UK ‘sleepwalking’ towards food shortages, farmers warn
Rising costs of fuel, fertiliser and feed are impacting on farmers
www.independent.co.ukShort answer: there is no current, widely-accepted evidence of an imminent UK-wide food shortage, but several indicators over recent years have raised concerns about supply fragility and regional gaps.
If you’d like, I can pull the most recent UK government or major retailer statements and assemble a quick, up-to-date briefing with key indicators (CO2 supply status, farm input costs, import pressures, and supermarket shelf signals) and a short forecast. I can also set up alerts for fresh developments.
Note: given your location in Fortaleza, Brazil, if you’re assessing implications for UK travel, exports, or global food markets, I can provide a concise, region-focused briefing with sources.
Rising costs of fuel, fertiliser and feed are impacting on farmers
www.independent.co.uk"Everyone wants to avoid rationing," the farmers' union have said. So why are supermarkets doing it?
www.euronews.comIn a recent article for The Conversation, Dr Sven Batke, Reader in Plant Science at Edge Hill University explains why our food supply should become a national priority, before its too late.
www.edgehill.ac.ukOne government minister told lawmakers that Britons should consider alternatives such as turnips instead of scarce items like tomatoes and lettuce.
www.cbsnews.comVIEWPOINT: Disruption to supply could lead to chaos in UK within 50 years
www.aru.ac.ukSome 17% of adults said they had not been able to purchase good because they were not available on the shelves - but separate data suggests the fuel supply crisis is easing across the country.
news.sky.comRoast chicken is next on the list of short supply lists, with the situation now at ‘breaking point’.
www.standard.co.ukSpiralling inflation isn’t the only problem: butter is vanishing, broccoli seems like a luxury and orange juice can cost as much as a pint. Hannah Twiggs investigates why Britain’s food supply is in crisis and what could be next to disappear from our supermarket shelves
www.independent.co.uk