Food Systems
The demand for healthy, sustainably produced food is greater today than ever before. With the global population heading towards 10 billion people by 2050, this demand will inevitably continue to grow. At present, according to the FAO, more than 820 million people are hungry and 1.2 billion people suffer from chronic undernutrition. At the same time, 2 billion people are overweight.
Resilient food systems
The food system is constantly having to adapt, as we have seen with the COVID-19 pandemic, the food price rises of 2008 and various climate-related impacts. Whenever a crisis occurs, its effects are felt most strongly by vulnerable people and by our ecosystem. We want to use a Food Systems approach to reduce those vulnerabilities and increase the resilience.
4 aspects of the “Food Systems approach”
There is no single solution when it comes to tackling food problems. If you solve one problem – by increasing food production, for example – you risk creating another, such as pollution or loss of biodiversity. By taking a “Food Systems approach”, WUR is looking at all aspects of the food system, with a focus on 4 “domains”:
1. Food security: sufficient food for everyone
2. Ensuring a healthy diet
3. Fair distribution of costs and revenues
4. Food security: climate change, sustainability and biodiversity
Integrated view on feeding the world
Looking for solutions following the ‘Food system approach’ requires us to consider all of the different elements that make up the system and influence each other. These include agricultural production, biodiversity, water availability and the risks associated with climate change.
Of course, people are an important part of the system. Farmers, consumers, middlemen, policymakers, technology developers, dieticians and activists all have a part to play. By focusing on various aspects of the food system, and ensuring our research results are solid and applicable, we are contributing to the ongoing improvement of food systems.
We do this in collaboration with our partners: governments, businesses, civil society organisations and other research institutes. And we do it at various levels: regional, national, international and global.

Wondering how the Food system approach can help you? Do not hesitate to contact our experts!
Food Systems Research
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This innovation passport of Wageningen University & Research highlights some of our projects through which we research and develop an evidence base for underpinning future pathways, all part of the food system approach.
Food Sytems Approach explained in 1 minute
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Publications about Food Systems
- Towards sustainable food systems: a Dutch approach
- Food Transitions 2030
- Global implications of the European food system: a food system approach
- Brochure Towards zero hunger
- Food system models and methodologies within Wageningen University & Research: opportunities for deepening our food systems work
Blogs about Food Systems
- Key challenges for post-COVID food systems
- Repairing food systems failures: Policies, Innovations & Partnership
- Blog series: Food systems
Wageningen World
- The road to zero hunger: 'If you zoom out, you see a lot going on at the same time'
- Sustainable farmers light the way
Tools
- The food systems decision-support toolbox: a toolbox for food system analysis
- The Food Systems Decision-Support Tool: Application in the case of the Sahel