From polluter to nurturer: How food and drink could save the planet

Between decarbonisation and increasing biodiversity, the food and drink industry is in prime position to make some of the biggest green gains.

“Food production can have an impact on biodiversity and ecosystems because they are closely interlinked,” explains Nature Positive associate director Tom Mason. “However, these supply chains play a critical role in delivering positive outcomes to biodiversity and ecosystems.”

At the beginning of the food supply chain, Mason explains, farmers are the “critical manager” of the world’s soil, a significant carbon sink, and land. This gives them direct control over how landscapes are used and maintained.

Agriculture, it is predicted, is responsible for around 80% of native habitat loss (FAO and TNC, 2021). So better control is necessary to not only protect plants and animals, but also global food supply.

Practices like regenerative agriculture, for example, are of growing importance to food and drink businesses’ supply chains as well as their investors. This is because biodiversity loss and climate change are recognised as a “systemic risk to the entire food and beverage supply chain, and regenerative practices are viewed as a critical step in building supply chain resilience,” Mason maintains.

Regenerative agriculture focuses on reducing harmful chemical use, maximising land management practices – to promote healthy soil, clean water and disease resilience – and contributing to habitat creation and restoration within food and beverage supply.