The move towards buying local food has been around for several years now and the economic downturn seems to have made consumers even more inclined to support nearby producers.
According to the Institute of Grocery Distribution, the number of shoppers buying locally produced food has grown from 39% in September last year to 43% in September this year. As to future intentions, 41% say they will buy more local food compared with 39% who said the same thing at the start of 2011. This number compares with 31% who intend to buy more welfare friendly food, and 17% who intend to buy more organic.Supermarkets are responding to the trend by stocking bigger local food ranges. Sainsbury now sells 3000 locally produced foods, and grew their sales by 15% in the last year.
Tesco says that “many customers want to buy locally sourced foods to support their local communities”. In response they have built alo special local foods website, where you can type in your postcode, find the nearest Tesco store and a list of the local foods they stock. In 2010/2011 compared with the previous year Tesco grew their local food sales from £850m to £1billion. Asda, who can justly claim to be the first supermarket to spot the trend has 6000 local products on sale from 600 suppliers. They are aiming to turnover £500m in local food sales, a 15% increase on where they are now.
A trip north of the border to Scotland illustrates the trend well with a Scotland-produced variant of virtually every fresh food like eggs, milk bread, cheese fruit and vegetables available on the shelves. Imagine if that degree of localness spread to English counties or regions.
The urge to buy local is definitely a trend rather than a fad. As has been the case for a while it is the 65+ age group who are most supportive of local foods, but the IGD tells us that the 55+ group seems to be the keenest to increase their local food purchase, and if the trend spreads to a younger age group then robust sales growth seems to lie ahead.
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