Implications of COVID-19 for UK food supply resilience

Risks to food and nutrition security during and after the pandemic

Research paper

Published 2 December 2021

Updated 18 January 2022

ISBN: 978 1 78413 502 7

Image — Freight lorries and heavy goods vehicles stacked at Manston Airport, southeast England, on 23 December 2020. Photo credit: Copyright © William Edwards/AFP/Getty Images

Aerial view of an airfield surrounded by open countryside and stacked with hundreds of parked lorries

Laura Wellesley

Former Senior Research Fellow, Environment and Society Centre

Since its onset, the COVID-19 pandemic has tested the resilience of food systems around the world. The impacts of this unprecedented global event on food and nutrition security had the potential to be extraordinarily diverse: risks triggered in one region could potentially cascade through complex, interrelated food supply networks and cause nutrition insecurity among populations elsewhere.

The UK is a major trader of food and drink items. Its food-related industries were preparing for significant change even before the pandemic, due to Brexit. These dynamics have complicated supply-chain resilience during the pandemic.

This paper assesses the impact of the pandemic on the UK’s interactions with the global food system, based on a risk assessment conducted iteratively from mid-2020 to mid-2021. It considers how nutrition security has been, and will continue to be, affected by the international impacts of the crisis, and how post-COVID food systems could be more equitable, sustainable and resilient.