Yorkshire Post

A better local food supply key to future

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IMPROVED LOCAL food supply chains could help prevent empty shelves, experts at the University of Sheffield have claimed.

The team at the Institute for Sustainabl­e Food at the university said that local producers have become a crucial source of supplies for the UK’s food system during the coronaviru­s pandemic and could improve its resilience for the long term.

Dr Anna Krzywoszyn­ska is launching a major study into the impact of the pandemic on local food producers. Her team will investigat­e how local supply chains have contribute­d to food security during the crisis, and how they can prevent shortages over the long term.

It will track emergency responses in the immediate crisis period, and develop strategies to inform longer-term plans, providing essential data to support a much-needed diversific­ation of the UK’s food system during and after the crisis.

Physical distancing measures have caused major disruption for the UK’s food sector – from shortages of fruit pickers, to restaurant closures and spikes in demand for certain products.

Direct sales of vegetable boxes from local growers or community supported agricultur­e schemes have more than doubled during the pandemic. With just 16 per cent of fruit and 53 per cent of vegetables sold grown domestical­ly, the UK is particular­ly vulnerable to disruption­s to internatio­nal supply chains.

Dr Krzywoszyn­ska said: “We have a chance to use this moment to change food systems for the better. We know that re-localising food is key for food security and for human and environmen­tal health.”

 ??  ?? FRESH LOOK: Re-localising food is key for food security and for human and environmen­tal health, says Dr Anna Krzywoszyn­ska.
FRESH LOOK: Re-localising food is key for food security and for human and environmen­tal health, says Dr Anna Krzywoszyn­ska.

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