Coventry University initiative will explore how to improve opportunities for public sector food buyers to include more sustainable, locally sourced food on menus

Public procurement represents a big opportunity to make the UK's food system more sustainable

Public procurement represents a big opportunity to make the UK’s food system more sustainable

Coventry University’s Centre for Agroecology, Water and Resilience (CAWR) is leading a new £1.9 million four-year research project aimed at creating a more sustainable food system in the UK.

The recently launched ‘Procurement for Good’ project was awarded funding from the UKRI Economic and Social Research Council and was co-designed with the Open Food Network, Garden Organic, and Social Farms & Gardens.

With a focus on ‘place-based procurement’, the project will examine how to improve opportunities for food buyers in schools, hospitals, and other public sector organisations to include more sustainable, locally sourced food on menus.

It will use a combination of knowledge exchange, peer-to-peer learning, and technical innovation to help establish new place-based food procurement networks and monitor their impacts.

The research aims to deepen understanding of how the public sector can procure efficiently from local producers in a way that benefits the environment, local communities, and economies.

The project will work with four pioneering food hubs in England, Wales, and Scotland: Cambridge Food Hub, Growing Communities Better Food Shed, Cultivate Food Hub, and Galloway Food Hub.

Through the project, the Open Food Network will extend the functionality of their open-source digital platform to enable food producers to sell to public sector organisations through food hubs

Garden Organic and Social Farms & Gardens will play a key role in supporting the food hubs and promoting knowledge exchange with other food hubs and with public sector buyers across the country.

Professor Moya Kneafsey, director of CAWR and project leader, said: “We hope that the significant buying power of the public sector – around £2 billion annually – can be leveraged to make genuine change in the food system. And we’re thrilled to be collaborating with some amazing organisations on this project.”

Currently around 80 per cent of the UK’s fruit and nearly 50 per cent of vegetables are imported. The Procurement for Good team hopes the research can help to shift the balance towards more local and regional produce being served across the public sector.