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UPDATED GUIDANCE ON TRANSPORTING ANIMALS INTO, FROM OR THROUGH GB

The Department for Environment, Food & Rural Affairs (APHA) and the Animal and Plant Health Agency (APHA) recently issued updated guidance on transporting animals into, from or through Great Britain.  

The guidance details what documents are needed and which records must be kept to meet animal welfare in transport requirements. 

The key section now included in this revision, dated 1st January 2025 covers detail about proving the purpose of your export in section 1 of your UK journey log application, if you’re transporting cattle, sheep, pigs or goats from Great Britain to a country outside of the UK, or transiting these animals through Great Britain. This became a requirement from 1st January 2025. 

The guidance can be found here 

 

UK SECURES 150,000 TONNES OF FISHING OPPORTUNITIES FOR 2025 IN NEGOTIATIONS WITH EU

Defra have announced that the UK fishing industry will have access to 150,000 tonnes of fishing opportunities following the conclusion of annual fishing negotiations with the EU. This is an increase of 15,000 tonnes versus 2024 and is worth up to £360 million for the industry. 

The announcement followed the UK’s trilateral agreement with the EU and Norway, which secured UK fisheries 290,000 tonnes of fishing opportunities in the North Sea and surrounding waters.  

It is also on top of 280,000 tonnes, worth around £240 million, from catch limits agreed earlier in 2024 on widely distributed stocks with coastal States in the northeast Atlantic.  

In total, this brings fishing opportunities secured for the UK fleet in 2025 in the main negotiating forums to 720,000 tonnes, worth up to £890 million based on historic landing prices.   

From these three negotiating forums, the UK has gained up to 120,000 tonnes more quota from the 2025 annual negotiations than it would have as an EU member state. 

More detail, including links to the agreed records for the negotiations can be found here. 

 

 

 

HOUSE OF LORDS PODCAST DISCUSSES FIXING OUR BROKEN FOOD SYSTEM

The House of Lords recently launched a new podcast entitled: ‘Unpacking The Evidence: Fixing Our Broken Food System’ with Baroness Walmsley. 

The first episode features a range of experts who spoke to the Lords Food, Diet and Obesity Committee including Henry Dimbleby, Dr Chris van Tulleken, Professor Christina Vogel and Professor Lucilla Poston. 

Discussions cover how the UK and other countries are facing a public health emergency with sobering statistics on levels of obesity and diet-related disease. 

It also reveals how unhealthy diets are the primary cause of this emergency, how the food industry bears major responsibility for this and also delves into the debate over the role of ultra-processed foods (UPFs) in relation to poor diet. 

The second episode explores the need for a new, comprehensive and integrated food strategy on the basis of strong and accountable leadership at the highest level of government. 

It also discusses approaches to food industry lobbying and the need for mandatory regulation of industry, production reformulation and taxes, advertising, local authority powers, food labelling and data transparency, healthy eating in infancy, and school meals. 

You can access the podcast here 

 

DHSC PUBLISH CHIEF MEDICAL OFFICER’S ANNUAL REPORT 2024

The Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) recently published the annual report 2024 from Chief Medical Officer, Professor Chris Whitty,  

This latest report, entitled ‘Health in Cities’ examines the health of our major cities, looks at the issues affecting them and addresses some specific challenges for health.  

It concludes with several recommendations including: 

  • The food environment in parts of cities entrenches inequalities in health and promotes obesity. Healthy food deserts combine with junk food advertising to set children and adults up to live a shorter and unhealthier life through obesity and the diseases it causes, particularly in the more deprived areas of our cities. Changes will need to be tailored to local needs and food choices. 
  • To reduce air pollution, transport emissions, including from public transport and space heating (especially solid fuel burners), need particular action specific to cities. Air pollution is a particular risk in cities where the greatest levels of pollution are combined with the highest concentrations of people. It causes significant lung and cardiovascular disease. Many mayors and city authorities have proposed sensible steps to reduce them; those who oppose these should say what they would do to improve air quality instead. 
  • Healthcare service planning and delivery should consider the needs of young adults in cities. The health needs of young adults are concentrated in cities and are often overlooked. Mental health issues generally emerge by or in early adulthood, and current increases in mental health needs for already stretched mental health services therefore fall disproportionately in cities. Similarly, increasing rates of sexually transmitted infections (STIs) and the weakened provision of STI services is particularly a city problem. 
  • We need to account for, and explore solutions to, the itinerant nature of city populations in providing routine immunisation and screening services. Steady engagement with communities with historically lower uptake is also essential. The relatively poor, and falling, rates of routine immunisation and screening in our cities deprive their citizens of effective tools which could prevent major diseases. This needs action. 

Read the full report here 

 

DEFRA PUBLISH UK FOOD SECURITY REPORT 2024

The Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) has published the UK Food Security Report 2024.  

The report examines past, current, and future trends relevant to food security, and is split into 5 ‘themes’. Key takeouts from the report are: 

Theme 1: Global Food Availability 

  • Continued stable growth in the production of food, despite geopolitical and climate shocks. The global trading system in food has also been stable.  
  • The number of undernourished people around the world is increasing.  
  • Climate change, nature loss and water insecurity pose significant risks to the ability of global food production to meet demand over the longer term.  
  • There is weak productivity growth globally which makes this more challenging. 

Theme 2: UK Food Supply Sources 

  • The UK’s overall balance of trade and production is broadly stable.  
  • Extreme weather events continue to have a significant effect on domestic production.  
  • The UK continues to be highly dependent on imports to meet consumer demand for fruit, vegetables and seafood.  
  • Long term decline in the UK’s natural capital is a pressing risk to UK food production. 

Theme 3: Food Supply Chain Resilience 

  • Russia’s invasion of Ukraine caused a spike in input costs such as energy and fertiliser.  
  • Agri-food sector labour shortages continue.  
  • While there was a sharp fall in volume of imports of Feed, Food and Drink to the UK in 2021, imports have increased slightly since then and the EU remains the UK’s largest external supplier.  
  • Single points of failure in food supply chains pose resilience risks. Many food businesses have shown resilience and recovery in response to shocks, but investment levels are not back to levels before the price shock in 2022. 

Theme 4: Household Food Security 

  • While a large majority of households in the UK continue to be food secure, there has been a notable decrease in food secure households. 
  •  There has been a notable rise in inflation both overall and for the category of food and non-alcoholic beverages since the beginning of 2021.  
  • Most people do not meet government dietary recommendations, with those from lower-income groups less likely to meet recommendations than those from the highest-income groups.  
  • Rates of food insecurity vary greatly by demographics, with a notable difference in levels and experiences between income groups. 

Theme 5: Consumer Confidence and Food Safety. 

  • Levels of trust in Food Standards Agency (FSA) and Food Standards Scotland (FSS) have remained relatively high.  
  • There has been an increase in consumers reporting concerns (prompted) about food prices since 2021.  
  • Laboratory confirmed reports of pathogens that can cause foodborne gastrointestinal disease and the proportional trends in foodborne disease outbreak surveillance data generally remained relatively stable over the period 2019 to 2023, with the exception of the COVID19 pandemic years.  
  • Of the businesses inspected, analysis indicates an upward trend in food business hygiene compliance. However, there is still a backlog in the number of businesses awaiting inspection. 

You can read the report in full at: UK Food Security Report 2024 

 

FSA PUBLISH RESULTS OF LATEST CONSUMER INSIGHTS TRACKING SURVEY

The Food Standards Agency (FSA) recently published the results of its Consumer Insights tracking survey for November 2024.  

This latest iteration of the survey reveals the top 6 food hygiene “fails” committed by consumers, which include:  

  • 46% of consumers don’t always check use-by dates before cooking or preparing food at home.  
  • 45% say that they would be likely to leave food from the fridge out after it is served (e.g., for a buffet) and eat it a few hours later. 
  • Around 39% admit that they at least occasionally cook raw meat, such as turkey or sausages, past its use-by date.  
  • 33% say they don’t always wash their hands before cooking or preparing food at home. 
  • Over 27% said that over Christmas they would be likely to store food that should be refrigerated in another cool place (such as a garage, porch, or cool box) due to a lack of space in the fridge. 
  • 23% said they would be unlikely to ask if their guests have any food allergies or intolerances.  

You can read more here 

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