Stakeholder Perceptions of Policy Tools in Support of Sustainable Food Consumption in Europe: Policy Implications
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Food and Sustainable Consumption and Production Patterns
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Semi-Structured Interviews
2.2. Participants
2.3. Analysis
3. Findings
3.1. Integrate Policies on Environmental Sustainability for More Effective Food System Management
Consumers will not push for it. So why would any company change a running system when the willingness to pay and the ability to pay is not supported by the customers’ demand on a broad scale?(P19-UK)
Real change can only be generated by the EU. Until certain management practices are allowed, it is difficult to behave more sustainably because everyone else can be more economically competitive.(P23-IT)
Implement sustainability by imposing strict rules where products have to comply with the law. If not, then we might lose democratic stability in our countries. Law is the only way to put all in the same position bound by law. That would account for retailers, producers and consumers in the same way.(P19-UK)
This is a mandatory step that companies will undergo in the long run. If you want to speed up the transition you can do it in a coercive or a proactive way. In my opinion, it is better to encourage than to mandate.(P22-IT)
3.2. Utilize Market Incentives in Support of Sustainable Food Consumption
There was this article in the paper some 2–3 years ago with the title ‘cheap food is an expensive deception’ and that is exactly what it is; an expensive deception.(P12-IS)
We are not confident that consumers can fully appreciate and understand information on value chain price distribution.(P26-IT)
There are so many different labels, instead of having one label where you’d know yes this here is PLA [bioplastic material] and you can distinguish it from the [plastic materials]. […] So, you know, a more integrated approach [to labels].(P8-IS)
Large-scale retailers have started to produce their own organic brands (private labels), which means that there is an ever-increasing and real interest of the food distribution system in organic products.(P26-IT)
3.3. Increase Transparency and Education on FVCs and Invest in Food Innovation
People want to reconnect with their food (apples grow on trees), to understand where their food comes from. They want to recognize the products they eat.(P24-FR)
Everything that unveils [this process] and shows how it really is [is a positive development] because people are not stupid and they want to know. But the industry has sort of [...] thrown a veil over it and [the product] just arrives ready at the store for you.(P15-IS)
As a manufacturer, you must pay attention to the increasing demands for traceability of ingredients and food safety, and ensure a very strong sustainable supply chain.(P21-UK)
Today, direct feedback and the ability to speak with customers immediately is an important part of the information chain. This increases the reaction pressure on the manufacturing companies.(P21-UK)
3.4. Promote Multi-Stakeholder Approaches and Address Power Asymmetries
Retailers often increase their sustainability commitment. Thus they often ask their suppliers to give a “present picture” of their sustainability agenda, and a short to medium-term forecast of the future for the sustainability management issues (such as plastic use in the products). Thus retailers can have a positive impact (and be part of the “solution”) on the sustainability practices of the whole food system.(P23-IT)
If you would map it out, most production companies in the world are under the ownership of just a few companies. [Just look at] how these companies have behaved in the past with regards to child slavery, how they treat their employees, their environmental policy and [yet] those are the companies that are most eager to sign pretty papers.(P4-IS)
Bacon has never been as popular in Iceland; bacon sales increased so much that Iceland had to import pork bellies in order to meet the demand. So it’s [both] this ketogenic [diet fad] and the tourism industry […] they all want bacon for breakfast.(P3-IS)
We need to build food policy councils which frame the food policy in Europe in the national and local levels. This may help break the silos and bring all stakeholders together, including farmers, producers, retailers, employers, consumers, to talk and increase transparency in food systems in Europe. And this would also enable capturing cultural and local differences.(P29-EU)
The biggest icon in the world today is a 16-year-old girl which is amazing. And the scared old men do all they can to bring her down. And all she is saying is ‘read and listen to the scientists’.(P13-IS)
[Radical discourse] pushes the cart in the right direction.(P16-IS)
Generally speaking, agricultural supply chains adopt a passive posture with regard to changes in consumer behaviour, meaning that they tell themselves that they will adapt once demand has changed. But at the same time, there are things to anticipate because we can’t adapt food production overnight [...]. Our goal is to get them to be more proactive about changes by showing that the demand is already there.(P40-FR)
3.5. Local-Level Solutions Supporting Seasonal and Regional Products and a Circular Economy Framework
We see a growing awareness of regional and national product demands as well as the trend towards old types of fruits and vegetables. But it is a very slow and small movement that is fighting its way up the social media. If I look at the supermarkets, then the shelf meters have moved rather to convenient food and serve the growing amount of single households.(P20-UK)
People who value freshness are entering the weekly farmer’s market, which is increasingly enjoying new popularity. But, […] it is a very, very small part of the entire population. Thus, these people are irrelevant for the majority of the food industry.(P20-UK)
The closer the relationship between producer and consumer, the stronger and more resilient the whole food chain.(P24-IT)
It is a structural problem, as most farms and manufacturers are conventional producing companies. The conversion would cost a lot of time and money, and we would not have guarantees that the market or the customers will pay for it.(P20-UK)
There is chicken and chicken. Danish chicken is not in the local environment. But what is more local: to import the chicken or to buy the chicken feed (because that’s imported)? […] You need 2 kg of feed to produce 1 kg of meat. Which is more environmentally-friendly? Clearly the imported meat because the feed for that chicken is close to the chicken factory.(P4-IS)
Are we looking at the […] chain that is…just now - our lifespan - or are we looking at the value chain in terms of the future? And which is more important? Is the world ending? Is it not ending? And where are we at in this picture? And which are our interests?(P10-IS)
What is most noticeable now [in food product exhibitions] is the focus on the future […] and [there is awareness that] when considering current agricultural practices there will not be enough land, water etc. to continue on the same path.(P18-IS)
Food loss is a “hot potato” nobody wants to own it but it is present. […]. In order to succeed in this then someone has to own it. It is best that the one who has it on their table should also be the one who owns it. You don’t tidy up your own garden by throwing everything over to your neighbours’ just because he is taking the garbage anyway.(P4-IS)
4. Discussion and Recommendations
Circular economy regarding the food system implies reducing the amount of waste generated in the food system, re-use of food, utilization of by-products and food waste, nutrient recycling, and changes in diet toward more diverse and more efficient food patterns (p. 2).
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
No. | Organization/Company Type | Interviewee’s Role | Pseudonym | Context |
---|---|---|---|---|
#1 | Business association | Expert | P1 | IS |
#2 | Research organisation | Research Analyst | P2 | IS |
#3 | Business association | Marketing and Administrator | P3 | IS |
#4 | Wholesaler | CEO | P4 | IS |
#5 | NGO | CEO | P5 | IS |
#6 | Policy-maker | CEO | P6 | IS |
#7 | Wholesaler | Quality Manager | P7 | IS |
#8 | Producer (Drinks) | CSR Manager | P8 | IS |
#9 | Marketing | Project Managers | P9 & P10 | IS |
#10 | Academic institution | Expert | P11 | IS |
#11 | NGO | Chairman | P12 | IS |
#12 | NGO | Chairman | P13 | IS |
#13 | Producer (Meat) | Product Development Manager | P14 | IS |
#14 | Entrepreneur | CEO | P15 | IS |
#15 | Producer (Dairy) | Product Development Manager | P16 | IS |
#16 | Retailer | Marketing Manager and Purchasing Manager | P17 & P18 | IS |
#17 | Producer (Dairy) | Head of Strategy | P19 | UK |
#18 | Producer (Frozen foods) | Head of Crop Cultivation | P20 | UK |
#19 | Manufacturer (Milling equipment) | CEO | P21 | UK |
#20 | Agricultural association | Director | P22 | IT |
#21 | Producer/Processor (Dairy) | Company Associate | P23 | IT |
#22 | Network/Association | Vice Director | P24 | IT |
#23 | Producer (Dairy) | Marketing Director | P25 | IT |
#24 | Processor Association | President | P26 | IT |
#25 | Research Institute | Manager | P27 | IT |
#26 | NGO | Global Campaign Strategist | P28 | EU |
#27 | EU organisation | Member | P29 | EU |
#28 | Academic institution | Researcher | P30 | EU |
#29 | Public agency | Project Manager | P31 | FR |
#30 | Retailer | Market Manager for Fruits and Vegetables | P32 | FR |
#31 | Research organisation | Director of Prospective and Consumption Division | P33 | FR |
#32 | Producer | Health and Diet Advocacy Director | P34 | FR |
#33 | Start-up | Co-founder | P35 | FR |
#34 | Public agency | Head of the Evaluation, Foresight & Transversal Analysis | P36 | FR |
#35 | Consultancy | Associate Director | P37 | FR |
#36 | Research organisation | Researcher in Nutrition | P38 | FR |
#37 | Retail | Director | P39 | FR |
#38 | NGO | Food and Agriculture Programme Expert | P40 | FR |
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Policy Tools | Proposed Solutions by Stakeholders |
---|---|
Direct activity regulation | EU-level mandatory regulations imposed on all for a level playing field (IT, UK) Reduce fertilizer and pesticide use (IT, UK) |
Less Commonly Identified | |
Ban production of certain unsustainable products (EU) Enforce minimum requirements for Extended Producer Responsibility (EU) Make product reformulation for nutritional benefits mandatory (FR) Reduce air transport of food (FR) Ban disposable plastics (IT) Ban the landfilling of biodegradable waste to reduce food loss/waste (IS) Improve food inspection to ensure food safety and quality (IS) Abolish the right for retailers to return expired food (IS) Implement fixed production quotas (UK) Enforce high quality standards (UK) |
Policy Tools | Proposed Solutions by Stakeholders |
---|---|
Market-based tools | Public and green procurement (FR, IS, EU) Certification schemes and ecolabels (FR, IS, IT) |
Less Commonly Identified | |
Taxation to encourage sustainable production and consumption (IS, EU) Price guarantees (IT, UK) Increase subsidies for organic farmers (FR) Decrease the price of electricity for greenhouse vegetable growers (IS) Reduce subsidies for meat production (IS) |
Policy Tools | Proposed Solutions by Stakeholders |
---|---|
Knowledge-related tools | Consumer education regarding food supply chains (IS, IT, UK, EU) Increase transparency (through e.g., traceability) (FR, IT, IS, EU) Invest in food R&D (FR, IS, IT) |
Less Commonly Identified | |
Social marketing (connect health to sustainability) (IT, EU) Training of culinary professionals (e.g., Chefs) to incorporate sustainability concerns (IS, EU) Behavioural interventions (e.g., nudging) (EU) Improve science communication about nutrition, health and sustainability (IS) |
Policy Tools | Proposed Solutions by Stakeholders |
---|---|
Governance tools | Leverage the power of large retailers (FR, IS, IT, UK) Civil society’s role in governance (FR, IS, EU) |
Less Commonly Identified | |
Cooperative models (IT, EU) Public-Private Partnerships (PPPs) for sustainable solutions (IS, UK) Pay attention to cultural differences when formulating food policy (UK, EU) FVC actors’ collaboration on sustainability initiatives/break silos (EU) Food policy councils to improve stakeholder engagement and participation (EU) Enable degrowth and post-growth policies (EU) Integrate food policy considerations with urban planning (FR) Strengthen consumers’ association with political and financial support (IS) Advance a cross-sectoral approach to food policy (IS) Academia’s role as an independent facilitator among different FVC actors (IT) Strengthen public participation (e.g., through citizen panels) (UK) |
Policy Tools | Proposed Solutions by Stakeholders |
---|---|
Strategic tools | Support seasonal production (FR, IS, UK, EU) Support regional/local production (FR, UK, EU) Emphasize local-level solutions (IT, UK, EU) Implement circular economy policies (FR, IS, IT) Reduce animal production (FR, IS, UK) |
Less Commonly Identified | |
Provide clear quality guidelines (IS, UK) Promote the need for long-term thinking in business (IS, UK) Align national/regional policy with global issues (FR) Utilize a system-perspective on food production (IS) Governments must agree on common international sustainability goals (UK) |
Policy Tool | Policy Topic | Stakeholder Group | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Government | FVC Actors | Civil Society | ||
Direct activity regulation | Policy integration | Integrate health and nutrition goals with sustainability goals; Address policy contradictions with sustainability goals and integrate agri-food policies with environmental sustainability targets (e.g., climate neutrality); Formulate policies that capitalize on cross-sectoral synergies | Device strategies that promote long-term perspectives in food production and consumption; Support a shift of production to more sustainable patterns (e.g., reduce meat production) | Identify policy gaps and inconsistencies to more effectively achieve policy integration for sustainability; Advocate systemic solutions alongside changing lifestyles |
Market-based tools | Market incentives | Formulate labelling/certification policy based on evidence of the limitations of private sector voluntary initiatives; Monitor compliance and effectiveness of labels in achieving sustainability goals; Align public procurement policies with sustainability objectives | In the absence of a mandatory label, use only well-established and reputable third-party accredited labelling schemes; Avoid greenwashing | Inform consumers about reputable labelling schemes |
Knowledge-related tools | Transparency and education | True cost pricing including social costs; Food education in schools; Utilize behavioural insights; Transparency about policy trade-offs; Shape the food environment to promote sustainable diets and support private sector initiatives to this effect | Release annual sustainability reports with appropriate metrics that take planetary boundaries into account; Adopt technologies that increase the transparency of FVCs; Shape the food environment to promote sustainable diets | Increase consumer literacy on complexity of food consumption; Educate on the sustainability and health gains of sustainable diets |
Food innovation | Invest in food innovation that advances sustainability goals; Develop frameworks for assessing innovation based on sustainability criteria and metrics | Invest in food innovation that advances sustainability goals | Monitor and educate about the effectiveness of specific food innovations on sustainability goals | |
Governance tools | Power asymmetries and influence | Target policies towards FVC actors with the power to change the system; Support consumer groups; Identify and engage broad scope of stakeholders | Recognize the role and power each FVC actor has to transform the food system; Participate in multistakeholder initiatives and form strategic alliances with stakeholders to pursue common goals | Target pressure on FVC actors and governmental bodies with the most power to implement transformative policies; Educate about the limited role of consumers and the need for systemic change |
Strategic tools | Local vs. global FVCs | Formulate policies that override false dichotomies among local and global FVCs | Identify and address trade-offs and synergies in FVC logistics | Promote policies that optimize sustainability outcomes |
New business models: circular economy | Monitor environmental performance with appropriate indicators and frameworks | Monitor environmental performance with appropriate indicators and frameworks | Scrutinize circular economy policies and evaluate them on the basis of sustainability outcomes; Inform consumers about the effectiveness of specific circular economy policies |
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Saviolidis, N.M.; Olafsdottir, G.; Nicolau, M.; Samoggia, A.; Huber, E.; Brimont, L.; Gorton, M.; von Berlepsch, D.; Sigurdardottir, H.; Del Prete, M.; et al. Stakeholder Perceptions of Policy Tools in Support of Sustainable Food Consumption in Europe: Policy Implications. Sustainability 2020, 12, 7161. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12177161
Saviolidis NM, Olafsdottir G, Nicolau M, Samoggia A, Huber E, Brimont L, Gorton M, von Berlepsch D, Sigurdardottir H, Del Prete M, et al. Stakeholder Perceptions of Policy Tools in Support of Sustainable Food Consumption in Europe: Policy Implications. Sustainability. 2020; 12(17):7161. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12177161
Chicago/Turabian StyleSaviolidis, Nína M., Gudrun Olafsdottir, Mariana Nicolau, Antonella Samoggia, Elise Huber, Laura Brimont, Matthew Gorton, David von Berlepsch, Hildigunnur Sigurdardottir, Margherita Del Prete, and et al. 2020. "Stakeholder Perceptions of Policy Tools in Support of Sustainable Food Consumption in Europe: Policy Implications" Sustainability 12, no. 17: 7161. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12177161
APA StyleSaviolidis, N. M., Olafsdottir, G., Nicolau, M., Samoggia, A., Huber, E., Brimont, L., Gorton, M., von Berlepsch, D., Sigurdardottir, H., Del Prete, M., Fedato, C., Aubert, P.-M., & Bogason, S. G. (2020). Stakeholder Perceptions of Policy Tools in Support of Sustainable Food Consumption in Europe: Policy Implications. Sustainability, 12(17), 7161. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12177161