This report provides a detailed and integrative analysis of the dramatic changes in China’s food system over the last 35 years, and explores the linkages among the environmental, health, economic and cultural trends that are emerging.
The Food Climate Research Network has published a major new report focusing on China’s changing food system.
Appetite for Change provides a detailed and integrative analysis of the dramatic changes in China’s food system over the last 35 years, and explores the linkages among the environmental, health, economic and cultural trends that are emerging.
The major changes include:
- A large increase in the volume and diversity of foods produced, with particularly rapid growth in the livestock, aquaculture and horticultural sectors, and a rapidly growing food processing sector
- Changes in supply chains, including a gradual scaling up of production operations and various forms of horizontal and vertical integration in some supply chains
- Growth of new forms of food retailing, including the emergence of supermarkets, convenience and fast food catering sectors
- Greater international engagement, including imports (notably soy for livestock feed) and growing horticultural and aquaculture exports, as well as inward investment by overseas manufacturers and retailers and outward investment in food production and processing overseas
- Rapid growth in incomes and urbanisation have led to significant changes in what people eat: diets are more diverse, consumption of animal products and processed foods has risen substantially, and there has been a growth in eating out of the home.
The report underlines the point that there is no one ‘food system’ in China, but rather a diversity of ‘food systems.’ Smallholder agriculture and traditional wet markets coexist with large-scale industrialised production and a burgeoning supermarket sector; China’s appetite for eating out embraces a broad range of catering formats and food types. There are also substantial variations by region, between rural and urban areas and by socio-economic status.
Rapid changes in the food system have had major consequences for the environment, for society and for people’s health, presenting multiple challenges for policy makers. Alongside a significant decline in hunger and malnutrition, and improved access by more people than ever before to affordable, diverse and enjoyable food, key challenges for policy makers include addressing environmental pollution and degradation, food safety concerns and the rising prevalence of obesity and chronic diseases. These problems are connected, and while addressing some issues may bring multiple benefits, there are also trade offs that need to be managed. In a country as large, diverse and rapidly transforming as China, this requires both interconnected but also differentiated policies that are sensitive to social, economic and environmental contexts and scales. The report examines the issues that policy makers face, highlights actions that are being taken to address them – and the challenges in doing so – and identifies opportunities for international collaboration.
Many of the issues that China faces are shared by other rapidly industrialising and developed countries. In China, as in the UK, livestock production and consumption represent a nodal point where multiple environmental, health and ethical issues intersect. Strategies to moderate meat consumption could potentially help address both the problems of obesity and other chronic diseases and the environmental impacts of livestock production. Given the shared nature of these problems, much could be gained from international collaboration in these and other areas.
Citation: Garnett T and Wilkes A (2014). Appetite for Change: social, economic and environmental transformations in China’s food system, Food Climate Research Network, University of Oxford.
Appetite for Change was produced with the support of the Department for the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills, the Rockefeller Brothers Fund and the World Society for the Protection of Animals. We are grateful for their support.
Briefing papers: In 9 briefing papers, we have distilled and summarised the report's main messages. We hope these briefings will be relevant for anyone trying to understand how and why China’s food system is transforming and the societal, economic and environmental implications of those changes, both within China and globally.
About the authors
Dr Tara Garnett runs the Food Climate Research Network (FCRN) at the University of Oxford’s Environmental Change Institute. The FCRN was set up to undertake research into food systems, climate change and the interface with other social and environmental concerns; and to communicate and broker knowledge on these issues to a growing network of members who together span diverse sectors, disciplines and interests. The FCRN is funded by the CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security (CCAFS) and the Oxford Martin Programme on the Future of Food. Email: taragarnett@fcrn.org.uk tel: 020 7686 2687.
Dr Andreas Wilkes has worked in agriculture and natural resources management in China since the 1990s. He is director of Values for Development, a UK-based consulting company focusing on climate change adaptation and mitigation in agriculture in developing countries, and supporting the development of international collaboration with China in the agriculture sector. Email: a.wilkes@valuesfd.com