back to article Trousers Brown: Blighty faces 'food security' threat

Just in case we didn't all have enough to panic about these days - what with energy prices, global financial gloom, impending ecopocalypse, terrorism etc - the government says any British trouser not yet besmirched by fear is definitely worn by someone who isn't paying attention. Apart from all of the above, we now face a "food …

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  1. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Problem solved.

    Plenty of that there long pig..

  2. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    in addition, we will need to cut the greenhouse gas emissions associated with food production.

    I think labours powerful is not far from god's powers.

    Go on Gordon Split the sea let us all cross it to a better land that has less rules and regulations

    This is getting pathetic and I have two clever solutions for these clever people:

    2 solutions

    1. Nuke us all - so no energy wasted no oxyen breathed no food eaten

    2. Put us all in metal containers provide us with set oxygen water bread

  3. Nomen Publicus

    Nanny knows worst?

    Once upon a time, this country could feed itself. But government decided that such an idea was old fashioned and unnecessary.

    Once upon a time, waste food would be collected, sterilised and fed to pigs. But government decided that such an idea was dangerous and unnecessary.

    Now, whose policies result in expensive and wasted food?

    BTW, BOGOFF deals result in savings to people who take advantage of them. To stop supermarkets offering such deals will result in an increase in food costs to the very part of the population that cannot afford to pay full price.

  4. Peter Labrow

    Brown. Look to yourself.

    Get on with running the country properly. If you did that, we'd respect you more when you were telling us how to live our lives.

  5. Peter Dawe
    Flame

    Hypocracy

    This is the same government that refuses to allow ploughing of the whole field because we might kill some bugs,

    That announced that agriculture was not a strategic industry less than 12 months ago.

    That stop me using the best chemicals because they are out of patent and no one will pay for the testing,

    That sacrifice hectares of land to the sea because they cant be bothered to rebuild the defences,

    That drown square kilometers of grade one agricultural land Cambridgeshire so that a few birds get a comfy roost,

    That today refuses to cull badgers to save dairy herds because of 'cultural issues'.

    That supports increasing the UK population by allowing limitless immigration That supports fertility treatment for people for whom nature determines shouldn't reproduce

  6. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    excellent

    Excellent article, the wider picture is perfectly laid out. maybe there is a little something to be said about food waste, but not in an Energy/water/security context.

    Could i suggest that Gordon throws away a little more of his food?

    - as most of us should really, or not buy it, whatever.

  7. Andy Bright
    Thumb Up

    Well that makes sense

    A fine piece of writing. Which of course means no one will listen (okay, read) and therefore nothing will change. Worse, someone very soon is going to use some bullshit they don't remember properly from a long talk with a friend in a pub, pass themselves off as a <insert subject here> graduate, and argue vehemently as to why this isn't the answer. It's amazing how many quantum physicists, fighter pilots, brain surgeons and astronauts read these articles.

    But for what it's worth, I agree 100% with what you've written, and would vote accordingly if I knew exactly which politician could be cajoled into supporting this line of thinking. Even if I didn't think they'd win, because until people start voting for someone who 'doesn't stand a chance', nothing will ever change.

  8. Andrew Cooper

    Well, yes, but...

    Lewis, I don't disagree with any of what you've said here, nor do I imagine does Gordon Brown. But to talk of energy security is to speak of something that is, at best, a medium-long term solution.

    Gordon Brown is an economist at heart, as well a politician looking to be able to do something that will produce a measurable improvement on something that effects everybody - today.

    In economic terms (and by that I mean the laws of supply and demand), what he's advocating would produce instantaneous changes on prices, not the long term changes that energy security would provide.

    Course all of this is a moot point, as the current "ballistic" food prices are most likely caused by two years running of crap harvest yields. If this year is a turning point on that, we should see lower food prices next year anyway.

  9. James Anderson
    Thumb Down

    Pa Broon needs to put hisown house in order.

    Before preaching to us and the rest of the world Pa Broon might consider injecting some sanity into gov,uk's topsy turvy world of target driven green initiatives, private public partnershipset al.

    I recently found out that hospital food in his Fife constituency is prepared in Wales and shipped by road the 500 odd miles to Scotland.

    Fife has some of the richest most productive farmland in the UK, the idea of shipping food in from Wales is insane. The idea of preparing food hundreds of miles away and shipping it and serving it hours later to the ill and infirm seems just plain cruel.

    Gordon cannot even get the basics right in his own constituency let alone his own country -- why should anyone listen to the pompous windbag?

  10. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Britain does NOT have a problem with food

    If you can't afford that heavily processed tasteless overpriced plastic wrapped crap that passes for food in the UK, then don't buy it. Buy *real* food and eat that instead.

    Food costs us NOTHING, chicken wings are 3 euros a kilo in bulk, a 5 euro box of wings is enough for 2 people for 2-3 meals. Fry them up all in one go, saves on energy and time too. Rice, 30 Euros for 20 kgs of Thai fragrant unbroken rice, enough for 2 people for 100 meals. Big whoop, it use to be 20 euros now it's 30...

    We buy a whole chicken, or a whole duck, cut it up freeze it, get 4 meals out of it for 2 people. Frozen salmon, 1kg 7 euros, that's *salmon* for six meals! 3Kg bulk frozen shrimp, 13 euros, that lasts us 2 months, a whole makerel 3 euros...

    Real food is soooo freeking cheap!

    Stuff being environmental, just for the sake of taste and flavour, learn how to cook simple quick food and you've vastly reduced the 'oil' cost of your food.

    Another pet hate of mine, I go into a supermarket and there's a dinky little bottle of oyster sauce from a fake asian brand and it's 3 euros, so much packaging for such a small amount of sauce. I go to the chinese supermarket, a big bottle of oyster sauce from a recognisable asian brand and it's 1.5 euros. 6-8 times better value.

    So a lot of food energy cost is just wasted packaging and processing, and it's sooooo dumb! We have a kid, we both work, the meal takes 15 minutes to prepare, it tastes better, is healthier, cheaper, more envirodiddly better (as if that's why we do it!). The next meal takes not time since we cook 2 meals in one (cook enough rice for both meals, cook enough fish or pork, to take as a packed lunch the next day).

    I reckon there is so much waste in the existing food system of developed countries, you've been convinced that packaged food offers more variety, tastes better, is quicker, and such, but it doesn't, and isn't.

    I can see we need to fix energy, but even there so much waste...

  11. Andy Barber
    Coat

    Trousers Broon!

    Haven't any of you in the editorial team at el Reg read "Oor Wully?" http://qurl.co.uk/lxx3

    It's Trousers Broon!

    Mines the tartan one! (BTW I'm English!)

  12. Andy Barber
    Coat

    Trousers Broon! 2

    Sorry it's "Oor Wullie" http://qurl.co.uk/lxx3

    Tartan coat again!

  13. Anonymous Coward
    Flame

    Looking forward to the change of government

    When Cameron's PM, says and does pretty much all the same things, and the Daily Heil readers (Hi, "Peter Dawe"!) don't have a "LABOUR!11!one!" PM to vituperate over. Oh wait, you'll carry on ranting impotently at reality just as you always have done. Well, good luck with that, then.

  14. David McQuillan
    Black Helicopters

    Does talking emit greenhouse gasses?

    I was wondering what he was up to, was it all just more hot air? It looks like he wants to force GM crops on us, probably to please some friends of Bush I'd guess. What worries me is how successful he has been getting his ideas through with his scare tactics. Rational discussion has completely gone out the window.

  15. Dave

    sodding professional politicians

    Thank you so much for the article. I still don't understand why this country has to import energy - didn't we have a thriving coal mining industry once ? Thanks Heseltine, Scargill and Thatcher. I hope you are all happy.

    This man Brown really really pisses me off. He has never held down a proper job, run a car, nor scrimped and saved for a house. And now he pontificates about not throwing away food. Well bugger me. Here I was chucking away perfectly good food and not thinking about it. That's probably because I forgot because I was busy burning £5 notes. Seriously what planet does he think we live on. Yes we do all throw away food and it probably is too much. Usually its because we are busy trying to hold on to our jobs. We don't shop properly nor plan ahead enough. Yep guilty as charged. However I do grow some of my own food and I try not to waste food but sometimes I miss a bit of chicken thats at the back of the fridge. Get over it. Perhaps if he didn't waste so much of our money on stupid IT projects (ID cards , NHS , CSA etc) which result in our tax money going to American companies and offshore jobs for no measurable benefit for us we'd take him seriously but in the meantime Brown - go away !

  16. Anonymous Coward
    Coat

    Oh no

    This really gives new meaning to the term "bean counters".

    Mine's the one with the nuclear reactor in the pocket. I'll let them have it if they ask nicely when they've run out of other stupid ideas for saving energy.

  17. tardigrade

    Re: Britain does NOT have a problem with food

    So your saying that if I go to the bank and change all my money from Pounds Sterling into Euros my food shopping will be cheaper?

    I think that's what your trying to say isn't it?

    Just one question. How do I get my local supermarket to accept payment in Euro's?

  18. James Pickett
    Thumb Down

    Villains

    I notice that all the Brown stuff is aimed at the consumer and not at his friends at Tesco, et al, who generate mountains of waste by rejecting fruit and veg that fail to meet idiotic cosmetic parameters that have nothing to do with flavour or nutrition. I sometimes get tomatoes from the bins of nearby greenhouses - they are mostly a millimetre or so under or over-sized, or a bit too ripe (i.e. they might taste of something) and, more to the point, may not be sold as food, as it might affect their profits! (This is a condition of purchase imposed by the supermarket.) The bins, which each hold about a ton of fruit, are then sent for local landfill...

    Potato growers operate under similar constraints. A farmer who supplies (if he hasn't since been blacklisted) McCains had a container-load rejected because the flesh wasn't white enough for MacDonalds' specification. MacD (and the supermarkets) say that they are simply responding to consumer demand, but when did you last critically inspect the contents of a chip or take a vernier to your tomatoes?

    Finally, the larger growers around here are discouraged from selling to small local shops, lest it put a tiny dent in the supermarkets' turnover. Instead, their produce is transported to a central depot miles away (it has already been packed by the grower, at his own expense) and then ferried all the way back.

    And what does Brown do? He blames us!

    You really couldn't make it up.

  19. Watashi

    No forward planning

    No sh*t Sherlock.

    Brown is so blinded by his dogmatic Utopian belief in the universal cure-all ability of market forces that he didn't bother to check that the West was investing enough money in food production research. Turns out that it wasn't. This isn't about temporary market shortages or the growth of China and India, it's about the lack of forward planning by Western governments. And many, many people will die as a result.

    The 'that's just the way the economy works' fatalism isn't good enough. We give people like Brown so much power because we expect them to spot these things coming. If he'd spent less time thinking up interesting ways to have Blair killed, perhaps he'd have done something useful with all that economic growth he likes to claim credit for.

  20. Pyros

    Thoughts...

    There's still plenty of hurdles regarding food security--but I agree that some policies need to stop limiting these things.

    I mean, that business with not culling badgers before they go nuts on valuable dairy cows? We have a policy here in Florida that says that if a gator gets too comfty with the idea of humans not being a threat, it needs a round into its thick skull. The idea is to *encourage* them not to be stupid and take the "easy food" (ie pet dogs. Especially on the leash.)

    I really do have sympathy for those in the UK. Why not use the London Undergound for shipping? You can displace a single car for local deliveries--less fuel and more people walking for a change!

  21. Kevin Reader
    Black Helicopters

    Tremendous Satire by Brown

    This story was fed (sorry) to the press between the Luncheon and Dinner at the conference. Lunch was reported to be SIX courses and dinner EIGHT courses.

    Apparently when challenged the press officer told channel 4 that that was OK as long as none was wasted! Brown must have really missed Prescott today....ho-hum.

    The principle of sending all these politicians, deputies, staff, security, press etc to have a meeting where all of the content must have been discussed/agreed by lesser officials for months - probably with lots of previous travel too - and will have to be ratified later by their parliments and then preaching about Energy and Food efficiency is worthy of Yes Minister or even The-Day-Today.

    Waiting for the SpyCam in the Bin...

  22. Simon Lewis

    Peaked my interest

    Peak Oil edges into the mainstream conciousness bit by bit. Well done El Reg! (Seriously) Not far to go now, there may be hope yet. (And perhaps people will stop looking at me strangely!)

  23. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Isn't he a little tubby to be preaching this

    Quite a few excess calories there.

    And wasn't one of them bulimic, sort of wasteful to spew it back up as well.

    Absolutely ridiculous, we are one of the most fertile areas in the world, our problem is the oligopoly of the super markets, and the farmers not selling direct.

    And if we are about to hit a famine in the UK well it is Tubby Brown to blame, now what happened in that movie Alive.

  24. Mark

    Food/energy

    Pre 1920 (If I recall correctly) america produced 3200 calories of food for each calorie of oil.

    Now it's 1 to 1.

    Less intensive farming has shown that there is no long term loss in production. The tests showing increased yields were short term results from fertilising and after a few years, the same fertilising produced no more food than it produced before fertilising was done.

    If we don't need 20% of the food, then reduction in yields will not be a problem, will they?

    It will also save farmers a lot of money spent on high-tech agribusiness.

  25. Ashley Stevens
    Stop

    Nothing to say - just follow the link

    http://www.defra.gov.uk/farm/environment/land-manage/setaside.htm

    ... and marvel at the hypocrisy

  26. Anonymous Coward
    Stop

    Just a tip...

    When one hears of governments saying that people should do this and people should do that, it really is better to take it with a pinch of salt as the expression goes.

    If a government (any government) really wanted to do something well it has the powers and machinery to do something about the something (if you know what I mean).

    On the other hand if all the government (any government) does it to make some noise without action I think we can safely conclude it was merely noise for some particular intended effect.

  27. Steven Raith
    Thumb Up

    @Ashley Stevens

    As per the other topic where set-aside came up, the EU want to get rid of it, at last:

    http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/science/article4282134.ece

    So hopefully the hypocrisy will wane slightly soon.

    Steven R

  28. Dave

    Quotas, anyone?

    Once upon a time we produced enough food for our own use. Then along came the EU quota system and told us we couldn't do that any more, we had to buy it from somewhere else. Now, if the somewhere else had been cheaper, we'd have done that anyway. British agriculture was once probably the most efficient in the world but now it's being totally screwed.

    Fortunately my local farmers have shops at their farms, so we can buy local meat, potatoes, fruit and veg and not have to trouble the local Tesco at all unless we're buying cleaning products or other similar things. I get to pay less than supermarket prices, the farmer gets more money than the supermarket would have paid him, so none of the important people lose out.

  29. W
    Heart

    Just a slight gripe...

    ...at an otherwise cock-on article.

    "...keep more food in the fridge. That means bigger fridges..."

    That assumption only holds if fridges and freezers are all full at the moment. But how many fridges and freezers are truly full for most of the time? Point being that if we filled our fridges and freezers up a bit then they'd be *more* efficient cos cooling empty airspace uses more energy. But I guess in reality, the unwashed masses are hankering after getting "one-of-them-American-fridges, you-know, the-one's-with-the-ice-maker". They're the new Dyson. Regrettably.

    Anyway, "Food Security threat", eh? So basically, we've had/are having a couple of wars and the population hasn't really felt the pinch and is not quite feeling the fear enough. So we need another looming threat. They've been fishing around for a while now. Global warming has been relaunched as climate change. They shot their load on that one though. But now that food prices have apparently gone up by x-amount*, there's an supposed attack of the killer tomatoes on the horizon or summats.

    All this bluster is just pish. And for the most part, it just gets regurgitated by the meeja. Especially on what passes for TV news at the mo. Nice to see some actual analysis from El Reg.

    Keep on biting the hand that feeds...

  30. Stewart Haywood
    Flame

    Trousers Brown?

    Surely every time he thinks of the next election it must be Brown Trousers time.

    BTW he is not an economist at heart, he is a modern, Scotish, political historian.

    Read the idiot's PhD.

    I thought that the government restricted the production of things like potatoes and milk. Also don't they prevent growers from selling food that is the wrong size or wrong shape? Isn't it the government that runs, funds or owns laboratories that spread diseases to livestock. I'm sure I read somewhere that it is the government that taxes fuel and energy as many times as possible to drive production and distributions costs up.

    Your government does all this for you, and all you can do is complain when they tell you not to waste what little food they allow to be produced and sold.

    I'm glad I left.

  31. Anton Ivanov
    Flame

    I agree - hipocricy, your name is Brown

    At present the land in the new EU arrivals is utilised at under 30%. The agriculture there is virtually bankrupt. You can drive for miles and miles through abandoned orchards and empty fields.

    Bringing it out of disrepair and running it at full throttle should be more than enough to deliver food for the whole EU with a lot to spare. The only reason it is not doing it is that EU at present is an organisation whose primary aim is to provide French farmers with a nice and easy life at a high living standard. This however is temporary as there is no food shortage just yet.

    As long as EU exists and Britain is part of the EU there is no such thing as a food security problem. There of course is a "French Farmer thinks that rest of EU is obligied to feed them" problem, but it will end up being solved in a jiffie if we no longer have enough food to eat.

    As far as Africa they will be able to feed themselves with ease as well if they stop using the aid (direct or indirect in the form of St Bob Geldof loan waivers) on murdering each other and building palaces for whoever happens to be filling in for the king job spec on that day.

  32. Rande Knight

    How about just reducing the population a bit?

    If there's no more food, then one way or another the population is going to decrease. Personally I'd rather that it was just not having children rather than messy wars.

  33. shay mclachlan

    Does anyone know

    Does anyone know where I can buy a copy of the Gordon Brown Diet Plan?

    Mines the strides with the ration book in the back pocket.

  34. Anonymous Coward
    Paris Hilton

    Problem solved

    "By using 60 per cent of food thrown away by households, enough energy could be generated to provide power for all the homes in Glasgow and Edinburgh."

    Given that Scotland is now the world leader in obesity this problem can be solved quite easily: put the Jocks on a diet and the rest of the UK will be able to eat. That is, of course, assuming the rest of want to live on deep-fried Mars bars and Irn-Bru.

    http://www.scotland.gov.uk/Topics/Statistics/Browse/Health/TrendObesity

    I was going to use the heart icon but Paris knows what Glasgow doesn't about staying slim.

  35. fred
    Paris Hilton

    allotments

    I often look at what people buy when I go to the supermarket. Usually, its pre-cooked meals, sweets, crisps and other crap. Instead of buying veggies and meat and making a meal, they economise by buying cheaper pre-cooked crap, which is worse for them, and heat this up. Its cheaper and better for them to actually cook a good meal where the ingredients can still be bought for a reasonable price especially when one buys the 2for1 offers.

    The other option is to use the garden for what it was intended for. A vegterible patch! Veg is easy to grow and almost free. You can use the bathwater to water it. Run a hosepipe up to the bath, and stand with it next to the veggie plot. Then suck on the tube until you hear the gurggeling noise (or get a mouthful of water) and then water the veggie plot.

    Paris' patch watering? (^pat^snat)

  36. Matt Bryant Silver badge
    Flame

    I will look at reducing food wastage....

    .... when Broon and his pitiful crew stop wasting oxygen.

  37. Anonymous Coward
    Paris Hilton

    Chimney goat

    "By using 60 per cent of food thrown away by households, enough energy could be generated to provide power for all the homes in Glasgow and Edinburgh"

    But I don't want to provide power for the homes in Glasgow and Edinburgh. They can generate their own power by burning deep-fried Mars bars, which are popular in Scotland. They have enough food as it is. This is just another plot by Gordon Brown to divert the natural resources of England to his fellow countrymen.

  38. Steven Jones

    @Dave

    The UK hasn't produced enough food to feed itself since the Industrial Revolution really took flight. Before the WW II UK production was only about 35% of the country's requirements and agriculture was in real trouble - one of the reasons that the U-boat blocade was so very serious. By the end of WW II UK production was enough for about 80% of the country's requirements, and it remained that way for a couple of decades afterwards but has been sliding since. Partly it's changes in tastes (food items that won't grow in the UK, more out-of-season stuff). Partly it's an increase in population and a decline in the agricultural sector. If prices go up, then production in the UK will increase. However, the population density in the UK is high (especially in England). Much of the land that is not heavily populated is not suitable for much more than sheep. Not all the UK is that fertile although it's well watered and there's always fertilsers; if you can get the oil to make them of course...

    Then there is the obvious truism in the article - it's energy supplies that guarantee food security in the EU. Certainly the EU is more than capable of feeding itself. But energy is the basis of it all and inevitably, as the continent becomes more dependent on some fairly unpleasant regimes like that in Russia, then life will become more uncertain.

  39. Anonymous Coward
    Thumb Down

    Re: Peaked my interest

    "Peak Oil edges into the mainstream conciousness bit by bit."

    Can I invoke Godwin's Law here? Pretty please?

    Show me figures that back this up and there's a small chance I'll believe you, until then it's just more eco-scaremongering.

  40. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    @Mark

    >Pre 1920 (If I recall correctly) america produced 3200 calories of

    >food for each calorie of oil.

    >Now it's 1 to 1.

    Maybe but they've got three times the population and the same landmass now haven't they?

    Agriculture and living in general wasn't pleasant in 1920, lots of the work we currently use machines for was done by hand on extremely low incomes. The consequences were a short life span and poverty in old age when peoples labour reduced in value. They compensated for that by having lots of children.

    >Nomen Publicus

    >Once upon a time, this country could feed itself.

    Yes, but that was pre 1850, do you want to live like that?

    Besides, what food would a self sufficient Britain eat?

    Do you want to live on turnips 4 months of the year?

  41. Anonymous Coward
    Stop

    Once its mine its mine

    Once I have bought my food my contribution to the worlds economy is over and it is mine to do with what I wish. If I choose to throw all of it away that is up to me. No one else - least of all Loser Brown - has any right to tell me what to do with it. This applies to any commodity, that's how the world works. What next, stop wasting that valuable gold on frivolous jewellery? Stop using that precious steel on knives to stab each other with? Stop breathing that valuable oxygen and producing all that nasty CO2?

  42. Mark
    Dead Vulture

    Population is the real issue

    "By 2050 we will need food for a world population that is wealthier and several billion larger... "

    Until people stop accepting this statement as an inevitable fact we're screwed. We need to start persuading people to stop breeding so much and until that happens the planet and the human race are destined for disaster.

    In the absence of a multi-billion killing world war or epidemic of course.

  43. Anonymous Coward
    Thumb Up

    The energy-efficient way to make food last longer:

    Switch off the central heating -- it causes your potatoes to sprout and you cannae keep tatties in the fridge.

  44. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    60KWh a day?

    One of the fundamental energy figures from this article is that the average UK houshold uses 60 kwh a day, that's 2.5Kw an hour! At a rate of say 13.5 pence per unit that's almost £3000 per year in electricity.

    I fail to to believe this can be correct, our houshold uses less than one tenth of that figure!

  45. Charley

    Required Title

    "The only way to get the Edinburgh+Glasgow scale of energy savings and carbon benefits hinted at by the Cabinet Office would be to reduce food demand in the UK by 20 per cent" - Surely not?

    How about a small nuke in the centre of each of these cities, and perhaps one or two others,

    Though this would, of course, have a side benefit of reducing demand for food as well.

  46. Steve Williams

    Thank you for today's political editorial...

    ...and accompanying comments. Although this doubtless adds to the Register site traffic and boosts your advertising revenue, it's not what I come here for.

    I feel you are diluting your technical image and the constant flow of partisan articles are damaging your credibility. The ratio of signal to noise here has taken a distinct turn for the worse in the last few months. Hopefully it's only a summer phenomenon.

  47. goggyturk
    Thumb Up

    Actually it's TROOSERS

    ..as anyone who's heard the song Donald whaur's yer troosers can testify. Also, I'm very impressed by the use of the word 'crivens' (usually followed by 'jings' or 'help ma boab'), but it usually has two v's - crivvens. Hopefully we can see this for the next article on First Citizen Broon?

    As for food shortages, I'll believe it when the 21st century equivalent of the U-boat menace appears, probably a plague of mutant whales exposed to French nuclear tests that develop a taste for human blood, sent by Gaia as a punishment for our sins. But then our leaders might think they have a real excuse for rationing and ID cards, so that's not so good.

  48. Adrian Jooste
    Black Helicopters

    RE: How about just reducing the population a bit?

    I like your thinking but we all know governments won't make any money out of people not popping out juniors. Now a war on the other hand... That'll reduce population AND make the weapons manufacturers a lot of dough (who all happen to be in the back pockets of the politicians). Everybody (who survives) wins!

  49. Mike Crawshaw
    Happy

    @ Fred

    "I often look at what people buy when I go to the supermarket."

    I do this too. It depresses me just how many have the Daily Wail in their basket...

    All the comments about "real food" - yep. We (ok, the gf does everything apart from the digging and heavy lifting...) grow a lot of veg, and we (ok, yes, she does it...) cook "proper" food, which doesn't involve processed tasteless yuk full of more yuk, where the label reads like a laboratory inventory. Healthier, tastes better. Which means I never leave any, so nothing gets wasted. Being green is nice for bonus points, but the taste / health side is the prime motivator. (NOTE: stuff that's labelled "ORGANIC!!111!!!" is often no better than the stuff that isn't, aside from for the shop profits)

    So Gordon would be proud of me. Which makes me feel all warm and fuzzy inside.

  50. Alan Fisher
    Boffin

    Intreresting points

    It's just a shame the usual Gordon Brown Marmite Effect (GBME) has dominated the comments again.....I'm personally nuetral to Gordon though hate that "yeast extract"y stuff ...urrrgh! Maybe we should live on fungus like that though, nutricious, easy and cost effective to grow.....unpalitable to many, thus possibly halving obesity problems....it has vitamins too, anything which tastes that bad must, surely? There, problem solved, "let them eat generic gungy-fungi spreadables!" says Gordon! he should give me a job i think ;)

    But to be serious, the amount of food the average Brit wastes is frightening, just go to a restaurant and see half full plates left because eyes tend to oft be bigger than bellies or people want to be seen to be able to afford large amounts etc.....me and the lady wife waste very very little as we do a lot of home cooking (I work a 40 hour+ week and cycle 20+ miles a day too so no excuses) and use up any left over veggies and meat we have around....buy what you need and not feed the greed, it's easy really.....

    the waste issue is a serious one and one for which we are all responsible, can't blame the incumbrant government for that one chaps...

  51. Colin Jackson

    Bah.

    I found the BBC six o'clock news coverage of this issue hilariously breathless and credulous. Brown's fear-mongering was swallowed wholly uncritically and regurgitated as shock-horror sensationalism. Both Brown and the BBC have this much in common - they both like to moralise. Brown should keep his nose out of my private life and get on with running the country. I can manage my own food budget thank you, until and unless he re-introduces ration cards. Which wouldn't surprise me. Somebody should eat the fuckwit. Great article, btw.

  52. James
    Stop

    @Peter Dawe

    Are you a Daily Mail reader?

    Maybe not, just something about that post gave me an inkling...

  53. Robin Bradshaw
    Coat

    soylent green

    Its the only viable option I tell you

  54. Tim Elphick
    Go

    Food Security

    I'll east most things, many of them cold, but I really don't like apples from the fridge.

    Also, I can't help feeling like every time I come across and article with some sort of environmental focus, the author seems to be working to prove the fruitlessness of any efforts suggested therein. I understand the concept of arguments and a balanced view, but perhaps Tesco is right after all and every little really does help.

    Sorry, but I find all the faffing everybody does these days very frustrating. These days! I'm 27! Oh, Lordy.

  55. Anonymous Coward
    Coat

    @Nomen Publicus

    When, exactly, did the UK last feed itself ? Go to the back of the class.

    3% is 3% and not to be sniffed at. Lewis again shows he can't see a bargain when he sees one. I imagine he gets all hot and excited when he sees the word FREE though.

    <-- yep, its the Nomex Winter Jacket, excellent for those balmy July days.

  56. Anonymous Coward
    Thumb Down

    Put your own house in order

    Tell you what Gordon, you sort out the millions, if not billions, of pounds your cack-handed, micro-managing, nannying, patronising, bullying, money-burning, corrupt government wastes and I'll try not to throw away the odd ready meal that went past its sell-by date and looked a bit manky?

    Deal? Cos otherwise you can sod off.

  57. Iain
    Pirate

    War on Laden Bin, possibly?

    I thought this was going to be story about terrorists injecting deadly diseases into food stocks destined for GB. I was obviously mistaken. Maybe I should sell the possibility to the Mail (calling myself an 'informed source close to MI5').

  58. Angus Wood
    Joke

    @Hypocracy

    "Hypocracy" ? Would that be rule by hippos?

    Longing for a "Pedants' Corner" icon...

  59. Anonymous Coward
    Stop

    They know we've rumbled it.

    We have pretty much rumbled the security issues (Give the terror message, hike taxes, remove liberties)

    Now we're rumbling the green issues (Give the green message, hike taxes, remove opportunties)

    Now they have a food issue that they're preaching about.

    What's next, a lack of oxygen?

    Brown & co, we the people of the UK have had enough of useless claptrap. It's time you left Westminster and joined the ranks of the useless and unemployable!

  60. Alan Fisher
    Linux

    To perfiddy with what the Government says

    we've still got a responsibility ourselves......we can't decry what the government says and then do nothing until they come up with a decent idea.....if they can't give us answers we must find more.....

    look at the fuel 'crisis' ...governments of the US and UK do jack squat about it and insist grubbing up the Antarctic and Amazon rainforests is the plan....but car companies are developing non fossil fuel vehicles and quiet, studious science types are also developing alternatives. We have to do it ourselves and force the old law of supply and demand through......the governments will listen if the people act en-masse.....if demand for fossil fuels dries up, they'll change their tune sharpish. There are too many vested interests in oil and gas for it to be put aside like that, but if people stop using it.....

    penguin coz they don't like oil platforms

  61. ben

    Liberate the food.

    Most families I know can't afford waste and recycle as much as they can in the current overpriced sloppy council collection system. As for wastage the government actively support supermarkets business models which is a combination of cheap and cheerful plastic wrapped crap and if not bought its then thrown out. If the government wan't to change things tax the supermarkets for every ton wasted or not recycled or not given to homeless who need the food. Then we might be able to start recycling properly. Its so completely half assed at the moment.

    I'm going back to my tesco's dumpster now.

    http://lifeandhealth.guardian.co.uk/food/story/0,,2149304,00.html

  62. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Wrong.

    Brown is spot-on. By reducing food demand, by eliminating unnecessary food waste, one reduces the overall equilibrium price of food - at a sensitive point along its supply curve which we're experiencing now.

    Energy for machines, though intertwined as an issue, is at base not as important as eating. It's easier to make your economy work around energy scarcity, than it is around food scarcity. Pint at the 'local', anyone?

    Food security is going to be a key phrase when allocation of resources for agriculture etc are presided over by our governments. Note the 'food NATO' rightly being proposed by Gordon at the G8.

  63. Galaxy Bob
    Thumb Down

    Oor Wullie

    Brown and his stooges are finished, he knows it, everyone knows it, so he's just clutching at straws. It's funny how the high price of oil is suddenly the catch all for all that is wrong with the world. Brown claims that he cannot do anything about it, so we just need to put up and shut up. Well, he might not be able to directly dictate the price of a barrel of crude oil, but he can reduce VAT and other taxes on fuel at the pump. Perhaps we need another war to resolve the issue. We could invade China to liberate the paddy fields, but we'd probably get our arses kicked, so let's go for someone smaller like Thailand. The UK is a bursting point. Soon we will be unable to sustain the population. Perhaps a cull of everyone over 40. What's the movie where people of a certain age are killed? Is it Solent Green?

  64. Jerry
    Black Helicopters

    What goes around comes around

    I have to give it to them.

    Instead of recycling the traditional 'food shortages looming' - 'mass starvation on the way' they have managed to load global climate change into the mantra.

    Ever since I was knee-high to a mastodon I've heard the never ending story of how things were going to get bad in a hurry.

    From the 'one chinese per square unit' in 'choose your short term value in years' to the 'critical shortage of commodity X' that will cause global calamity in 'choose your short term value in years' - My assessment is: it's all a load of bollocks.

    None of the doomsayers have been right on any time scale. The probability of them being right diminishes each and every time they get it wrong (There is a whole raft of mathematical and statistical theory about this)

    May I strongly recommend "Memoirs of Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds by Mackay" - especially the "Popular follies of great cities " Read it at http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/24518

  65. Anonymous Coward
    Coat

    Idiots

    "We cannot deal with higher food prices in the UK in isolation from higher prices around the world," added the PM."

    This very same govenment has been pushing 'Globalisation' for years and years. How come this wasn't obvious as a direct knock-on effect - even I could see it coming.

    <gets coat whilst leaving doomed country>

  66. spiny norman
    Black Helicopters

    This is what they want.

    A while ago there was a piece on food waste on Today on Radio 4. They had some academic from the University of Nowhere and a woman who remembered WWII when wasting food was illegal apparently. Both got terribly excited as she recalled a woman in her street who was fined for throwing bread crusts away. This time round it'll probably be a jail term.

  67. Luther Blissett

    Rant of the Week

    The quality of ranting by admirers of the Vulture seems to have taken a cold dip. An opportunity for the Vulture to roll out and air the Pythons' Torremolinos/Watneys red barrel sketch...?

  68. shay mclachlan

    @Thank you for today's political editorial

    Er .......El Reg does what pretty much what it says on the tin - 'bites the hand that feeds IT'.

    A purely technical journal is a tribal comfort zone. IT does not exist in a vacuum & personally I'd rather have a 'Reg' that does relate to the real world, especially on significant issues that may affect our lives. I dont have to (and dont) agree with all the positions it takes but I'd rather it provoked than that it churned out endless tech pap without comment.

  69. Anonymous Coward
    Boffin

    @AC's advocating globilisation as the problem

    The UK has never fed itself in your lifetime. I don't care if you are an octogenarian sucking your gums through your badly fitting dentures, muttering about the way the worlds gone to pot since you last looked round (Woohooo lookit them new fanangled motor ve-hicles).

    Globilisation has put cheap food on your plate, whilst subsidies have kept our farmers with their crap productivity in business. We have been able to preserve (as in vinegar) the country way of life, luxuries like set aside and green spaces. Of which we still have a fair bit outside of the SE.

    So, whats your problem with globilisation and how it relates to food in the UK ? You are on the easy living side of the fence, and are unlikely to miss even one ready meal/Maccy D's, though maybe you should.

    "When I give food to the poor, they call me saint. When I ask why the poor have no food, they call me a communist". Hélder Pessoa Câmara

    "Only the poor starve" Karl Marxs

  70. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Re: Oor Wullie

    "Perhaps a cull of everyone over 40. What's the movie where people of a certain age are killed? Is it Solent Green?"

    Logan's Run - life ended at 30.

    Were it not for the fact that even dying costs a friggin' fortune in this godforsaken dungheap of a country it would almost be an attractive proposition.

  71. David Robinson

    Pigswill

    From way back we fed waste food to pigs and got a good return. Pigswill was always boiled. Then, the government (naturally to save fuel) lowered the temperature that needed to be used and lo and behold we had foot and mouth that cost milions of pounds more than the fuel that would have killed it. Typical government thinking, but the trouble they caused means that we longer use pigswill, so it goes into landfill.

    Bio fuel is no new thing either. 100-120 years ago one third of the country's agriculture was devoted to it. Then the horses were superceded.

  72. Alfazed
    Happy

    What a lot of rot

    It's a long time since I worked in food retailing but the assessment back then was that, of all food passing through the production cycle and on to the consumer, about one third the whole was wasted at various stages of the process, ie; harvesting, transportation, packaging, transportation and storage. This waste occurs long before goes into the end consumer's bin.

    I doubt very much that things have changed in this process besides the introduction of Information Systems providing business advantage, like "Just in Time Deliveries". Which basically means that the end consumer now receives the food products just before they expire. The "holder" has longer to play with their food - when they feel it to be fiscally expedient, before passing it on at the "right time" to receive the "business advantage opportunities" that these systems bring.

    So modern European and American shoppers must scoff as much as possible in the short time available, before the grub is fit for the bin only. Err sorry compost heap.

    If companies like T***o weren't so cynical about their customers and single minded about their bottom line, we might have a chance to change the trend. However, the trend is towards customers soaking up marketing devices like, four cans and some cardboard in exchange for the traditional bottle of Pimms. Hic !

    Who's wasted now ?

  73. Mike

    Stupid, stupid people (and I include myself in this)

    3% energy saving is a good thing, not trivial nor to be ignored.

    We demand too much food because we consume too much food, we're overweight and have the wrong balance of foods in our diets, cut down on consumption and the problem just vanishes.

    Soylent green is not a solution either, do you know how much energy goes in to create the raw product? it's worse than cattle.

    Personally (and just to make people irate) I blame the farmers, they want to suck the life out of the ground to make the maximum profit, get huge subsidies (sometimes for non existant land), pump huge quantities of chemicals into the food chain, kill foxes, badgers, rabbits or anything else that might pose a natural risk to their unnatural steriod filled mutant livestock. Oh, and btw, I love some farmers (more than I want to disclose!) organic, high quality in lower quantities for a lower consuming society is the way forward, not high yeild poor quality for the GM unaware overconsumers.

    Brown has it half right, throwing away the amount of food we do is wrong, but attempting to consume that much in the first place is the actual problem.

  74. Christopher Hogan

    Why Glasgow & Edinburgh?

    Why not Leeds & Mancester?

    Why always F**king Scotland - let them starve, Gollum Brown & his ilk have bled the English for too long.

  75. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Lewis - did I write this or do we just agree 100%

    ... in fact I read it again and agreed even more - which makes as much sense as Nob Broon ever did.

    James - Fife (my home kingdom) has got some of the finest most productive arable land in the entire world mate, not just in the UK.

    MahatmaCoat - I believe Scotland has seen the biggest increase in obesity, but that the US still holds the record for body fat w/w per head of the population by some considerable margin (or is that margerine).

    Ashley Pomeroy - Woah there mate... When the England-based government stops pulling *NORTH* North Sea oil and West *Irish/Welsh* sea oil for boosting its Summer cash flow (you can keep your flaming gas) and stops benefitting from Scottish and Welsh HydroElectric... THEN and only then can you moan about Scotland benefitting from anything English. Oh, and that Nobend Broon has NO fellow countrymen... we rejoiced that the stupid fat tw@ went South to sponge off you - although I must admit now to a little twang of guilt.

    Simon Ward - "peak oil" as a "mental construct" is indeed seeping into the consciousnes of the general public. The *validity* of the construct is not the issue, merely the fact that the general population are now increasingly thinking in those terms - if you say something often enough, people will believe you. Gordon Brown, for example, is a stupid fat tw@.

    Charley - nice idea - but for half the number of devices and 4 times the effectiveness, how about we drop one inside the M25? There's one particular useless lump of lard that I have in mind.

    GalaxyBob - Logan's Run mate ;o) There was also a really good episode of StarTrek TNG where they found a planet that had a similar approach at an older age.

    .

    And finally, my 2p worth... I think El-Reg commentators, myself included, should stop all this berating of the government and especially of Gordon Brown. He is not an environmentalist, or a scientist, or a farmer, or IT literate. In fact his only real skill and discernable quality is his insane drive for power and his steadfast resolve to ignore everything and everyone that stands in his way. it must be terrible to be such a big fat useless tw@. Fortunately he has his army of liars, backstabbers and cheats to help keep him in the lifestyle to which he has become accustomed during a decade raping the financial reserves of the country. So please, readers, lay off the sponging, manipulative, misinformed, bully and let him get on with the important job of screwing us all out of every last form of wealth that we have ever known.

  76. Alan Fisher
    Black Helicopters

    @AC

    Well said mate; this is no longer about your Politics (I voted Broon's predecessor in...gnrgh!), or your nationality (British is fine, thank you) or your general leanings....not time to take pot shots at your least favourite section of society but to focus on the REAL problem, and that is this government, taking away people's rights faster than we can see it, or people can report it.

    people of all stripes and so forths should stand together on this

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