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PRIVACY
Retail & Consumer

Supermarkets hit out at government's new plans to tackle obesity

The government is consulting on plans to require large supermarkets to stock a certain level of healthy food, which bosses have warned will add costs and not improve public health

Supermarkets will be told to follow a new healthy food standard(Image: Getty Images)

º£½ÇÊÓÆµ supermarket chiefs have criticised aspects of the government's latest obesity reduction strategy, claiming it will increase costs without benefiting public health.

The government intends to introduce a new standard for products on supermarket shelves as part of its decade-long NHS plan, which is grappling with an obesity epidemic, as reported by .

Asda chair Allan Leighton has cautioned ministers to "consider the cumulative regulatory burden and costs supermarkets are already bearing".

"Engaging us collectively and genuinely to meet the challenge of rising obesity would harness that expertise to deliver tangible and lasting outcomes.

"We are supportive of prevention and our role in delivering it. We – the supermarkets – are part of the solution, not the problem," Leighton further stated.

Supermarkets will be mandated to disclose sales data, and those failing to meet the new standards could face financial sanctions.

The government has defended the proposal as essential to reduce the NHS's annual obesity-related costs, which stand at £11.4bn.

However, M&S chief Stuart Machin told the Telegraph that the proposals "will likely add cost with no discernible improvement in public health".