UK fruit and vegetable production has plummeted as farms have been hit by extreme weather.

The country suffered the wettest 18 months since records began across the 2023-24 growing year, leaving soil waterlogged and some farms totally underwater. The impact on harvests has been disastrous. Data from the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs shows that year-on-year vegetable yields decreased by 4.9% to 2.2m tonnes in 2023, and the production volumes of fruit decreased by 12% to 585,000 tonnes.

Farmers said they were not able to plant due to the wet weather, and this is borne out in the statistics. The growing area of vegetables was down, falling by 6.5% to 101,000 hectares. A dry early summer in 2023 also did not help, as those who could not irrigate found it hard to plant.

Wet weather in the autumn and winter meant that the planted area of brassicas decreased by 3.1% to 23,000 hectares, leading to a 0.4% fall in broccoli yields and a 9.2% year-on-year fall in cauliflower volumes. Onions fared similarly, with volumes down by 13% and a fall in production area of 3.6%. So did carrots; their yields fell by 7.2%.

Farmers said the next government needed a proper plan for food security as the UK’s climate becomes less predictable, with more extreme weather hitting farms.

  • BigDanishGuy@sh.itjust.works
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    4 days ago

    If only there was a way to share your produce across borders, without taxes, duties, and tariffs. Then maybe fruit and vegetables could be easily acquired from other places when your own harvest fails.

    • eleitlM
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      4 days ago

      Still doesn’t help if there’s not enough diesel, bunker fuel and fertilizer.

  • towerful@programming.dev
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    4 days ago

    Has vertical integrated farming made any progress here?
    I imagine it’s still more expensive than fields of crops, but it’s a hell of a lot cheaper than no crops.

    • eleitlM
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      3 days ago

      No way to grow bulk calories without lots of nonrenewable inputs. No crops is dealt with by people starving, which is cheap.

  • rah@feddit.uk
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    3 days ago

    a proper plan for food security as the UK’s climate becomes less predictable, with more extreme weather hitting farms

    LOL, they think planning is going to make a difference.