INTELLIGENCE HUB

News & Events

Stay connected with developments, seminars, workshops, and institutional updates from the MRTC community.

aa NEWS
December 02, 2000

aa

aaa

Read More
Professor Julie Ingram: Are greenhouse gas accounting tools working for farmers in the UK? NEWS
Feb 24, 2026
Professor Julie Ingram: Are greenhouse gas accounting tools working for farmers in the UK?

In this seminar Julie will give an overview of the GHG farm accounting context in the UK, drawing on insights from the ongoing Land Use Net Zero FOOTPRINT project. In this project, 100 farms, three GHG tool companies, researchers and land agents across four UK nations are collaborating to create a scalable auditable process to sustainably and equitably reduce greenhouse gas emissions. The seminar will focus on farmers’ and other stakeholders’ understanding of, and confidence in, GHG accounting tools, and the potential for these tools to support learning and build net zero literacy. The governance and equitability implications of scaling these tools will also be considered.

Read More
Professor John Ingram: Transforming Food System Outcomes for Health, Environment and Enterprise- A Food System approach to identifying who has to do what NEWS
Feb 24, 2026
Professor John Ingram: Transforming Food System Outcomes for Health, Environment and Enterprise- A Food System approach to identifying who has to do what

One of the great human achievements over the last half century is that advances in food production have largely kept pace with demand on a global basis. Today, around 7 billion people are not hungry, up from about 3 billion 50 years ago. But we should not be complacent: despite these successes, over 800 million people are still hungry, perhaps 3 billion more lack sufficient nutrients, and at least 2.5 billion people consume excess calories for their physiological needs. Stunting and wasting due to insufficient nutrients and calories, and especially in early years, have lasting impacts on an individual’s potential. Meanwhile, cardiovascular disease and Type 2 Diabetes are already major – and very expensive – health sector issues afflicting many of the ever-increasing number of people over-consuming calories for their physiological need and are the leading cause of death in many countries. The social and financial impacts of the triple burden of malnutrition are massive. There are also significant, and growing, impacts of our food system on the climate and natural resource base upon which our food security ultimately depends. The presentation will introduce how adopting a food systems approach helps to identify how and where the food system impacts health and other social and economic outcomes, and the environment. This draws on an understanding of the wide range of food system activities from consuming food through to primary production (a ‘fork-to-farm’ approach), the actors involved, and the drivers that influence their decisions. In addition to considering the consequences of these activities on the range of outcomes, the presentation will highlight how, in turn, these outcomes need to be better balanced given the inherent trade-offs within the ‘diets-health-climate’ discourse. This will be considered against the need to better manage – i.e., not just continuing to strive to meet – food demand. To this end, the presentation will also unpack the notion of ‘food system transformation’, the respective roles that food system actors and public and private policy makers need to play, and the challenges and opportunities that lie ahead. It will close with some take home messages for food system practitioners, educators, and policy makers.

Read More