Fresh vegetables and fruits displayed at a grocery store produce section with a digital overlay of interconnected lines and dots.

Risk and Resilience in

UK Food Supply Chains

Share Your Experience.
Influence Policy. Build Resilience.

This Brunel University of London study investigates how UK fruit and vegetable supply chains handle challenges and build resilience. Interviewing farmers, processors, distributors, retailers, policy makers and food system experts to understand the challenges you face and the solutions you implement.

Purpose-Driven Research

Schedule an Interview

✓ Influence future UK Food Security Policy

✓ Share your expertise with policymakers

✓ Network with industry peers (optional workshop)

✓ Contribute to solving food system challenges

✓ Fully confidential and anonymous

Just 30-60 minutes of your time could shape the future of UK food systems

Food System Resilience

The challenges facing UK food supply chains are complex. Understanding them requires insights from people on the ground — from farmers and producers dealing with weather disruptions, to processors managing costs, to retailers navigating consumer demands to policy makers navigating systemic risks. Your perspective is essential to building more resilient food systems.

Initiate an Interview

Work in or with UK fruit & vegetable supply chains? We want to hear from you

✓ 30-60 min interview

✓ Online or in-person

✓ Completely confidential

Share your story. Shape future food security.

How long does it take?
30-60 minutes, at a time that suits you

Is it confidential?
Yes — all data is anonymised

Do I need to travel?
I will come to you
Travel required for workshop participation

What will I be asked about?
Your experiences and challenges

Do I have enough experience?
If you work in or with the vegetable food supply chain, yes

Will I need to do the interview and the workshop?
‍ ‍You can do one or both

Quick Questions

A woman inspecting a variety of fresh vegetables at an outdoor market with digital icons representing supply chain logistics overlaid.