Periodic Reporting for period 1 - SchoolFood4Change (Shifting school meals and schools into a new paradigm by addressing public health and territorial, social and environmental resilience)
Periodo di rendicontazione: 2022-01-01 al 2023-06-30
SF4C will create a shift to both sustainable and healthy diets on a broad societal scale by directly impacting over 3,000 schools and 600,000 school children in 12 EU countries, providing a replicable good practice across the EU and beyond. All children go to school and are vulnerable to diet-related conditions and disadvantaged environments. SF4C views schools as catalysts for systemic change for the shift to sustainable and healthy diets of all EU citizens.
The 43 partners involved in SF4C follow a holistic multi-level approach: this entails the development of innovative/sustainable food procurement criteria/methods, the reflection of planetary health diets and cooking in school meals, training school chefs to be agents of change, and the introduction of a Whole School Food Approach (WSFA). The latter is a framework for municipalities and schools that aims to create a holistic food culture and bring food to the heart of the school mission. However, it’s not just about food provision, the school food environment plays an important role in children’s consumption patterns. The framework offers distinct criteria, grouped into four pillars (education, school meals, policy, and school environment) and clustered into three levels of ambition (bronze, silver, gold).
The rationale of the WSFA, and the red thread which runs through SF4C, is that no child is left behind when it comes to nutrition at school. This applies to both feeding and education. Consequently, addressing food insecurity and promoting inclusive and equitable learning environments inherently form part of the WSFA approach developed by the project. This is in line with the SDGs, the objective of the EU Child Guarantee, and the aims of the Farm to Fork strategy.
Ambitious targets and innovative food procurement guidelines developed by SF4C will help guide cities and encourage cooperation between small-scale farmers, schools, local food suppliers and caterers in providing sustainable and healthy meals. Targeted guidance is addressed to school chefs which ensure that both cities and schools are fully equipped with the tools needed to implement changes in how school food is provided and consumed.
The groundwork for the training of school chefs on planetary health diets was laid with identification of trainers and ‘urban food enablers’ in each of the participating cities and regions, and content developed for the guidance materials focusing on sustainable meals in schools. A team of Youth Food Ambassadors is currently being recruited to boost outreach activities in the 12 focus countries. WP5 focused on defining procurement criteria and models on Innovative, Sustainable and Healthy Food Procurement which are compiled in a guide for public procurers with good practice examples.
SF4C’s approach to Outreach, Replication and International Cooperation has been a multifaceted effort that aims to create a lasting transformation in school food systems by leveraging effective communication, replication, and strategic partnerships. This has been complemented by targeted actions with EU institutions, projects and initiatives.
• The project has begun demonstrating that the SF4C triple approach is viable on the ground across EU and beyond, and will provide evidence that it can be cost-effective and does not necessarily lead to additional costs (e.g. cost reduction through increased plant-based food and smart market engagement models; social return on investment assessment)
• Evidence for the effective shift to sustainable healthy diets will be provided through an impact assessment on dietary, behavioural shifts and body weight and image in four cities, namely Madrid, Vienna, Umeå (or the region of Dordogne) and Milan - in approximately 6,400 children and young people aged 0-18, including oversampling the most deprived and vulnerable children groups.
• SF4C is not just about the most advanced cities in the EU. The project comprises an impact-driven high number of strong partners (33 partners - 16 cities/regions, 10 Linked Third Parties, 19 Replication Cities) and extending to Africa, Australia and Latin America but it can also score in terms of balanced advancement level: whilst cities such as Copenhagen, Vienna, Ghent and Malmö are leading European cities on sustainable food procurement, the partners from Czech Republic and Slovakia are leading on the WSFA, which is a novel concept in other parts of Europe.
• The SF4C triple approach is not just viable and cost-effective, it is also designed for rapid uptake, implementation and roll-out across all EU countries and beyond: WSFA in 12 months, sustainable healthy food procurement in 12-24 months.
• For communication, dissemination, outreach and uptake SF4C has outstanding actors: WWF, Slow Food, ICLEI (World and Europe Secretariats), City of Milan (Milan Urban Food Policy Pact), Vienna (Chair: European Network Organic Cities), Lyon (Délice Network), European Green Capitals, Nuremberg’s Biofach, and the initiatives of other frontrunner cities.