this post was submitted on 13 Apr 2025
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Food UK

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As opposed to the memeable British dishes. If you want to point out that our food is bland and unsightly then you can always do so at: !casualuk@feddit.uk or !okmatewanker@feddit.uk.

This is about our food production, consumption and the food industry in the United Kingdom. Which, I think we can all agree, needs improving and there are unique challenges that we face.

See also:

Elsewhere in the Fediverse:

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Big food brands dramatically increased their spending on advertising last year, months before new junk food regulations aiming to curb Britain’s obesity crisis are due to come into force, the Observer can reveal.

Food companies spent an extra £420m in 2024, an increase of 26% year on year that coincided with a bumper 12 months for sales of snack foods. Shoppers bought an extra 45.4m packs of chocolate, cakes and crisps from the top-selling brands.

The spending bonanza came as campaigners said food corporations were switching tactics to circumvent the impact of the upcoming regulations, which will bring in a 9pm watershed for TV commercials showing unhealthy food products, and ban them online from October, after five years of delays.

Outdoor posters, audio advertising on podcasts and streaming services such as Spotify, and partnerships with social media influencers are not covered by the regulations.

The increase in spending and the suggestion it may have led to an increase in sales may fuel calls for further restrictions. James McDonald, the director of data, intelligence and forecasting at WARC Media, which monitors ad spend and recorded the 26% increase, said it was “not surprising that we saw sales lift in line with spend”. He added: “I think the timing is interesting, given the introduction of HFSS [foods high in fat, salt or sugar] regulation this year.”

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Health campaigners say food companies are adopting tactics similar to those used by the tobacco industry in the battle over cigarette advertising, by focusing on brands and logos rather than products. The advertising industry has argued that uncertainty over regulations threatens the sector and said ministers should legislate to exempt brand-only ads from the regulations.

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[–] YungOnions@lemmy.world 4 points 3 weeks ago (1 children)

Outdoor posters, audio advertising on podcasts and streaming services such as Spotify, and partnerships with social media influencers are not covered by the regulations.

That seems quite the loophole, tbh...

[–] Emperor@feddit.uk 2 points 3 weeks ago

The laws haven't kept pace with changes in society, although you'd have hoped that they'd be general enough to cope, but apparently not.