Is the UK Food Supply Chain now Broken?

“Increasingly, farmers are leaving the sector and using the land for non-agricultural uses because they cannot afford to continue to subsidise the cheap food that UK consumers have become used to – glasshouses are being closed and orchards are being grubbed up.”

OFC 2024: Risk-reward ratio in supply chain ‘out of kilter’ – Farmers Weekly

Philip Case www.fwi.co.uk

Risk must be fairly distributed across the food supply chain instead of sitting with farmers and growers to secure a more sustainable footing for the industry.

This is according to a report launched for the 2024 Oxford Farming Conference (OFC).

Over the past five years, the food and farming sector has experienced “significant shocks”, including the impact of Brexit and the Covid-19 pandemic, the war in Ukraine, climate change and soaring “agflation” costs in fuel, feed, fertiliser, energy and labour.

See also: OFC 2023: Report seeks fairness for farmers in food supply chain

Years of “permacrisis” have left farming’s confidence and bank balances at an all-time unsustainable low, says the report’s author, Ged Futter.

Mr Futter has over 30 years of experience in the retail sector, including 15 years working as a buyer at Asda.

These events have exposed pre-existing and fundamental weaknesses in the supply chain and “we are now in an era of volatility”, he says.

As a result, the risk-versus-reward ratio is now “out of kilter”, which means many farmers are asking “is it worth doing it?”, Mr Futter says.

Increasingly, farmers are leaving the sector and using the land for non-agricultural uses because they cannot afford to continue to subsidise the cheap food that UK consumers have become used to – glasshouses are being closed and orchards are being grubbed up.

Mr Futter’s report – Is the UK Food Supply Chain Broken? – is based on more than 40 interviews with business owners across fresh produce, eggs, poultry, pork, importers, frozen food manufacturers and various consultants.

It presents key insights and considers a range of potential solutions to enable the industry to “thrive and not just survive” in the future.

Four key statistics in report

  • 52% of a grower’s costs spent on labour in some horticulture businesses
  • £2,000-£2,500 is the average cost of an audit with a UK retailer
  • 50% of vegetables produced in the UK consumed domestically
  • 15% of soft fruit produced in the UK consumed here

Retailer practices ‘must change’

The retailers have become more sophisticated at finding ways of getting better prices and most farmers/growers/packers have not kept up, says Mr Futter.

Fixed-price, long-term trade agreements, inexperienced buyers who can be “more aggressive and less empathetic”, and burdensome audits over the past 10 years “have squeezed every drop of profit from many of the suppliers”.

However, Mr Futter argues that much-peddled headlines over the past five years, suggesting the food chain is “broken” and the responsibility sits solely with retailers, fundamentally ignore other participants in the industry.

These include farmers, growers, governmental bodies and NGOs.

The report urges retailers to change their behaviour, but it also says a change of mindset from all stakeholders is needed “to ensure true collaboration, built on trust”.

What farmers and growers can do

Farmers and growers often focus on being better food producers, when they should focus more on being better buyers and sellers, Mr Futter says.

His interviews with farmers and growers revealed they are “not great looking at numbers” and several use outdated accountancy practices.

The key to success is knowing the cost of production, which is more critical now the Basic Payment Scheme is being removed.

Mr Futter says it is more important than ever for the farming sector to move away from overproduction as a perceived solution because a model “based on ‘just enough’ instead of abundance brings in jeopardy for retailers”.

Diversification and exports

Successful growers are already looking at ways to reduce their reliance on retailers.

This includes diversification projects or developing brands that can be sold not only in retail, but also in food service and exports.

One farmer interviewed, who supplies the food service sector, said: “If I have to supply retail, I will quit.”

Alongside diversification, it is crucial that farmers and growers invest in training their teams to ensure they can negotiate successfully and confidently with buyers.

“We need better trained, business-like farmers, multiskilled and business savvy, able to buy and sell,” says Mr Futter.

Frequent extreme weather events exacerbate risk

A volatile climate and more frequent extreme weather events in recent years have been increasing risk for farmers and growers, the report notes.

It highlights the flooding event in October 2023 in Scotland which left millions of pounds of unharvested vegetables damaged under floodwaters.

Fresh produce supplier Stewarts of Tayside’s managing director, Liam Stewart, said the business lost about £500,000 worth of food grown for supermarkets across 60ha of land.

“There’s body blow after body blow, and farmers are no longer growing the same amount of buffer as they traditionally would.

“So if something grows wrong, we take the hit,” he told the BBC in the aftermath of the incident.

“We need everything to happen. Otherwise it is the difference between making money and not making money.”

Devon housing shortage sparks severe consequences

A drastic shortage of affordable housing is having “severe consequences” on Devon’s economy as families increasingly struggle to find places to live.

Bradley Gerrard www.devonlive.com

The Devon Housing Commission, which is made up of Devon’s 11 local authorities and supported by the University of Exeter, has written to Lord Richard Benyon, minister for rural affairs, to urge faster action on delivering more affordable homes for the county.

The commission told Lord Benyon that the average home in Devon costs more than 10 times the average income, rising to 28 times in some rural areas.

Lord Richard Best, the commission’s chair, said: “The acute shortage of any accommodation to buy or rent for those on or below average earnings is having severe consequences. Apart from the hardship to families, it is deeply affecting the local economy.

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“It is also leading to a dramatic increase in the need for temporary accommodation, with ever-rising costs to local authorities and a growing population living in insecure, unsatisfactory housing.”

The commission wants the government to ensure more homes are made available for local people by deploying the Defra Rural Housing Enablers’ policy in Devon.

The scheme was boosted last year with £2.5 million of funding to help the supply of new, affordable housing by identifying development opportunities, supporting site owners and community representatives to navigate the planning system, and securing the support of local communities for developments.

Initially, only schemes in Cambridgeshire and Northumberland were announced, but more are due to be outlined by the government this year.

Lord Best said he had heard from Lord Benyon that £97,000 had since been announced for Devon, which will be coordinated through charity Devon Communities Together, but he hopes for further measures to support rural areas in the county.

“Small village developments can make an immense difference to the life of the community,” he said.

“Without funding associated with schemes like Rural Housing Enablers for a reasonable term it can be hard to recruit and retain the talented people required to fill important roles in Devon’s workforce.

“But with these Enablers in place, real progress can be made in getting attractive, sustainable, affordable homes built for local people.”

The majority of Devon’s local authorities are classed as predominantly rural and the percentage of people in the county who live in a settlement of fewer than 10,000 people is twice that of England as a whole.

Furthermore, the delivery of affordable rural homes in Devon has declined since the loss of the previous Rural Housing Enabling service, from over 200 homes in 2017/18 to only 91 four years later.

The Devon Housing Commission also said it hoped revisions to national planning rules would encourage more development for local people in the county, and that moves would be made to moderate the growth of Airbnb-style short-term lettings from replacing rented accommodation for local people.

Long wait continues for new Devon Rockfish restaurant – Topsham & Sidmouth

The transformation of a former French bistro and bar in Topsham into a Rockfish restaurant is said to finally be making progress after more than 18 months since its takeover. For many months, the seafood chain has teased that the new restaurant – situated on the historic quay – will be ‘coming soon’.

Anita Merritt www.devonlive.com

However, in reality, no work to renovate the previous L’Estuaire Bistro and Bar has been seen leading to speculation about whether it will ever reopen. Rockfish has assured it is still pressing ahead with its plans but it does not know when it will open its doors yet.

A spokesperson for Rockfish said: “We don’t have an official opening date for Rockfish in Topsham as of yet but the project has entered the design and planning stages.”

It was back in June 2022 when L’Estuaire Bistro and Bar closed for good after stating its lease was not being renewed and the site was set to become a Rockfish restaurant. Celebrity chef and restaurateur Mitch Tonks is the founder and chief executive of Rockfish.

Sidmouth

It is also planning to open a new restaurant in Sidmouth which is another project that has been severely delayed. Its plans to convert Sidmouth’s seafront Drill Hall – the former headquarters of Sidmouth’s Territorial Army unit -into a Rockfish restaurant date back four years.

An original scheme for the seafront site had been approved back in 2020, but work never begun, with delays and ‘legal matters’ stopping the plans. A new scheme was proposed and submitted to East Devon District Council planners in 2023, after the chain also acquired the toilet block adjacent to the Drill Hall to enable a ‘much enhanced restaurant offer on this site’.

It had been recommended for approval at a meeting of the council’s planning committee in November. However, a decision was delayed after Mr Tonks was asked by the Environment Agency (EA) to provide more detailed flood risk assessments before the proposal could be considered.

The EA have recommended that the application is not determined until a Flood Warning and Evacuation Plan (FWEP) has been prepared and submitted to the council’s emergency planner.