Healthy Eating for Schools Debates

Martin Banks
Two young girls during snack time in a school looking into each other's lunch boxes with healthy vegetables and bread. Bottles of fruit juices on the desk. Other kids in blurred background

Belgium, (Brussels Morning Newspaper) Members of the European Parliament have been accused of “downplaying” the need to “drastically change” children’s school eating habits.

Euro deputies are also accused of failing to agree that plant-based kinds of milk and pulses should be part of an EU-funded healthy eating scheme.

The attack, after a vote in the European Parliament, has been made by Compassion in World Farming EU, a Brussels-based group that campaigns for animal welfare.

Its head Olga Kilou, responding to the outcome of the vote, told this site: “MEPs have voted to downplay the drastic change we need to see with our diets.”

She added, “We can’t have our kids overeat on animal products in school, and then expect them to grow up with healthy eating habits and live within the planetary boundaries, in a planet that is already burning.”

Kikou went on, “If schools were to continue to fail with this education, school canteens should at least give students the choice of plant-based meals and kinds of milk. MEPs now failed to recognize even this need.

“The bar is obviously quite low in the Agriculture Committee. We can only hope the rest of the Parliament will be more ambitious when they vote on the file later this year.”

In their recommendations on how the EU should change its funding for school meals, which were adopted on 22 March, the Parliament’s Agriculture Committee is said by the group to have “not only failed to acknowledge the need for plant-based meals and kinds of milk – it even stated that there should be educational campaigns to promote milk and dairy products.”

The group, in a statement, added, “In light of the climate emergency and our diets heavy on animal protein, it is mind-boggling that such a position was adopted.”

The European Commission is currently reviewing the EU scheme that supports the distribution of fruit, vegetables, milk, and certain milk products to schoolchildren, from nursery to secondary school.

As part of the process, CWF has called on the EU to revise the scheme in order to shift dietary habits towards healthier and “more sustainable foods and engrain these dietary habits in future generations.”

It says, “The position of the European Parliament’s Agriculture Committee, however, does not go far enough for the EU to reform our food systems, as outlined in the Farm to Fork Strategy and the European Green Deal.”

CWF campaigns for farm animal welfare and sustainable food and farming. With over one million supporters, it has representatives in 11 European countries, the U.S., China, and South Africa.

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Brussels Morning is a daily online newspaper based in Belgium. BM publishes unique and independent coverage on international and European affairs. With a Europe-wide perspective, BM covers policies and politics of the EU, significant Member State developments, and looks at the international agenda with a European perspective.
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Martin Banks is an experienced British-born journalist who has been covering the EU beat (and much else besides) in Brussels since 2001. Previously, he had worked for many years in regional journalism in the UK and freelanced for national titles. He has a keen interest in foreign affairs and has closely followed the workings of the European Parliament and MEPs in particular for some years.
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