A Sustainable Future for Food, Health and Planet?

Public talks

 - 

Great Room, RSA House

  • Sustainability
  • Climate change
  • Health & wellbeing
  • Environment

 WATCH LIVE using the embedded player, above, or on our YouTube channel

Facebook Watch this event live on the RSA Events Facebook page - 'like' or follow us for notifications!

 

RSA Food, Farming & Countryside Commission & City University Centre for Food Policy Food Thinkers Seminars present the EAT-Lancet Commission London Launch

Can we feed a future population of 10 billion people a healthy diet within planetary boundaries?

To answer this question, EAT gathered 37 of the planet’s foremost experts who, for the first time ever, propose scientific targets for what constitutes a healthy diet from a sustainable food system – as published in the EAT-Lancet ‘Food in the Anthropocene’ report.

These targets have polarised opinions across the food, farming and public health sectors. One of the most widely touted challenges to the report is the applicability of the global set of recommendations at a local level – how might different countries respond?

To unpack what the EAT-Lancet framework might look like in a UK context, the Food, Farming & Countryside Commission and City University’s Food Thinkers Seminars are convening a panel of experts from food policy, farming, public health and government backgrounds as well as presenting new UK-specific modelling data.

 

Dr Sandro Demaio, CEO of EAT, and Professor Tim Lang, City University & EAT-Lancet Commissioner, will present the findings of the Commission, and Dr Marco Springmann, James Martin Fellow, Oxford Martin School, will present the new UK data. A panel debate will follow, moderated by Sue Pritchard, Director of the FFC Commission. Professor Corinna Hawkes, Director, City University Centre for Food Policy and EAT-Lancet Commissioner will provide closing remarks.

 

Useful links:

Food, Farming & Countryside Commission event blog

EAT-Lancet Commission report (full)

EAT-Lancet Commission summary report (quick read)

Food, Farming & Countryside Commission favourite eight take-aways

 

Twitter  Instagram  

 

Be the first to write a comment

0 Comments

Please login to post a comment or reply

Don't have an account? Click here to register.