A tractor cultivates the ground in West Sussex, UK DANIEL LEAL/AFP via Getty Images
A new published today has already been criticised by the UK government鈥檚 own food adviser, Henry Dimbleby, who the plan only incorporates about half of . The blueprint, designed to tackle a raft of health and environmental issues, has also drawn the ire of environmentalists.
Much of the concern is about what is left out, such as steps to shift diets away from greenhouse gas-intensive meat. Dimbleby called for a 30 per cent reduction in meat consumption in 10 years and for behavioural nudges rather than a 鈥渕eat tax鈥. But the strategy is shorn of any mention of reducing meat consumption. What it does include are plans for randomised control trials over the next three years to produce evidence that could later lead to 鈥渓ong-term policies to shift diets鈥. So any nudges to eat less meat remain a long way off.
Alternative proteins such as Quorn get a brief mention, but there are no promises of new money, policies or detail on how people might be encouraged to switch to them.
Advertisement
Instead, the strategy puts the spotlight on feeding additives to livestock to curb their methane emissions. at Scotland’s Rural College, an expert on additives, says there is evidence they lower emissions. But he says steep cuts will also require behaviour change, meaning we will need to eat less meat. And getting additives into animals will be a 鈥渂ig challenge鈥, he says, because almost all of England’s cows and sheep graze in fields.
The strategy has been accused of falling short on plans to help nature. Dimbleby called for environmental agricultural subsidies of 拢500 million to 拢700 million a year to help nature recover and to store carbon on farmland. The government has set out a to support such projects, and environment secretary George Eustice has told New 女生小视频 that the scheme will be a key long-term way to help meet net-zero goals, by expanding woodland cover and restoring peatlands. Yet the one week ago it would cap the scheme鈥檚 payments at 拢50 million over the next three years. Barnaby Coupe at the Wildlife Trusts, a non-profit organisation, says he is concerned the scheme has been 鈥渨atered down鈥.
The strategy promises a 鈥渓and use framework鈥 next year, to balance competing needs such as the independent Climate Change Committee鈥檚 call for a fifth of farmland to be turned over for carbon storage rather than producing food. The issue is contentious within government. A leaked version of the strategy, seen by New 女生小视频, baldly said 鈥渨e do not need to reduce domestic food production to meet our wider environmental objectives鈥. The final version dropped that for a toned-down promise to “broadly maintain domestic production at current levels”.
The leaked version also implicitly defended the cap on Landscape Recovery payments, saying that being led by demand from farmers was better than a 鈥渇ixed and inflexible allocation鈥 of money. That was also dropped.
Minette Batters, president of the National Farmers’ Union, says she was pleased to see the change on the Landscape Recovery funding. “Our concern was that you had effectively 33 per cent of the budget [for farming subsidies] going to less than 5 per cent of the land area,” she says. She adds that the main thing missing from the strategy is anything about how farmers will cope with rising costs.
Elsewhere, there is talk of exploring more organic-based fertilisers, but nothing concrete on what to do about fossil fuel-based fertilisers that are increasingly expensive and can lead to air and water pollution. There is 拢270 million allocated for innovation, on everything from carbon storage to gene-edited crops and automated robotics to help horticulture tackle labour shortages. The government also revealed it will look at making large companies report on the greenhouse gas emissions from when people consume their food and drink (so-called scope 3 emissions).
These small steps are welcome, but as Dimbleby says, they don鈥檛 amount to 鈥渙ne vision across the whole system鈥. This is a food strategy that ducks the big environmental questions it needed to answer.
Sign up to our free Fix the Planet newsletter to get a dose of climate optimism delivered straight to your inbox, every Thursday
Topics:


