The House

From food security to the impact of energy on prices – the big questions facing farming industry

- Robert Goodwill Conservati­ve MP for Scarboroug­h and Whitby and chair of the Environmen­t, Food and Rural Affairs Committee

Liz Truss certainly has a full in-tray. The Environmen­t, Food and Rural Affairs Committee will be doing its bit to make constructi­ve recommenda­tions on some of the key items as she settles in. Very high on the agenda, of course, is the cost of living crisis and the impact it will have on the food we eat – where it comes from, its quality and its price. The fallout from the Covid-19 pandemic and the Russian invasion of Ukraine has caused big hikes in food prices. Experts predict that food inflation will hit 15 per cent in the coming months. The United Kingdom’s farmers, fishers and food producers are feeling the pressure – as, of course, are families up and down the country.

My committee’s food security inquiry will consider whether the current level of national food self-sufficienc­y is enough. About three-quarters of the food we can grow in the UK is supplied by our own growers, fishers and producers. However, because of people’s diets and choices (some like imported food, and we can’t grow mangoes here!), as well as our food exports, only a little over a half of the food that actually ends up on our plates is produced in the UK.

We need healthy and nutritious food, but we also need it to be reliably supplied and at a price we can afford. Food security is all about ensuring that, despite challenges, we can deal with any future price or supply shocks so the nation is still fed.

By scrutinisi­ng government action, and inviting experts to brief us, we hope to provide some answers on how this can be done.

In the shorter term, the vulnerabil­ity in our supply chains can present real risks to food security. For example last month it was announced that the UK’s only remaining fertiliser plant, on Teesside, would stop producing ammonia for fertiliser – a process that also creates a lot of carbon dioxide (CO2) gas as a by-product.

CO2 gas is vital for keeping packaged food fresh and is also used to stun animals for slaughter. In response to the factory stoppage, my committee

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