we can make a difference.”

You can view the full presentation here, we would love to hear your thoughts!

 

 

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Campaign update Meat and Dairy

The Global Methane Pledge; a way to keep us below 1.5 degrees or a load of hot air?

In failing to significantly address the methane emissions of our unsustainable food system the pledge falls short.
November 4, 2021
Krysia Woroniecka

This week was big for methane at the COP26 global climate negotiations in Glasgow. As had been trailed beforehand, global leaders including President Joe Biden announced a Global Methane Pledge. The pledge commits to reduce methane emissions by at least 30% from 2020 levels by 2030 and transition to using the best methodologies to measure methane emissions. The alliance of 90 countries signing onto the pledge includes the US, EU, and Brazil, but crucially excludes China, India and Russia (the three other largest emitters after Brazil). Delivering on the Pledge would reduce warming by at least 0.2 degrees Celsius by 2050.

Like another agreement to halt and reverse deforestation, commentators have expressed support but also concern on how the pledge will be delivered – or if it will be at all. Global climate negotiations are no strangers to unfulfilled promises and vague commitments. Here are our key concerns;

Not ambitious enough

There has been much focus at COP26 on need to stay within 1.5°C, the pledge falls short on this. Global temperature has risen by 1.2 degrees above pre-industrial levels, and the IPCC projects us to hit 1.5 degrees at or before 2030. Cutting methane emissions by 40–45% (whereas pledge only commits to a 30% cut) by 2030 allows us to limit global warming to 1.5° C this century according to the IPCC.

Ignoring the biggest source of methane

The pledge focuses on the energy sector, which contributes 35% of methane emissions. A 75% cut in methane emissions from oil and gas operations by 2030 is possible with existing technology at near zero cost, the oil and gas industry is considered the “low-hanging fruit” of methane reduction. However, the single biggest source of global methane is largely ignored. Agriculture accounts for 40% of global methane emissions. Most agricultural methane emissions come from growing rice and raising ruminant animals (via enteric fermentation and manure). A large part of these emissions come from large-scale farms, particularly in the US where methane emissions nearly doubled between 1990 and 2019, according to the Environmental Protection Agency. These emissions will keep growing as the global population increases and developing countries get richer and consume more protein.

Industrial livestock producers are major culprits in methane emissions: direct methane emissions from livestock have caused a fifth of all global warming since the industrial revolution. It’s not difficult – technically speaking – to reduce these emissions. Simply farm far less methane-emitting livestock (mainly ruminants like cows and sheep) and ensure livestock that is farmed is reared in ways that minimise methane emissions and provide other benefits like soil carbon sequestration and nature conservation by using agro-ecological rearing methods.

Focusing on the wrong solutions

The pledge doesn’t even consider significantly changing our food system: instead, it talks about “climate-smart” technological fixes such as improved manure management systems, anaerobic digesters and new livestock feeds. The focus on anaerobic digestion, or biogas, as a solution to manage food waste and methane from manure, is a major climate concern. Public subsidies directed at anaerobic digestion risk incentivising expansion of the intensive livestock industry by making it cheaper for industrial farms to dispose of their waste.

Similarly, reducing food waste – another major source of methane – gets a mention, but it’s not clear whether this will be about channelling resources and regulation to get big companies who set the conditions that cause most waste to address this, or about spending lots of money on biogas digesters that tie us into long-term ‘waste disposal’ infrastructure, without addressing the source of the problem.

Likewise, preventing the manure and slurries from being produced in the first place, through reduced meat and dairy production and consumption in the UK would reduce emissions substantially more than the mitigation potential offered by Anaerobic Digestion, and also has the potential to free up vast quantities of land for tree planting and additional carbon sequestration leading to a 156% reduction in the UK’s agricultural emissions.

Reducing food waste, improving livestock management, and the adoption of healthy diets (vegetarian or with a lower meat and dairy content) could reduce methane emissions by 65–80 Mt/yr over the next few decades. This is significantly greater than the emissions reductions of 29–57 Mt/yr available from readily available targeted measures for oil and gas.

 The bottom line

 It is positive that methane is being focused on and if delivered the pledge will contribute towards the goal of remaining below 1.5 degrees. However, in failing to significantly address the methane emissions of our unsustainable food system the pledge falls short. We simply can’t achieve recommended methane emissions without tackling Big Livestock and ultimately creating a better food system.

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Campaign update Meat and Dairy

Supermarkets in the Netherlands are avoiding responsibility for one third of their CO2 & methane emissions

Our new report explores whether Dutch supermarkets are doing enough to tackle the climate impact of their meat and dairy.
November 2, 2021
Frank Mechielsen, Campaign Lead, Netherlands

Today, Foodrise EU published its first report (in Dutch or read the English summary here): a brief exploring the role of Dutch supermarkets in addressing the country’s climate footprint by taking responsibility for the environmental impact of their high meat and dairy sales. Frank Mechielsen, Campaign Lead in the Netherlands, explores how they’re measuring up.

During the Climate Summit COP26 this week in Glasgow, it is important that Dutch supermarkets show their ambitions in their fight against climate change. In their announcements, they emphasize the reduction of CO2 emissions in their own stores and their transport, but what they don’t mention is that this is only a small part of their overall emissions. Like in the UK, 95% of supermarket emissions come from the supply chain. About a third of this is caused by the production of meat and dairy. Two major retailers, Albert Heijn and Lidl, are starting to become transparent about their meat sales, but no supermarket has a plan to reduce meat and dairy sales.

The report draws on a poll by IPSOS among a representative sample of 994 Dutch citizens. Four in ten young people see a greater role for supermarkets in reducing meat consumption. For example, by fewer promotions on meat and more promotion of meat substitutes. Supporters of the Green party (GroenLinks), the Party of the Animals, and Democrates D66 also expect more leadership from supermarkets on this theme. Furthermore, 18% of young people up to the age of 35 say they do not buy meat, almost twice as high as average.

With an 80% market share, the five largest retailers have an enormous influence on the food system in the Netherlands. Last year, supermarkets saw their turnover increase by 14% thanks to the impact of Covid-19. Nearly half (45%) of consumers under 35 believe that supermarkets should reinvest their Covid-19 profits in offering more plant-based and sustainably produced products.

Dutch supermarkets continue to offer too much cheap meat, which causes more than half of the food-related greenhouse gas emissions worldwide. In the Netherlands, livestock is the driving force behind the nitrogen crisis, and growing emissions of methane, a highly potent greenhouse gas. Supermarkets must take more responsibility for the climate impact throughout their entire chain by halving the sale of meat and dairy by 2030, and offer more healthier and plant-based food. If they don’t, they won’t be able to achieve their climate ambitions.

The report analysed data and commitments from the five major retailers and concludes that Albert Heijn, through parent company AholdDelhaize, is the only retailer to be transparent about greenhouse gas emissions across their entire supply chain, including the part caused by animal proteins.

Supermarkets are starting to respond to this growing climate priority. Albert Heijn is committed to achieving a 50/50 balance in animal/vegetable proteins by 2025 and showed for the first time its current ratio in protein sales: 70% animal to 30% vegetable. Furthermore Lidl announced that 25% of their total revenue derives from fresh meat and dairy products.  Jumbo set a new target to increase their plant-based alternatives from the current 4% to 10% by 2025. But no major supermarket has so far set specific targets to reduce meat and dairy sales. The much smaller Ekoplaza is at the forefront of this and has specific targets to reduce meat sales by 2022.

Foodrise’s UK scorecard, published in June 2021, showed that none of the UK’s 10 largest supermarkets are taking steps to reduce meat supply. They continue to encourage meat consumption through low-price promotions, labelling and product placement. In 2022, Foodrise will launch a scorecard together with partners from other EU countries to assess supermarkets on their commitments, policies and trade practices to tackle climate change and the transition to less and better meat.

The recent Food Policy Coalition report, to which Foodrise contributed, emphasises the importance of a healthy and sustainable food environment. Supermarkets must use their marketing resources to enable their customers to make healthy and sustainable choices, which means eating far less meat and dairy and where they do choose to eat meat buying ‘better’. Instead of the current fixation on price, supermarkets should place other values ​​such as human and animal health, environment, climate, fair income for farmers and workers much more centrally in their communication to their customers.

The Food Transition Coalition (TCV), in which Foodrise EU participates, advocates an ambitious ‘protein transition’ from 60/40 to 40/60 in animal/vegetable proteins to be achieved by 2030. During the ‘Plant the Future’ dinner last month, more than 100 organisations and companies came together to discuss how plant-based can become the new normal. Politicians must make the protein transition a spearhead in policy aimed at food, climate and health. Businesses must be directed to adjust the supply and promotion of animal products. The True Animal Protein Price Coalition (TAPPC), active this week at the CoP in Glasgow, promotes an environmental tax on meat. According to the PBL, this leads to a reduction of 2 Mton CO2 eq. per year, a small coal-fired power station. A large majority of the population in the Netherlands supports an environmental tax on meat in the coalition agreement, which D66 and Christen Unie also support.

A third of AholdDelhaize’s total emissions are produced by meat and dairy. This corresponds to the annual emissions from heating 6 million homes, three quarters of all homes in the Netherlands. Supermarkets must increase their climate ambitions and sell less meat and more vegetables, fruit, legumes, nuts and grains. It is especially important during this COP26 Climate Summit in Glasgow that companies set a good example.

Read the full report the Ipsos poll, and the English summary.

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Campaign update Meat and Dairy

Jongeren vinden dat supermarkten minder vlees moeten verkopen om verdere opwarming van de aarde te voorkomen

Nederlandse supermarkten doen te weinig om hun klimaatimpact drastisch te verlagen.
November 2, 2021
Frank Mechielsen, Campagneleider bij Feedback

Tijdens de Klimaattop COP26 deze week in Glasgow is het belangrijk dat Nederlandse supermarkten hun ambities tonen in hun strijd tegen klimaatverandering. In de communicatie benadrukken ze het reduceren van de CO2-uitstoot in de eigen winkels en hun transport, maar dit is slechts een klein deel van hun uitstoot. 95% van de emissies komt uit de productieketen. Een derde daarvan wordt veroorzaakt door de productie van vlees en zuivel. Albert Heijn en Lidl beginnen transparant te worden over hun vleesverkoop, maar geen enkele supermarkt heeft een plan om de vlees- en zuivel verkoop te verminderen. Dit concludeert campagneorganisatie Foodrise in een nieuw rapport.

Het rapport is mede gebaseerd op een peiling van IPSOS onder een representatieve steekproef van 994 stemgerechtigde Nederlanders. Vier op de tien jongeren zien een grotere rol voor de supermarkten om de vleesconsumptie te verminderen. Bijvoorbeeld door minder aanbiedingen van vlees en meer promotie van vleesvervangers. Aanhangers van GroenLinks, de Partij van de Dieren, en D66 verwachten ook meer leiderschap van supermarkten op dit thema. Verder zegt 18% van de  jongeren tot 35 jaar geen vlees te kopen, bijna twee keer zo hoog dan gemiddeld.

De 5 grootste retailers hebben met 80% marktaandeel een enorme invloed op het voedselsysteem in Nederland. Vorig jaar zagen de supermarkten hun omzet met 14% stijgen dankzij de Corona-maatregelen. Bijna de helft (45%) van de consumenten onder de 35 vindt dat supermarkten hun Corona-winst moeten herinvesteren in het aanbieden van meer plantaardige en duurzaam geproduceerde producten.

De Nederlandse supermarkten blijven te veel goedkoop vlees aanbieden wat wereldwijd zorgt voor meer dan de helft van de broeikasgasuitstoot gerelateerd aan voedsel. In Nederland is veeteelt ook de drijvende kracht achter de stikstofcrisis, en de groeiende uitstoot van methaan. Supermarkten moeten meer verantwoording nemen voor de klimaatimpact in hun hele keten door de verkoop van vlees en zuivel in 2030 te halveren, en meer gezonder en plantaardig voedsel aanbieden. Als ze dat niet doen, zullen ze hun klimaatambities niet kunnen waarmaken.

Het rapport analyseerde gegevens en toezeggingen van de vijf grote retailers en concludeert dat Albert Heijn, vanuit moederbedrijf  AholdDelhaize, als enige retailer, transparant is over de uitstoot van broeikasgassen in hun volledige toeleveringsketen, inclusief het deel veroorzaakt door dierlijke eiwitten en heeft zich verplicht tot een 15 % daling van de totale uitstoot van broeikasgassen in 2030.

Supermarkten beginnen te reageren. Albert Heijn zet zich in om in 2025 een balans van 50/50 in dierlijke/plantaardige eiwitten te bereiken en liet voor het eerst zien wat de huidige verhouding in eiwitverkoop is, namelijk 70% dierlijk en 30% plantaardig. Verder maakte Lidl bekend dat 25% van hun totale omzet betrekking heeft op vers vlees en zuivelproducten. Jumbo stelde een nieuwe doelstelling op om hun plantaardige alternatieven te verhogen van de huidige 4% naar 10% in 2025. Geen enkele grote supermarkt heeft tot nu toe specifieke doelen aangegeven om de verkoop van vlees en zuivel te reduceren. Het veel kleinere Ekoplaza loopt hierin voorop en heeft specifieke streefcijfers om de vleesverkoop in 2022 te verlagen.

Uit de in juni 2021 gepubliceerde Britse scorecard van Foodrise bleek dat geen van de 10 grootste supermarkten in het Verenigd Koninkrijk stappen zet om het vleesaanbod te verkleinen. Ze blijven vleesconsumptie stimuleren door reclames waarin gestunt wordt met lage prijzen. Ook in Nederland wordt er nog veel gestunt met vlees in de aanbieding zoals blijkt uit de jaarlijkse kiloknallers factsheet van Wakker Dier. In 2022 zal Foodrise een scorecard lanceren samen met partners uit andere EU-landen om supermarkten te beoordelen op hun toezeggingen, beleid en handelspraktijken om klimaatverandering en de overgang naar minder en beter vlees aan te pakken.

In het recente rapport van de Food Policy Coalition waaraan Foodrise heeft meegewerkt, wordt het belang van een gezonde en duurzame voedselomgeving benadrukt. Supermarkten moeten hun marketingmiddelen inzetten om hun klanten juist gezonde en duurzame plantaardige keuzes te laten maken. In plaats van de huidige fixatie op prijs, zouden supermarkten andere waarden zoals gezondheid van mens en dier, milieu, klimaat, eerlijk inkomen voor boeren en arbeiders veel meer centraal moeten zetten in hun communicatie naar de klant.

De Transitiecoalitie Voedsel (TCV), waar Foodrise aan deelneemt, pleit voor een ambitieuze ‘eiwittransitie’ van 60/40 naar 40/60 in dierlijke/plantaardige eiwitten te bereiken in 2030. Tijdens het ´Plant the Future´ diner vorige maand kwamen meer dan 100 organisaties en bedrijven samen, om te bespreken hoe plantaardig het nieuwe normaal kan worden. De politiek moet de eiwittransitie speerpunt te maken in het beleid gericht op voedsel, klimaat en gezondheid. Bedrijfsleven moet aangestuurd worden om aanbod en promotie van dierlijke producten aan te passen.

The True Animal Protein Price Coalition (TAPPC), actief deze week tijdens de CoP in Glasgow, promoot en milieuheffing op vlees. Volgens het PBL leidt dit tot een reductie van 2 Mton CO2 eq. per jaar, een kleine kolencentrale. Een ruime meerderheid van de bevolking ondersteunt een milieuheffing op vlees in het regeerakkoord, wat D66 en Christen Unie ook ondersteunen.

Een derde van de totale uitstoot van AholdDelhaize wordt geproduceerd door vlees en zuivel. Dit komt overeen met de jaarlijkse uitstoot door de verwarming van 6 miljoen woningen, driekwart van alle woningen in Nederland. Supermarkten moeten hun klimaatambities opschroeven en minder vlees gaan verkopen en meer groente, fruit, peulvruchten, noten en granen. Beter voor de gezondheid van onszelf en onze aarde. Juist tijdens deze Klimaattop COP26 in Glasgow is het belangrijk dat bedrijven het goede voorbeeld geven.

Lees het volledige rapport en de Ipsos peiling.

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Campaign update Meat and Dairy

Foodrise at COP26

How our food is produced, what we eat and what we throw away are major climate issues.
October 28, 2021

How our food is produced, what we eat and what we throw away are major climate issues. Even if all other sectors were immediately net zero from 2020, without action on food system emissions we would likely surpass the 1.5°C emissions limit by the middle of the century. Food isn’t on the official agenda at COP26, but it touches on virtually every aspect of the negotiations and surrounding discussions, from the effectiveness of a Global Methane Agreement, to the drive for more ambitious country-level commitments to bridge the ‘emissions gap’.

Find out where to find Foodrise’s staff and events at COP26.

9 November – 16.45 GMT

Side Event – No More Omissions: Addressing the ambition and scale of change required in global food systems (Multimedia Studio 2 – Blue Zone)

Food systems, especially meat, fish and feed, haven’t gotten the attention they should in climate COPs, despite huge GHG emissions. Foodrise’s Executive Director Carina Millstone will present on this panel which encompasses perspectives from health, culture and science and bold policy and financing recommendations to forestall further catastrophic emissions and omissions. Register here. 

11 November – 10.00 GMT

Young seeds for your thoughts (COP26 Food and Climate Zone, Salvation Army Glasgow, 1 Houldsworth Street, G3 8ED)

A group of young people present a perspective on how to move towards a just and regenerative food system, based on their research over the course of a 6 month participatory action research project, which centres ordinary people rather than “experts” in the food sector. Sign up here.

To attend virtually – sign up here.

12 November – 10.00 GMT

Green gas without the hot air (COP26 Food and Climate Zone, Salvation Army Glasgow, 1 Houldsworth Street, G3 8ED)

 

Anaerobic Digestion (AD) involves turning food waste, manures or crops into “green gas”. But is AD an environmental silver bullet? Foodrise uncover how AD policies can go seriously wrong – incentivising factory farming and food waste, and diverting land from nature and feeding people.

Join us for a discussion on AD’s limitations and how to fix our broken food system. Sign up here.

To attend virtually – sign up here.

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Campaign update Meat and Dairy

The shift to Paris Agreement-aligned diets won’t happen without retailers

Investors eyeing the UK retail market should remember that supermarkets face one of the toughest and most important climate transitions yet.
October 26, 2021
Jessica Sinclair Taylor, Head of Policy and Media

UK retailers are having a moment in the sun when it comes to international investment. Last week saw UK retailer Morrisons agree its purchase with new owners, US equity firm Clayton, Dubilier & Rice (which provoked concerns from Foodrise and our allies in the Times this weekend). Meanwhile, Sainsbury’s is the next supermarket in US investors’ sights, with the firm that missed out on buying Morrisons, Fortress, said to be interested in the UK’s second biggest retailer instead.

Retailer sustainability strategies may not have been top of the agenda as these investors sized up their new assets. But investors large and small shouldn’t forget that UK retailers face one of the toughest new fronts in corporate climate action: how to create a sustainable food system, within the deadlines that the climate science tells us are looming ever closer. As the need for a rapid decarbonisation of the UK economy sharpens, the focus in the next few years won’t be on supermarkets’ electric vehicle fleets or plastic bag charges but on how they intend to tackle the emissions associated with the products they sell and the supply chains that produced them (their ‘Scope 3’ emissions), of which meat and dairy make up a major slice. Foodrise’s new investor brief, ‘The Shift to Paris-aligned Diets and Investor Risk in the UK Retail Sector’ explores these themes, based on our 2021 Meat and Climate Scorecard, which used just under 40 indicators to assess the top ten retailers on their action to address the climate impact of the meat and dairy they sell.

The investor brief explores the physical and transitional climate risks retailers face, associated with their sales of meat and dairy, and argues that, as markets continue to price climate risk into the value of equity securities, setting and meeting ambitious and accountable science-based targets on product emissions will become a bellwether of a retailer’s long-term viability. And it makes the case that only by radically reducing how much meat and dairy they sell will retailers be able to meet these targets.

Most UK retailers have some sort of ‘climate plan’ and many, under pressure from the COP26 team as well as investors, have net zero targets. But, here’s the rub: to be credible, retailers’ net zero plans must include their Scope 3 emissions, which represent up to 95% of their overall carbon footprint. Retailers are reluctant to include these figures in their targets – Green Bonds issued by Tesco last year explicitly excluded their Scope 3 emissions from their action targets, and the retailer has yet to update their implausible Scope 3 estimates, which saw these emissions represented as only a small proportion of Tesco’s overall climate burden. This is because reducing Scope 3 emissions, otherwise known as taking meaningful climate action, requires fundamental changes to what retailers sell, and how they sell it. Figures on the proportion of Scope 3 emissions generated by retailers’ sales of meat and dairy are hard to come by because of a lack of transparency, but numbers published by a Dutch retailer Ahold Delhaize suggest they represent around a third of Scope 3 emissions.

So what should a climate-savvy investor eyeing one of the UK’s mega retailers be looking for?

First, does this retailer have a credible decarbonisation target that is science-based, independently audited, and in line with the global goal of limiting temperature rise to 1.5 degrees?  Does this plan include how they will halve (at least) their Scope 3 emissions in a credible, Paris-aligned timeframe? This is a bare minimum: supermarkets have a huge amount of power in our food supply chain, and scientific evidence shows that if we don’t address food systems, we’re very unlikely to deliver 1.5 degrees. Investors can expect governments and the public to pay more and more attention to supermarkets’ role in delivering a just and safe future as we head towards 2030.

Just as importantly, does the retailer have a credible plan for how it will achieve this target, and the transparency to back it up? UK retailers provide hugely varying levels of detail on how they plan to achieve their plans: Tesco announced a new target in October but with little detail on how it will get there. Sainsbury’s, who was first out of the net zero blocks back in 2020, has still not published a detailed plan showing how exactly it will cut its emissions. This matters, because all the retailers have still to publicly face the very clear reality that they cannot achieve any credible climate targets without reducing how much meat and dairy they sell.

Where retailers talk about their plans, do they include action at every level of their business? This means from mainstreaming sustainability targets by linking them to senior staff’s renumeration packages to making changes on the shop floor that will actually start to shift their shoppers’ habits. We shouldn’t be naïve – supermarkets have been shaping how we shop and what we buy for decades, and the myth that they only respond to consumer demand is a dangerous one. Promotions, labelling, and even how food is displayed in stores all contribute to how we shop. Foodrise’s supermarket scorecard had a series of suggestions for how supermarkets can address the ‘food environment’ they create, to make it healthier and more sustainable: but retailers need to do their own research and accept that selling less meat and dairy – not just more plant-based foods – is going to be a central piece of the puzzle.

The scorecard is not looking strong. Sainsbury’s, the ‘official’ supermarket of COP26, which kicks off next week, announced a net zero ambition back in early 2020. Yet Sainsbury’s have yet to provide investors with the essential transparency on their emissions, broken down by sales category, or with a concrete roadmap of how they intend to address them. Tesco is even further behind – their plan to have ‘net zero’ products and supply chains by 2050, announced earlier this month, fails to align with a commitment only a few weeks earlier to cut product-based emissions by half by 2030. Morrisons has vaguely guestured to future ‘net zero eggs’ and beef – an approach which will rely solely on offsets, a strategy which is coming under increasing scrutiny from climate-savvy investors (as we argue in this letter to the FT).

Until retailers have credible answers to each of these questions – and the transparency to prove it – investors may be left to conclude that the real answer to ‘what’s the plan on retailers’ climate transition?’ is that, currently, there is no plan.

Read the full investor brief: ‘The Shift to Paris-aligned Diets and Investor Risk in the UK Retail Sector’

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In the media Meat and Dairy

The Firms Keeping Big Ag in Business

If current trends continue, the global meat and dairy industry will be eating up almost half the world’s 1.5°C emissions budget by 2030.
October 25, 2021

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In the media Meat and Dairy

You told us how supermarkets should fight climate change – Here’s what they said

Retailers need to wake up to the realities of the climate crisis and what it means for the meat and dairy they sell.
October 25, 2021

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In the media Meat and Dairy

Letter to the editor – Morrisons Takeover

A good deal for shareholders may be a bad deal for farmers and shoppers.
October 22, 2021

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Campaign update Meat and Dairy

New Net Zero Strategy fails to address food system

We see three key specific food and climate needs – and potential wins - that this strategy doesn’t meet.
October 20, 2021
Krysia Woroniecka & Jessica Sinclair Taylor

The government has published its strategy for how it plans to reach net zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050. The strategy focuses on electric vehicles, decarbonising heat and buildings as well as major spending on nuclear energy and support for energy from hydrogen, as well as a funding boost to spending on peat restoration and woodland creation.

It’s a strategy that sees technology and industrial transformations as the answer to the climate crisis and spends accordingly. But in common with many of the government’s pronouncements on a green future, it forgets people and the huge changes to a greener, healthier, fairer society which are possible if government works in partnership with people on the ground. This is particularly clear when it comes to food and the system which produces our daily meals: research shows that, globally, without addressing food systems, even if every other sector of the economy decarbonised, we cannot meet climate goals to remain below 1.5°C of warming.

We see three key specific food and climate needs – and potential wins – that this strategy doesn’t meet.

1.  Reducing meat consumption

 The strategy has nothing about dietary change and reduced meat consumption. It acknowledges that “ruminant livestock are the leading cause of farm emissions” but plans to reduce these emissions via improved livestock practices such as the still emerging technology of feed additives. While regenerative livestock management will lead to improved biodiversity outcomes and increased carbon in soils, the evidence is consistently showing that technology and management practices will not be enough to curb the total greenhouse gas emissions from the livestock sector – we need reductions in production (and consumption) as well. The strategy makes no mention of what kind of management practices it intends to support (industrial and intensive livestock production in the UK is rising at an alarming rate) and if absolute greenhouse gas emissions from livestock will also be tackled. The National Food Strategy recently recommended the government to help us cut down on our total meat consumption while the government’s own independent Climate Change Committee (CCC) recommends reduced meat consumption as the low hanging fruit in reducing the UK’s greenhouse gas emissions – a recommendation the government has, so far, consistently chosen to ignore.

2. Halving food waste

While the strategy has a lot of fanfare around food waste, what the detail suggests is that food waste policy – never very ambitious – has been downgraded. A move to bring forward separate food waste collections for all households by 2025 is a whole two years later than a previous target to have these fully rolled out by 2023. Despite promises since 2018 of a consultation on new regulation to require business transparency and targets on food waste, the only business action on food waste mentioned in the strategy is voluntary. And it’s hugely dispiriting that the government appears to be focusing on sending food waste to AD rather than helping prevent food waste in the first place. We already know that preventing food waste saves 9 times more greenhouse gas emissions than sending it to Anaerobic Digestion, or 40 times if you plant trees on the spared farmland that would have been used to grow the food. Using land to grow food to feed digesters, not people, is terrible climate arithmetic.

3. Focus on offsetting via unproven technologies

Talking of land use takes us onto another deeply worrying aspect of this strategy: it’s focus on offsetting via unproven technologies like Bioenergy with Carbon Capture and Storage (BECCS), instead of the urgent need to directly decarbonise our food system. In a week when financial institutions are getting wise about shifty sustainability credentials of BECCS, the Net Zero Strategy is still touting the supposed negative emissions of energy from biomass. What we need is reassurance that there will be genuine emissions reductions from the agriculture sector via an increase in nutritious food production from small-scale regenerative farms alongside a reduction in demand for high carbon (meat, dairy, eggs) or low nutrition foods (sugar and ingredients for processed foods). Instead, the strategy says that food mitigation measures are now all to be covered in the Food Strategy – with no legal teeth – unlike the Net Zero strategy which is pursuant to the Climate Change Act and so will have some enforceability.

And these are only three of the most glaring issues we see – other omissions include action on methane, which garners two mentions in the entire strategy, despite being a major win for preventing short-term warming. It is particularly regrettable that the government is so unwilling to engage with the issue of sustainable food at a time when the EU looks set to see off a particularly determined industry lobbying effort to try to prevent key aspects of the Farm to Fork strategy – including on sustainable diets, and on achieving EU green targets through national agricultural policy – from coming into law. The UK has consistently ignored the benefits of climate-sensitive food policy, but in doing so, we do more than miss a decarbonisation trick – we miss opportunities to make food better for us, for nature and for the climate.

 

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Campaign update Community Food Economies

Celebrating our Food Heroes on World Food Day

Reflecting on those that inspire us to build a better food system
October 15, 2021
Feedback staff

Christina O’Sullivan, Campaign & Communications Manager

When reflecting on my food heroes, many amazing cooks, activists, and food writers came to mind. However ultimately, I realised that for me, my food hero is my mom. She is an amazing cook and has an incredible instinct for food and flavour that I am forever grateful to have learned from her. When my friend Ankita rings her mom in India for a recipe she is told ‘Use your own judgement’ like my mom’s similar refrain ‘You know yourself Christina’. Recipes are a malleable concept in our kitchen which leads to wonderful meals and sometimes epic failures and I wouldn’t have it any other way. What I have noticed is that my mom does not always consider herself particularly skilled – cooking is just something she does. Our food system is made up of and inherently dependent on people who are often classed as ‘unskilled’. The Covid19 pandemic has forced us to consider what a ‘key worker’ is. Why did it take a global pandemic to see the hands that feed us as essential? The mass outbreaks of Covid19 in meat factories has highlighted that any movement towards a better food system that doesn’t incorporate worker’s rights will ultimately fail. Thank you to all the food heroes working across the food system to get food on our plates, together we can create a just and sustainable food system for everyone.

Helena Appleton, the Alchemic Kitchen

My food hero is Charles Dowding. A champion of no dig organic food production. His methods of food production echo the need for shorter supply chains, more nutritious produce and ecologically sound practices. In a very close second place, I have to say Andrea Camilleri whose books and films have inspired me to master the art of homemade pasta and I can finally make arancini to be proud of.

Martin Bowman, Policy & Campaigns Manager

Jack Monroe is my food hero. An inspirational food poverty campaigner who has done so much to challenge cruel government policies that have forced people to rely on food banks and written delicious recipes which are affordable for people cooking on a budget. I saw them giving moving testimony about how they were driven to rely on food banks at a government inquiry – and have endless admiration for their courage.

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In the media Fish Farming

Should you buy farmed salmon?

Foodrise estimates that UK farmed salmon consume roughly the same amount of wild-caught fish as purchased by the entire UK human population.
October 14, 2021
Which?

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