Difference between revisions of "Food and Drink Federation"

From Powerbase
Jump to: navigation, search
(Officers)
m (Principals)
 
(38 intermediate revisions by 9 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
The Food and Drink Federation is a lobby group in the UK for the food and drink industries. It 'promotes the industry's views and works to build consumer confidence in the food chain as a whole.' http://www.fdf.org.uk/.
+
{{Template:Foodspin badge}}
 +
 
 +
The '''Food and Drink Federation''' (FDF) is a lobby group in the UK for the food and drink industries. It 'promotes the industry's views and works to build consumer confidence in the food chain as a whole.'
  
 
==Overview==
 
==Overview==
  
The Food and Drink Federation (FDF)
+
Industry Areas: The Food and Drink Federation (FDF), through its 50 members, directly and indirectly represents approximately 95% of the UK food and drink manufacturing sector<ref>[http://www.bsb.org.uk/members/library/conferences/2001autumn/paper_460.htm BSB:Members] (No lonver available 23 October 2007)</ref>. Member organisations include the Rice Association, the Food Association, the Potato Processors Association, the British Soft Drinks Association and the Federation of Bakers<ref> FDF website [http://www.fdf.org.uk/fdfmembership.html#1 FDF:Members] (Accessed: 23 October 2007)</ref>.
  
Industry Areas: The Food and Drink Federation (FDF), through its 50 members, directly and indirectly represents approximately 95% of the UK food and drink manufacturing sector[1]. Member organisations include the Rice Association, the Food Association, the Potato Processors Association, the British Soft Drinks Association and the Federation of Bakers[2].
+
Overview: The FDF represents big business in the food and drink sector. Its current president is Peter Blackburn, former chair of Nestle UK, and now also chair of Northern Foods. Food and drink industries use the FDF to promote their own interests to both government and the public. Such interests typically include:
  
Overview: The FDF represents big business in the food and drink sector. Its current president is Peter Blackburn, former chair of Nestlé UK, and now also chair of Northern Foods. Food and drink industries use the FDF to promote their own interests to both government and the public. Such interests typically include:
+
* the production of a globally competitive food production system which involves the intensification and genetic modification of agriculture, thereby minimising input costs for the food manufacturing industry;
 +
* the promotion and support of high profit-margin, high value-added food and drink products - in practice this tends to mean highly processed products, often unhealthy and containing many additives.
 +
* Ensuring that the research agenda in the universities and research institutions match the ever-increasing need for new products in the processed foods sector.
  
: the production of a globally competitive food production system which involves the intensification and genetic modification of agriculture, thereby minimising input costs for the food manufacturing industry;
+
The FDF relays these interests through various campaigns and lobbying strategies to government and the public. Within government, FDF and/or industry representatives sit on numerous government committees responsible for dealing with food issues.
: the promotion and support of high profit-margin, high value-added food and drink products - in practice this tends to mean highly processed products, often unhealthy and containing many additives.
 
: Ensuring that the research agenda in the universities and research institutions match the ever-increasing need for new products in the processed foods sector.
 
  
The FDF relays these interests throught variosu campaigns and lobbying strategies to government and the public. Within government, FDF and/or industry representatives sit on numerous government committees responsible for dealing with food issues.
+
Market share / Importance: The FDF is the principal trade federation representing UK food and drink producers. Through its 50 members, it represents a gross output of £65 billion, or 14% of total UK manufacturing. 500,000 people are employed within this sector: 12.7% of the UK manufacturing workforce<ref> UK Food and Drink Industry Statistics 2000</ref>.
 
 
Market share / Importance: The FDF is the principal trade federation representing UK food and drink producers. Through its 50 members, it represents a gross output of £65 billion, or 14% of total UK manufacturing. 500,000 people are employed within this sector: 12.7% of the UK manufacturing workforce[3].
 
  
 
The FDF therefore calls itself the:
 
The FDF therefore calls itself the:
:Largest packaging client
+
*Largest packaging client
:2nd largest advertising client
+
*2nd largest advertising client
:3rd largest energy client
+
*3rd largest energy client
:Furthermore, the FDF indirectly (through its members) buys 2/3 of all UK agricultural produce.
+
*Furthermore, the FDF indirectly (through its members) buys 2/3 of all UK agricultural produce.
 
 
==Projects==
 
 
 
The FDF has its own well-kept website with reports, news, documents and information concerning the food and drink industry at www.fdf.org.uk. It also runs tangential websites aimed at getting ‘science-based information’ over to the public:
 
http://www.foodfuture.org.uk looks at biotechnology and food;
 
http://www.foodfitness.org.uk encourages healthy eating combined with exercise;
 
http://www.foodlink.org.uk promotes good hygiene practices.
 
 
 
The FDF’s more important job is to act as the ‘voice of the UK food and drink manufacturing industry’, in which role it aims to ‘improve the environment in which the UK food and drink manufacturing industry must operate: be it legislative, economic, social or political. It aims to safeguard the commercial interests of the industry and maximise its international competitiveness’.
 
 
 
To this end, it is an active lobbying group; the website boasts that in 2001 it had ‘over 1,000 contacts with Ministers [and] Members of Parliaments at UK and EU level’ and had ‘hundreds of consultations with EU, Government and others’[4]. Lady Jay, Director General of the FDF, explains that ‘FDF co-ordinated and represented industry in more than one hundred formal and informal consultation exercises’ [5].
 
 
 
Lady Jay also explains that the FDF has helped create ‘an important forum which brings together the Presidents and Directors General of the four key groupings along the food chain - FDF, the NFU [[National Farmer’s Union]], the [[British Retail Consortium]] and the [[Institute of Grocery Distribution]].’ She believes that this ‘ “joined-up� approach, this Whole Food Chain approach, is and will continue to be, a major element of our lobbying strategy.’
 
 
 
This is largely due to the fact that all four stakeholders hold a similar future vision for agriculture in the UK, one that revolves around global competitiveness, greater intensification of agriculture, and the widespread growth and use of GMOs. This lobbying forum also excludes some of the other interests in the food chain - namely small and family farmers, small organic producers, people working on local food economies, farm-workers and to a large extent consumers.
 
 
2. Who, where, how much?
 
# Company structure/ownership
 
# FDF Policy formulation
 
# A few key people
 
 
 
WHO, WHERE, HOW MUCH?
 
 
 
Food and Drink Federation
 
6 Catherine Street
 
London WC2B 5JJ
 
020 7836 2460
 
 
 
Company structure/ownership
 
 
 
The FDF is funded principally by member’s fees. In 2003, company membership was £200 per £1m turnover, plus VAT, capped at £1bn. There are extra charges to be an associate or affiliate member.
 
 
 
It costs between £1000 to £3000 per year to access committee papers so unfortunately Corporate Watch cannot spill the beans on their internal workings.
 
 
 
FDF Policy formulation
 
 
 
FDF policies are developed through industry-wide consultation, channelled through its governing Council, and advised by specialist committees. The committees are:
 
 
 
Communications Committee. This promotes industry messages to decision-makers and opinion formers including Parliament, central and local government, the media, health professionals and academics.
 
 
 
The key task of the UK Communications Committee is ‘to devise programmes to develop the image and influence of the British food and drink manufacturing industry by widening public knowledge and recognition of its products and heightening consumer confidence in the quality and safety of the food supply.’
 
 
 
Food Policy and Resources Committee consists of industry leaders who meet quarterly to discuss trade, supply, resource, research and other major issues of concern to the industry. It has a number of sub-committees and working parties.
 
 
 
Out of Home Group (formerly Food Service Committee) consists of senior company representatives. The committee works on policy resulting from manufacturer/distributor and end operator relationships.
 
 
 
Grocery Trade Liaison Committee consists of senior company representatives. It works on policy resulting from manufacturer/retailer relationships and, interestingly in recognition of the unprecedented concentration in the industry, focuses on Competition Policy developments. To support its work there are two sub-committees, one dealing with supply chain and the other with sales promotion issues.
 
  
Scientific and Regulatory Affairs Committee seeks to monitor, evaluate and influence both UK and EU scientific and regulatory affairs that affect the commercial interests of the UK food and drink manufacturing industry. Its wide-ranging responsibilities include good manufacturing practice, identity-preserved ingredient supply, food chain technical data transfer and the maintenance of liaison with other major food chain interests such as the Food Standards Agency and the UK research associations. Sub-committees include: Agricultural Practices, Food Contact Materials, Food Hygiene, Food Ingredients, Food Law, Labelling, Nutrition and Residues and Contaminants.
 
  
Environment Committee Reviews environmental issues and developments that affect, or have the potential to affect, the interests of the food and drink industry and ensures that the scientific, technical or other relevant aspects are being adequately dealt with by FDF. Current issues are environmental management, integrated pollution prevention and control (IPPC), packaging, sustainability and waste. There are currently five issue-led topic groups under the Environment Committee to facilitate more detailed discussions of specific issues, namely: Air Emissions, IPPC, Packaging, Transport and Water.
+
==Lobbying campaigns==
 +
===Working Against Junk Food Ban===
 +
The FDF has worked against a government ban on advertising of junk food to children to fight obesity . The FDF has been a key player in a huge "lobbying campaign in Whitehall to see off growing pressure for regulation to tackle obesity and diet-related diseases". According to leaked documents, the then Director General of the FDF, Sylvia Jay went to see the Public Health Minister, Melanie Johnson. 'Minutes of the meeting show that the FDF took the opportunity to tell the minister that the industry would oppose any proposals to reduce fat and sugar in foods along the lines of the work being done to reduce salt', recorded The Guardian in 2004.
  
Food and Drink National Training Organisation (Food and Drink NTO) Represents the strategic training and development interests of the industry at national level.
+
By 2006 as the regulatory authorities began drawing consultations on a junk food advertising ban, the food industry including the FDF was being accused of "derailing" them. Documents released under FOI show that the Broadcasting regulator, Ofcom, met food bosses 29 times between May 2005 and March 2006.
  
The Organic Food Manufacturers Liaison Group. This group of over 50 manufacturers was set up in 2001 to among other worthy causes ‘ensure high quality standards’ as well as support the future development of new certification standards, based on consumer needs. (See Corporate Crimes section).[6]
+
Food campaigners want all junk food advertising banned before the 9pm watershed to protect children of all ages. However, the FDF is one of the main organizations fighting to oppose this. In September 2006, when the National Heart Forum renewed call for a ban on junk food advertising pre-9pm, arguing that responses on Ofcom's website to its consultation were "100 to one" in favour of a pre-9pm ban. Those in favour include over 40 consumer and health organizations and even the government's Food Standards Agency . The FDF though argued that "A ban up to the watershed is overly restrictive and unnecessarily curbs advertising to a mostly adult audience".
  
CIAA Delegation The Confederation des Industries Agro-Alimentaires (CIAA), based in Brussels, is the food and drink industry’s European trade association. It represents the industry on regulatory issues at an EU and international level. Its objective is explicitly to increase free trade within the European Union. As well as representing national trade federations, it also represents the interests of large transnationals operating in Europe such as Cargill, Coca-Cola, Kraft Foods and Unilever.
+
===Protecting processed and unhealthy food ===
  
The CIAA took an active part in the World Summit on Sustainable Development in Johannesburg, August 2002, hosting a side event and publishing a UNEP sponsored report entitled ‘Continuous Improvement Towards Sustainability’ which ‘offers testimony to the determination of the food and drink industry to understand and integrate sustainability into its business culture and processes.’[7]
+
The FDF has come to the defence of companies accused of producing food high in salts, fats, sugars, additives and preservatives.  After a jury of 800 parents recruited by the Food Commission targeted certain foods such as Sunny Delight for being unhealthy, Martin Paterson responded that "No one food is bad - balance is the key - and demonising individual products which are marketed as snacks or treats may be unhelpful to both parents and children ." When the think tank Demos proposed a food tax on high fat foods, Paterson called the idea "patronising" and said it would "hit lower income families" and "be a tax on choice".
  
Their evident commitment to sustainability is reflected in their recent press statement resisting European recycling targets of 65% by 2006:
+
===Against reduction in Salt levels===
  
‘Today’s vote in the European Parliament did not take into account the considerable efforts that the food and drink industry has already made regarding the prevention and recycling of packaging. A recycling target of 65 % would lead to costs for the industry that are disproportionate to the benefits for the environment’, argues Raymond Destin, Director General of the CIAA, the Confederation of the Food and Drink Industries of the EU.[8]
+
The FDF has spoken out in defence of salt in food which is linked to increased heart disease and blood pressure. In the late nineties the medical journal the Lancet published research that found that the level of salt can be significantly reduced without sacrificing taste, Martin Paterson responded by saying there was "over-excitement about the use of salt" and that "the majority of the population enjoy the use of salt and understand that it has been used for thousands of years to the benefit of the consumer ."
  
A few key people:
+
In May 2003, the Food Standards Agency (FSA) announced guidelines on maximum recommended salt intakes for children. Food watch-dog, the Food Commission warned that with so much hidden salt in children's food, it would be hard for parents to achieve the targets without a significant reduction of salt. However, the FDF was against regulatory action. A year later, tests showed that bread, crisps, beans and soup were as salty as ever , so the FSA suggested that labelling should declare the salt content of food. The FDF continued to oppose such labelling recommendations .
  
Peter Blackburn
+
===Against FSA's "Traffic Light" System===
- President of the FDF
 
- Non-executive director of Compass Group plc., the world’s largest foodservice company with annual revenues in excess of nine billion pounds.
 
- Non-Executive Director and Chair designate of Northern Food plc (as of November 2001), succeeding Lord Haskins.
 
  
Previous industry positions:
+
In 2004, a survey of shoppers by the UK Food Standards Agency found that they backed "traffic light" coding for food so they could tell what is healthy and what is not. The moves were opposed by Martin Paterson for the FDF, who said, "Simplistic schemes which categorise products into good and bad could seriously mislead consumers."
- Chair and Chief Executive of Nestlé UK. See Corporate Watch’s profile of Nestlé.
 
  
Other information:
+
===Pro-GM and Against Labelling of GM-ingredients ===
He is a practising Catholic, and sees Easter as a ‘gifting’ festival which, he believes, is a positive thing since it helps bring families together[9] (in 2000, Nestlé sold 20 million eggs for £88 million). He has come more under attack for his role in marketing baby milk formula in the developing world. He admits ‘There is no doubt that the marketing of formulas was excessive in the 1970s’ [10] but insists that since the early 1980s Nestlé has complied with the World Health Organisation Code on Marketing of Breast Milk Substitutes. See www.babymilkaction.org for contradictory evidence.
 
  
Peter Blackburn has also come under fire for his role in the 2001 foot and mouth crisis. Working with the NFU, he helped to turn around the government’s proposed and almost-cemented vaccination policy for Cumbria and possibly part of Devon. Blackburn ‘fiercely’ lobbied against the vaccination programme, concerned that it may dent Nestlé export profits (see ‘Foot and Mouth crisis’ in ‘Corporate Crimes’ section).
+
In the late nineties, the FDF argued to a government Select Committee that the use of genetic modification of food production can provide benefits throughout the food chain: to primary producers; food processors and consumers … we do not believe that genetic modification per se presents any food safety risk or that foods produced using GMOs represent a special class of new foods, and that we believe they should be subject to the same type of risk assessment as any other new food product and its intended use, rather than its method of development . In 2002, the FDF also attacked moves from Brussels to tighten up GM labelling regulations as "ridiculous and unworkable " It now runs the website foodfuture, whose role is ostensibly to inform the public, but it is pro-GM.
  
Lady Sylvia Jay
+
===Greenwashing 'food miles'===
- Director General of FDF (from January 2001).
 
- Previously, career in British civil service, including secondments to the French Ministre de la Cooperation and the Tresor, and to the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development. Also former civil servant at the Department for International Development.
 
- Wife of the former British Ambassador to Paris and current Foreign Office permanent undersecretary, Sir Michael Jay.
 
  
Guy Walker CBE MA [11]
+
Although concerns over food miles have increased in recent years as has the demand for local and seasonal food, the FDF has tried to argue that food miles are less of a problem than domestic refrigeration and cooking. The FDF has also argued that consumers would not support any moves to restrict the year-round availability of seasonal fruits and vegetables and that ready cooked meals are more ecological than home cooked food.
(Previously-held positions)
 
- President of the Food and Drink Federation
 
- Chair of Van den Bergh Foods Ltd
 
  
Bill Ronald
+
===Corrupting local food===
- Deputy President of the Food & Drink Federation.[12]
 
- Chief Executive Officer of Uniq plc. as of February 2002. Uniq is a leading European convenience foods business with a turnover in excess of £1bn. Principal brand names in the UK include St Ivel.
 
  
==Officers==
+
The FDF sponsored a conference run by South West Food and Drink in June 2004, the organization set up to promote local and regional food from the region. The key-note speech was by Paul Freeston on 'Apetito – A South West success story'. Apetito's subsidiary, Wiltshire Foods, may South-West based, but the Apetito group is one of Europe's leading suppliers of frozen food and catering meals with its head office in Germany. One delegate noted: "When asked what percentage of ingredients used in "Wiltshire Farm" foods is actually sourced from the South West, Freeston was unable to supply a figure or even name a single supplier. 'We buy beef from South America and chicken from Thailand' he said, 'where the quality is very good'".
President: [[John Sunderland]] - [[Cadbury's]]
 
  
Deputy President: [[Gavin Neath]] - [[Unilever]]
+
===Stopped foot and mouth vaccination plan===
  
Treasurer, Deputy President: [[Ross Warburton]] - Warburtons
+
At the height of the foot and mouth crisis in 2001, the government was considering a limited vaccination policy which would have saved tens of thousands of animals from being needlessly slaughtered. Blair had announced that vaccination was the best option, but the plan was scrapped after lobbying by the food industry, including Peter Blackburn, the then chief executive of Nestlé UK, and president of the FDF, as well as the FDF's then chief executive, Lady Sylvia Jay. "We argued against a vaccination policy" argued Blackburn. "We were very afraid of the consequences on all meat and dairy exports ."
  
Vice President: [[Iain Ferguson]] - [[Tate and Lyle]]
+
===Against FSA Nutrient Profiling===
  
Vice President: [[Kirit Pathak]] - [[Patak Foods]]
+
The FDF was disappointed with the Nutrient Profiling (NP) model which was created by the [[Food Standards Agency]] (FSA) as a tool to measure foods which were high in fats, salt and sugar (HFSS). In a response to the [http://www.spinprofiles.org/index.php/Image:FDF_consultation_response-1.pdf NP review panel's recommendations] the FDF claimed they “remain concerned that the profiling model is selective and arbitrary and not based on clear scientific evidence” and that it “that it perpetuates the myth that individual foods can be objectively described as “healthy” or “unhealthy”.”
  
==Staff==
+
In this response, they go on to say, “FDF rejects FSA’s claim that there will be no additional costs to industry with the use of this model, as we feel the claim can not be substantiated. Indeed as the purpose of its use by Ofcom appears to be to try and distort the market by discouraging sales of particular products, then it is hard to see how this can not be a contradiction. We therefore request an objective and independent impact assessment and a cost benefit analysis.”
  
Director General: [[Sylvia Jay]]
+
==Resources==
  
Communications Director: [[Martin Paterson]]  
+
*[[Food and Drink Federation: Projects]]
 +
*[[Food and Drink Federation: Who, Where and How Much]]
 +
*[[Food and Drink Federation: Influence and lobbying]]
 +
*[[Food and Drink Federation: Corporate Crimes]]
  
Campaigns Manager: [[Karen Barber]]  
+
==Personnel==
 +
===Principals===
 +
*[[Ian Wright]] - director general appointed 2015
 +
*[[Melanie Leech]] – director general from August 2005. Joined the civil service in 1988. Worked in HM Customs and Excise, the [[Cabinet Office]] (including private secretary to [[Lord Butler]]), the [[Department for Media, Culture and Sport]] and the Office of the Rail Regulator. From 2001-2004, seconded to Executive Director of the [[Association of Police Authorities]], before returning to the [[Cabinet Office]] as Director of Communications .
  
Media and Parliamentary Relations Manager: [[Christine Fisk]]  
+
*[[Gavin Neath]] – president. Director of Corporate Social Responsibility, [[Unilever]].
 +
Governing Body of ICC in the UK. Leadership Team of Business in the Environment
 +
 +
*[[Iain Ferguson]], deputy president but became president of the FDF in January 2007. Ex-[[Unilever]], sat on the Government's [[Policy Commission on the Future of Farming and Food]] (Curry Commission). Former President of the [[Institute of Grocery Distribution]]. Honorary Vice-President of the [[British Nutrition Foundation]] . Ex-Director, [[Rothamsted Research Station]] and of the biotech company [[Sygenta]]. Ex-Member of the UK's DTI Foresight Programme Food Chain and Crops for Industry Panel
  
 +
===Officers===
 +
*President: [[John Sunderland]] - [[Cadbury's]]
 +
*Deputy President: [[Gavin Neath]] - [[Unilever]]
 +
*Treasurer, Deputy President: [[Ross Warburton]] - Warburtons
 +
*Vice President: [[Iain Ferguson]] - [[Tate and Lyle]]
 +
*Vice President: [[Kirit Pathak]] - [[Patak Foods]]
 +
===Staff===
 +
*Director General: [[Sylvia Jay]]
 +
*Communications Director: [[Martin Paterson]]
 +
*Campaigns Manager: [[Karen Barber]]
 +
*Media and Parliamentary Relations Manager: [[Christine Fisk]]
  
==Links==
+
==Affiliations==
 +
The [[Food and Drink Federation]] was a donor to the [[Science Media Centre]] in 2012 and 2013. <ref>SMC, [http://www.sciencemediacentre.org/about-us/funding/ Funding], accessed 29 September 2013. See also [[Science Media Centre - Funding]]</ref>
  
 +
==References, Resources and Contact==
 +
===Contact===
 +
:Website: [http://www.fdf.org.uk/ www.fdf.org.uk]
 +
===Resources===
 
*The Food and Drink Federation, A Corporate Profile, By Corporate Watch UK Completed November 2002 [http://www.corporatewatch.org.uk/?lid=222]
 
*The Food and Drink Federation, A Corporate Profile, By Corporate Watch UK Completed November 2002 [http://www.corporatewatch.org.uk/?lid=222]
 +
*Felicity Lawrence and Rob Evans '[http://society.guardian.co.uk/publichealth/story/0,11098,1224943,00.html Food firms go all the way to No 10 in fight over what we eat]: Letters, lunches, dinners, briefings.' The Guardian, 26 May 2004. Also here: [http://www.spinwatch.org/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=41]<ref>File no longer available</ref>
  
*Felicity Lawrence and Rob Evans '[http://society.guardian.co.uk/publichealth/story/0,11098,1224943,00.html Food firms go all the way to No 10 in fight over what we eat]: Letters, lunches, dinners, briefings.' The Guardian Wednesday May 26, 2004. Also here: [http://www.spinwatch.org/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=41]
+
===References===
 +
<references/>
  
==Notes==
+
[[Category:Alcohol]][[Category:Food Industry lobby groups]][[Category:Alcohol Industry]]
*[1] http://www.bsb.org.uk/members/library/conferences/2001autumn/paper_460.htm
+
[[Category:Front Groups]][[Category:GM]][[Category:GM Lobby Groups]][[Category:Science Media Centre]]
*[2] http://www.fdf.org.uk/fdfmembership.html#1
 
*[3] UK Food and Drink Industry Statistics 2000
 
*[4] http://www.fdf.org.uk/fdfmembership.html#2
 
*[5] http://www.bsb.org.uk/members/library/conferences/2001autumn/paper_460.htm
 

Latest revision as of 02:16, 9 March 2015

Foodspin badge.png This article is part of the Foodspin project of Spinwatch.

The Food and Drink Federation (FDF) is a lobby group in the UK for the food and drink industries. It 'promotes the industry's views and works to build consumer confidence in the food chain as a whole.'

Overview

Industry Areas: The Food and Drink Federation (FDF), through its 50 members, directly and indirectly represents approximately 95% of the UK food and drink manufacturing sector[1]. Member organisations include the Rice Association, the Food Association, the Potato Processors Association, the British Soft Drinks Association and the Federation of Bakers[2].

Overview: The FDF represents big business in the food and drink sector. Its current president is Peter Blackburn, former chair of Nestle UK, and now also chair of Northern Foods. Food and drink industries use the FDF to promote their own interests to both government and the public. Such interests typically include:

  • the production of a globally competitive food production system which involves the intensification and genetic modification of agriculture, thereby minimising input costs for the food manufacturing industry;
  • the promotion and support of high profit-margin, high value-added food and drink products - in practice this tends to mean highly processed products, often unhealthy and containing many additives.
  • Ensuring that the research agenda in the universities and research institutions match the ever-increasing need for new products in the processed foods sector.

The FDF relays these interests through various campaigns and lobbying strategies to government and the public. Within government, FDF and/or industry representatives sit on numerous government committees responsible for dealing with food issues.

Market share / Importance: The FDF is the principal trade federation representing UK food and drink producers. Through its 50 members, it represents a gross output of £65 billion, or 14% of total UK manufacturing. 500,000 people are employed within this sector: 12.7% of the UK manufacturing workforce[3].

The FDF therefore calls itself the:

  • Largest packaging client
  • 2nd largest advertising client
  • 3rd largest energy client
  • Furthermore, the FDF indirectly (through its members) buys 2/3 of all UK agricultural produce.


Lobbying campaigns

Working Against Junk Food Ban

The FDF has worked against a government ban on advertising of junk food to children to fight obesity . The FDF has been a key player in a huge "lobbying campaign in Whitehall to see off growing pressure for regulation to tackle obesity and diet-related diseases". According to leaked documents, the then Director General of the FDF, Sylvia Jay went to see the Public Health Minister, Melanie Johnson. 'Minutes of the meeting show that the FDF took the opportunity to tell the minister that the industry would oppose any proposals to reduce fat and sugar in foods along the lines of the work being done to reduce salt', recorded The Guardian in 2004.

By 2006 as the regulatory authorities began drawing consultations on a junk food advertising ban, the food industry including the FDF was being accused of "derailing" them. Documents released under FOI show that the Broadcasting regulator, Ofcom, met food bosses 29 times between May 2005 and March 2006.

Food campaigners want all junk food advertising banned before the 9pm watershed to protect children of all ages. However, the FDF is one of the main organizations fighting to oppose this. In September 2006, when the National Heart Forum renewed call for a ban on junk food advertising pre-9pm, arguing that responses on Ofcom's website to its consultation were "100 to one" in favour of a pre-9pm ban. Those in favour include over 40 consumer and health organizations and even the government's Food Standards Agency . The FDF though argued that "A ban up to the watershed is overly restrictive and unnecessarily curbs advertising to a mostly adult audience".

Protecting processed and unhealthy food

The FDF has come to the defence of companies accused of producing food high in salts, fats, sugars, additives and preservatives. After a jury of 800 parents recruited by the Food Commission targeted certain foods such as Sunny Delight for being unhealthy, Martin Paterson responded that "No one food is bad - balance is the key - and demonising individual products which are marketed as snacks or treats may be unhelpful to both parents and children ." When the think tank Demos proposed a food tax on high fat foods, Paterson called the idea "patronising" and said it would "hit lower income families" and "be a tax on choice".

Against reduction in Salt levels

The FDF has spoken out in defence of salt in food which is linked to increased heart disease and blood pressure. In the late nineties the medical journal the Lancet published research that found that the level of salt can be significantly reduced without sacrificing taste, Martin Paterson responded by saying there was "over-excitement about the use of salt" and that "the majority of the population enjoy the use of salt and understand that it has been used for thousands of years to the benefit of the consumer ."

In May 2003, the Food Standards Agency (FSA) announced guidelines on maximum recommended salt intakes for children. Food watch-dog, the Food Commission warned that with so much hidden salt in children's food, it would be hard for parents to achieve the targets without a significant reduction of salt. However, the FDF was against regulatory action. A year later, tests showed that bread, crisps, beans and soup were as salty as ever , so the FSA suggested that labelling should declare the salt content of food. The FDF continued to oppose such labelling recommendations .

Against FSA's "Traffic Light" System

In 2004, a survey of shoppers by the UK Food Standards Agency found that they backed "traffic light" coding for food so they could tell what is healthy and what is not. The moves were opposed by Martin Paterson for the FDF, who said, "Simplistic schemes which categorise products into good and bad could seriously mislead consumers."

Pro-GM and Against Labelling of GM-ingredients

In the late nineties, the FDF argued to a government Select Committee that the use of genetic modification of food production can provide benefits throughout the food chain: to primary producers; food processors and consumers … we do not believe that genetic modification per se presents any food safety risk or that foods produced using GMOs represent a special class of new foods, and that we believe they should be subject to the same type of risk assessment as any other new food product and its intended use, rather than its method of development . In 2002, the FDF also attacked moves from Brussels to tighten up GM labelling regulations as "ridiculous and unworkable " It now runs the website foodfuture, whose role is ostensibly to inform the public, but it is pro-GM.

Greenwashing 'food miles'

Although concerns over food miles have increased in recent years as has the demand for local and seasonal food, the FDF has tried to argue that food miles are less of a problem than domestic refrigeration and cooking. The FDF has also argued that consumers would not support any moves to restrict the year-round availability of seasonal fruits and vegetables and that ready cooked meals are more ecological than home cooked food.

Corrupting local food

The FDF sponsored a conference run by South West Food and Drink in June 2004, the organization set up to promote local and regional food from the region. The key-note speech was by Paul Freeston on 'Apetito – A South West success story'. Apetito's subsidiary, Wiltshire Foods, may South-West based, but the Apetito group is one of Europe's leading suppliers of frozen food and catering meals with its head office in Germany. One delegate noted: "When asked what percentage of ingredients used in "Wiltshire Farm" foods is actually sourced from the South West, Freeston was unable to supply a figure or even name a single supplier. 'We buy beef from South America and chicken from Thailand' he said, 'where the quality is very good'".

Stopped foot and mouth vaccination plan

At the height of the foot and mouth crisis in 2001, the government was considering a limited vaccination policy which would have saved tens of thousands of animals from being needlessly slaughtered. Blair had announced that vaccination was the best option, but the plan was scrapped after lobbying by the food industry, including Peter Blackburn, the then chief executive of Nestlé UK, and president of the FDF, as well as the FDF's then chief executive, Lady Sylvia Jay. "We argued against a vaccination policy" argued Blackburn. "We were very afraid of the consequences on all meat and dairy exports ."

Against FSA Nutrient Profiling

The FDF was disappointed with the Nutrient Profiling (NP) model which was created by the Food Standards Agency (FSA) as a tool to measure foods which were high in fats, salt and sugar (HFSS). In a response to the NP review panel's recommendations the FDF claimed they “remain concerned that the profiling model is selective and arbitrary and not based on clear scientific evidence” and that it “that it perpetuates the myth that individual foods can be objectively described as “healthy” or “unhealthy”.”

In this response, they go on to say, “FDF rejects FSA’s claim that there will be no additional costs to industry with the use of this model, as we feel the claim can not be substantiated. Indeed as the purpose of its use by Ofcom appears to be to try and distort the market by discouraging sales of particular products, then it is hard to see how this can not be a contradiction. We therefore request an objective and independent impact assessment and a cost benefit analysis.”

Resources

Personnel

Principals

Governing Body of ICC in the UK. Leadership Team of Business in the Environment

Officers

Staff

Affiliations

The Food and Drink Federation was a donor to the Science Media Centre in 2012 and 2013. [4]

References, Resources and Contact

Contact

Website: www.fdf.org.uk

Resources

References

  1. BSB:Members (No lonver available 23 October 2007)
  2. FDF website FDF:Members (Accessed: 23 October 2007)
  3. UK Food and Drink Industry Statistics 2000
  4. SMC, Funding, accessed 29 September 2013. See also Science Media Centre - Funding
  5. File no longer available