Abstract

The COVID‐19 pandemic is a major shock to society in terms of health and economy that is affecting both UK and global food and nutrition security. It is adding to the ‘perfect storm’ of threats to society from climate change, biodiversity loss and ecosystem degradation, at a time of considerable change, rising nationalism and breakdown in international collaboration. In the UK, the situation is further complicated due to Brexit. The UK COVID‐19 F ood and N utrition S ecurity project, lasting one year, is funded by the Economic and Social Research Council and is assessing the ongoing impact of COVID‐19 on the four pillars of food and nutrition security: access, availability, utilisation and stability. It examines the food system, how it is responding, and potential knock on effects on the UK’s food and nutrition security, both in terms of the cascading risks from the pandemic and other threats. The study provides an opportunity to place the initial lessons being learnt from the on‐going responses to the pandemic in respect of food and nutrition security in the context of other long‐term challenges such as climate change and biodiversity loss.

Highlights

  • In 2009, Sir John Beddington, Chief Scientific Adviser to the UK Government, made his famous ‘A Perfect Storm by 2030’ statement (Beddington 2009) on risks of civil disruption arising from coinciding food shortages, insufficient energy and water scarcity at a time of climate change and increasing world population

  • With a second wave of the pandemic having taken hold, and with some affected planting seasons started, it is likely that the full scale of impacts are yet to be fully realised

  • Up to January 2021, there has been a large variation in how the pandemic has impacted the UK’s food system and differentially affected society

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Summary

EMERGING RESEARCH

M. Rivington* , R. King†, D. Duckett*, P. Iannetta*, T. G. Benton†, P.J. Burgess‡, C. Hawes*, L. Wellesley†, J. G. Polhill*, M. Aitkenhead*, L.-M. Lozada-Ellison*, G. Begg*, A. G. Williams‡, A. Newton*, A. Lorenzo-Arribas*, R. Neilson*, C. Watts†, J. Harris‡, K. Loades*, D. Stewart*, D. Wardell-Johnson*, G. Gandossi*, E. Udugbezi*, J.A. Hannam‡ and C. Keay*

Food systems and food and nutrition security
About the project
UK impacts
Future risk and opportunity scenarios
Role of agroecology
Changing diets and consumer behaviour
Findings
Food system power relations
Full Text
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