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PRIVACY
Economic Development

Churchillian call to arms to 'bring home Britain’s harvest' before it rots in the fields

Dire warning from academics as business leaders spring to action to support the agri-sector

Farm workers work into the evening to gather winter crops near Shifnal.(Image: Birmingham Post and Mail)

The agri-food sector is suffering from a shortage of workers – with fears for a harvest when it is needed the most.

A call is now going out to the unemployed, redundant, students and those looking for work to help feed the nation.

Logistics expert Dr Jonathan Owens said: “It appears the Covid-19 crisis is may well deliver what Brexit did not, a poor harvest. That is if Britons do not answer the 21 century Churchillian call to arms and 'Bring Home Britain’s Harvest' before it rots in the fields.

"Britain’s food production has been very dependent for many years on seasonal migrant labour from the EU, with farmers relying heavily on Eastern European countries for their manual labour.  However, since Brexit many of these workers have returned home in their droves, those that remain tell their families there are almost guaranteed jobs here in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ, but many simply do not want to come. 

"Now, they cannot come because of the Covid-19 pandemic crisis and there is simply not enough of them around the country to bring in the harvest." 

More than 30 per cent of those working permanently in the agriculture sector are from overseas, and it is thought these figures did not account for seasonal workers.

Farm workers tend to hops.(Image: BPM)

The leading figure at the University of Salford Business School said: "We must go it alone and gather our own harvest or face the stark possibility of food rationing the longer the global lockdown goes on.  If we look back to history, as a nation we used to do this for generations, and it is still in living memory!

"Maintaining and sustaining levels of productivity is crucial especially if the output from the harvest is going to maintain supplies to supermarkets and other food outlets throughout the country.  For harvesting speed is a critical performance measure.  Getting food products from the ground quickly and with minimal waste, then to the marketplace, in order to maintain a constant supply as not to bring about destabilisation is vital in feeding a nation."