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Food Foundation film calls for urgent action to improve school food in 2026

22nd Jan 2026 - 09:30
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Food Foundation film calls for urgent action to improve school food in 2026
Abstract
The Food Foundation has launched an animated campaign film, narrated by Dame Emma Thompson and four young people from across the UK with lived experience of food insecurity, that calls for urgent action to improve school food this year.

The film titled ‘The Lunch They Deserve’, seeks to focus the nation on the need for better school food standards. Research shows there are currently 4.5m children growing up in poverty in the UK as for many of them a healthy diet is unaffordable.

The Food Foundation believes school meals have the potential to ensure these young people have access to a nutritious, hot meal that will help to keep them healthy.  

Dame Emma Thompson, actor and Food Foundation celebrity ambassador said: “School lunchtime is the golden opportunity for society to step up, to serve great food to our young people and by doing so support families, the NHS and our communities. Every child has the right to healthy food. Let’s get it right in all our schools. Let’s give all our kids the lunch they deserve so that they can thrive.” 

The film was created by multi-Bafta winning animators The Tin Bear Project and funded by Trust for London and The National Lottery Community Fund. It can be viewed here

Jamie Oliver, chef and school food campaigner, added: “We’ve had the evidence for years - good school food transforms children’s health, learning, attendance and wellbeing. Yet we still have a system where some children eat well at school and others don’t.

“That’s outrageous. School meals are the UK’s biggest and most important restaurant chain, and it’s failing too many of its customers. It’s long past time for Government to properly update 20-year-old standards and actually enforce them.” 

Currently in the UK fewer than 10% of teenagers eat enough fruit and vegetables, over a third of children are living with being overweight or obesity by the age of 11 and young people’s risk of type 2 diabetes has increased by 22% in the last five years. 

Mandatory school food standards do currently exist, but they do not take into account recent nutritional recommendations. The Food Foundation says another key problem is that compliance with the standards is not monitored, so no one is checking the food schools are providing to our children. 

Anna Taylor, executive director of The Food Foundation, commented: “September 2026 is a huge opportunity to mark a step change in both access to free school meals and the quality of the meals served. 

“Monitoring has to go hand in hand with new standards so that schools which aren’t meeting standards can be given adequate support to improve. There are lots of wonderful examples of schools delivering fantastic food to children – that experience needs to be less of a postcode lottery and instead something which all children can benefit from.  

“We’ve seen clear evidence that when school food standards have been updated in the past, the uptake of school meals has increased steadily over the following years. We now have the opportunity to make sure this goes further so that every child can enjoy a nutritious meal at lunchtime.” 

Written by
Edward Waddell