The Government has been accused of weakening the UK’s food and farming rules as it prepares for a post-Brexit future, undermining the Prime Minister’s promise of a green recovery from the pandemic barely a fortnight after he announced the plans.
A new report from farming and food safety experts says ministers have acquired powers to change the rules on food imports without parliamentary votes or thorough scrutiny.
Standards governing the use of antibiotics in farming are set to be weakened in January, the Future British Standards Coalition (FBSC) claims, with regulations on hormones and food additives also now easier to change.
A government spokesperson called the report, authored by farming, food safety and environmental experts from organisations including the Faculty of Public Health and RSPCA, “unhelpful scaremongering”.
“The unity of voice across farming, environmental, animal welfare and public health groups underlines the imperative that UK Government doesn’t drop the ball in reaching trade agreements which undermine domestic food production standards,” said George Denny, chief executive of the Tenant Farmers Association, part of the FBSC.
Environmental and food safety campaigners have long warned that the UK should not compromise on standards to accept trade deals after leaving the European Union.