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Australia's new food security strategy: What's on the table, and what's missing?

Australia’s new food security strategy: what’s on the table, and what’s missing?
A Sustain employee tending to an organic garden at the Oakhill Food Justice Farm in Preston, Victoria. Credit: Sustain: The Australian Food Network

In 2023, a parliamentary was held in Australia. This involves the government asking for public and expert advice on key issues to make better decisions.

The inquiry drew 188 submissions from experts across the , including farmers, health experts, community organizations and advocacy groups. This reflects both the scale of the issue and the vast expertise Australia could draw on to address it.

Two years later, the is now using this advice to develop a national strategy, called . The inquiry's contained 35 recommendations to boost the productivity, resilience and security of Australia's food system to be better prepared for , natural disasters and other disruptive events.

impacts:

  • helps people lead healthier lives
  • reduces the burden on important infrastructure (like hospitals)
  • improves mental well-being
  • creates equity and stability in communities
  • fulfills a human right.

Australia is at an important moment. Meaningful change and strengthening food security could help millions of Australians well into the future.

And yet, while the inquiry marks a step forward, of the expert submissions reveals several key areas were left unaddressed.

Key issues from the experts

Our analysis found the experts shared many key concerns about Australia's food security preparedness.

National food security policy: Stakeholders strongly supported the need for coordinated national policy. Many submissions called for whole-of-government collaboration and a "national food plan." They also demanded oversight and accountability to fall under a new "minister of food" role in government.

Cost-of-living pressures and food insecurity: Another consistent theme was the link between the cost-of-living crisis and food insecurity (struggling to pay for food). This is due to welfare payments being below the poverty line, stagnant wages and . Research shows are affected by food insecurity.

The experts also emphasized that emergency food relief, while necessary as a crisis response, is not a long-term solution. Instead, they called for structural reforms. This includes raising government benefits above the and expanding . These suggestions are backed by .

Sustainability and climate resilience: Environmental concerns were also central. Many submissions stressed the need for Australian agriculture to transition toward regenerative practices. These can limited or no tilling of the soil, using ground-cover crops to support water retention, or rotating livestock to prevent soil damage. This would reduce reliance on herbicides and synthetic fertilizers, a strategy also backed by .

For many experts, climate change adaptation goes hand-in-hand with food security. Many submissions urged action to protect farmland from urban sprawl, improve funding and education for urban agriculture, and prepare for climate shocks such as droughts and floods.

What was missing?

While the inquiry's 35 recommendations for a national food security strategy addressed many of these key concerns, there were gaps.

For example, there was no mention of Australians' basic "right to food"—this has been .

Also missing: the need for clearer food labeling and stronger trade regulations on food to protect people's health and the environment.

Roadmap for a food secure Australia

The submissions point to a roadmap for a truly food-secure Australia—one that is just, sustainable and resilient. A national strategy can build on these submissions and be informed by best practices internationally.

Here are our four recommendations, drawn from our research:

1. Legislate the right to food: would provide a to guide all policy decisions. This would allow government responses to to move beyond band-aid approaches and align with leading international standards.

2. Establish a national food plan and governance framework:Submissions overwhelmingly called for a fully funded, national food plan, in addition to a dedicated minister for food and a National Food Security Council comprised of diverse stakeholders.

But to ensure success, the future strategy needs to include measurable targets, reporting requirements and annual funding. Further, it should be centered on health, sustainability and equity goals.

3. Address structural drivers of food insecurity: and housing insecurity must be treated as food policy issues. Raising income support payments, investing in affordable housing, and ensuring access to local community food resources (including in remote, regional and First Nations communities) are essential.

4. Transform food systems for health and sustainability:. As such, a national food security strategy must invest in . This would protect farmland, encourage local food economies and ensure harmful industries are properly regulated.

It should also boost investment in our national food transport and infrastructure systems (such as storage and warehousing).

And we must limit the power of the supermarket duopoly over food supplies and costs. This would ensure fairer outcomes for and shoppers alike.

The national food security inquiry generated a wealth of evidence and ideas for moving forward. Yet, the final report left many of the most pressing issues unaddressed.

To truly secure Australia's food future, government action must prioritize the systemic drivers of insecurity, inequality and ecological decline.

Provided by The Conversation

This article is republished from under a Creative Commons license. Read the .The Conversation

Citation: Australia's new food security strategy: What's on the table, and what's missing? (2025, October 4) retrieved 16 October 2025 from /news/2025-10-australia-food-strategy-table.html
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