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PM announces national programme to redistribute surplus food

14 May 2026

Food charities and social enterprises across the UK have today come together as part of a new National Programme to Redistribute Surplus Food.

Food charities and social enterprises across the UK have today come together behind a single shared plan, committing to triple the volume of surplus food made available for redistribution as part of a new National Programme to Redistribute Surplus Food.   

The plan, which has been developed over many months by sector leaders and co-authored by IGD and the newly merged FareShare and The Felix Project, will see the food industry, charities and social enterprises working collectively, alongside philanthropists and the government. The Bread and Butter Thing, City Harvest, Community Shop, Feeding Britain, His Church, Neighbourly, Trussell and the Xcess Network have all joined forces behind this ambitious vision. 

Following the King’s Speech, the Prime Minister Keir Starmer said to Parliament: “Faced with challenges, we don’t retreat from our Labour values. Strength through fairness. So, we will keep supporting those who need it the most, including by creating a new national programme to redistribute surplus food.”   

This plan will mean that more food gets to people who need it the most. Built through the leadership and convening power of Number 10 and inspired by His Majesty the King through the Coronation Food Project, the National Programme to Redistribute Surplus Food will be delivered in partnership with government, business, philanthropic, voluntary, community and social enterprise leaders.  

The initiative establishes food redistribution as a key pillar in the UK's national approach to food systems change. The breadth of organisations reflects the significance of the moment.  

Surplus food redistribution is not a substitute for the structural reforms needed to address the root causes of poverty. It is, however, an unambiguously positive intervention: one that strengthens communities, improves health and builds the local resilience that people increasingly depend on.   

The community organisations supplied by redistribution networks do far more than provide food. They are the places where older people find connection, where families access financial and housing advice, and where young people get a start.  

More food means more of that work is possible, and it frees up vital resources across the community sector to go further still. Scaled up, this is not just a solution to a waste problem. It is an investment in the social fabric of the country.   

With food inflation set to rise sharply and household budgets coming under further pressure, demand for support from the charity sector is expected to grow. The partners hope that funding committed through the National Programme to Redistribute Surplus Food will reach communities in time to support those turning to community organisations for help.   

Government, business, philanthropy, social enterprise and the charity sector each have a distinct and essential role to play. Tripling surplus food redistribution is not something any one organisation can deliver alone and today marks the first step towards achieving that ambitious target. One that will reduce waste, strengthen communities and demonstrate what a genuinely collaborative national effort can achieve.    

Suzanne McClelland
Head of Corporate Comms & Sustainability

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