Food aid in Europe at scale 'not seen since the second world war'

European citizens' growing reliance on food banks is 'unacceptable', and the EU must ensure its populations are able to enjoy a healthy and affordable diet, argues Edward McMillan-Scott.

By Edward McMillan-Scott

16 Apr 2014

There is justified concern over the growing reliance on food banks across the European Union. We should consider it as a symptom of a broken food system which requires a complete overhaul. We need a sustainable food policy across the EU, where often prosperous farmers will get €350bn over the next seven years, while the most deprived get a meagre €3.5bn.

On March 30, a further report from the intergovernmental panel on climate change (IPCC) warned that the impacts of global warming are likely to be "severe, pervasive and irreversible". Scientists and officials meeting in Japan said the document is the most comprehensive assessment to date of the impacts of climate change on the world.

The week before the Copenhagen climate change summit in 2009, I organised a hearing at the European parliament in Brussels on the theme 'Less meat = less heat'. Paul McCartney spoke up for his campaign for a meat-free Monday. There is something we can all day about climate change: change our diet. I did: it is five years since I stopped eating meat.

So on 2 April I organised a further hearing, again addressed by Olivier de Schutter, the UN's food rapporteur to address the need for true reform of the common agricultural policy (CAP).

Today, nine million EU citizens depend completely on food hand-outs from Brussels, mostly in countries with poor welfare systems. In Europe, 80 million people live below the poverty line, with 30 million of those suffering from malnutrition.

The priority of the European Union should be to protect the right of its citizens to nutritious and affordable food. Because of the problem of livestock competing with humans for food, there is an increasing emphasis on the need to reduce meat consumption in the EU, as well as promoting a fairer balance between farmers and the consumer.

Such a policy must address all of the important aspects of sustainable food practices, including the fair pricing and value of food; the protection of biodiversity and natural resources such as water and soil; food distribution; packaging and food waste, as well as economic aspects, such as the development of local economies and small-scale production.

There are also important cultural issues, such as the protection of traditional knowledge and species. In July the European commission is due to publish a communication on sustainable food, which will shape policy in the coming legislature. There are concerns that this will focus mainly on food waste, which although a significant problem in the EU should not be used as an excuse not to tackle the main barriers to a truly sustainable food system.

As vice-president of the European parliament responsible for human rights, I believe that the UN's 10-year message 'a right to food' is a timely one. The current levels of food poverty and malnutrition in Europe are unacceptable. According to the director-general of the international committee of the Red Cross Yves Daccord, food aid in Europe is on a scale not seen since the second world war.

Food banks are not a long-term solution to this food crisis. Now is a time for forward thinking and a European food policy which benefits the consumer above all and ensures that all EU citizens have access to healthy and affordable food.

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