Future foods: Morphological scenarios to explore changes in the UK food system with implications for food safety across the food chain

Date

2023-03-20

Supervisor/s

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Elsevier

Department

Type

Article

ISSN

0016-3287

Format

Free to read from

Citation

Garnett K, Delgado J, Lickorish FA, et al., (2023) Future foods: Morphological scenarios to explore changes in the UK food system with implications for food safety across the food chain. Futures, Volume 149, May 2023, Article number 103140

Abstract

Scenarios are used to examine systemic change in food systems so policy makers can craft opportunities to improve the management of uncertainty and shape food policy. We present a number of alternative scenarios of the food system for 2035, developed with the Food Standards Agency, the independent government department working to protect public health and consumers’ interest in relation to food for England, Wales and Northern Ireland. To build scenarios we employed morphological analysis; a non-quantified method for modelling multiple scenario variables (food system drivers, projections), simulating their interactions and all possible scenario combinations. A cross-consistency analysis compared all possible scenario combinations to identify which set of driver projections formed a logical (internally consistent) scenario. Recently, we augmented the scenarios to consider the potential impacts and consequences of Brexit and the pandemic on consumer food safety. Outputs illustrate the consequences of extreme impacts emerging from an optimistic (Global Trading) and pessimistic (Resource Tensions) future for the food system. The scenarios establish a context for foresight in decision-making and a framework for evaluating the robustness of policies considering the opportunities and challenges arising from Brexit and a global pandemic.

Description

Software Description

Software Language

Github

Keywords

Scenario building, Food system, Brexit, Pandemic, Consumer safety

DOI

Rights

Attribution 4.0 International

Relationships

Relationships

Supplements

Funder/s