CREDITON farmer and butcher Andy Gray is this today and tomorrow, June 15 and 16, speaking at this year’s Sustainable Food Trust’s Food and Farming Conference which brings together leaders from the farming, business, finance, NGO, research and policy sector at Fir Farm, Swell, Gloucestershire.

Mr Gray is the CEO of McKelly, a 65-year-old company founded in 1956 which operates from Elston Farm near Copplestone in the heart of Devon and supplies quality meat direct to the catering industry.

He also provides the route to market for meat boxes from Farm Wilder, a Community Interest Company non-profit organisation which works with farmers who use wildlife friendly farming practices, predominantly on Dartmoor and south Devon.

The entire range is reared by farmers who use regenerative farming practices, working in harmony with the environment to benefit the animals, farmers, consumers, wildlife and the natural world.

Mr Gray is one of five guests invited to speak on local food systems and overcoming barriers to change.

This week he said: “I am honoured to have been asked to speak and am looking forward to sharing my views on local food systems and a sustainable future.

“Regenerative farming is what the public will want increasingly as the benefits of these practises become ever more apparent: more nature, cleaner water, more delicious food, lower production costs, less flooding, to name a few.

“We need to eat less meat but better, and we need to have the choice of food from farms that nurture.

“The regenerative farming practise we are developing shift the emphasis back to natural processes which creates a great environments for wildlife and animals to thrive. The question is how we bring this shift into the public conscience.”

Producing food sustainably means the negative impact on the environment is reduced because the current food supply chain is a major cause of greenhouse gas emissions (GHG), unsustainable water extraction and pollution, deforestation and biodiversity loss.

Also speaking on these topics at the conference are some of the UK’s most influential policy makers who will explore the urgent need for a radical transformation of our food and farming systems in response to the challenges of climate change, food security, biodiversity loss and poor public health.

They include Alice Thompson, associate editor for The Times, Henry Dimbleby, non executive board member of DEFRA and National Food Strategy Lead, Minette batters, president of the National Farmers Union, and the Rt Hon Lord Deben, chairmen of the Committee on Climate Change.

Mr Gray said: “It will be a very interesting and informative conference with the hope that some positive steps forward will be made as we work towards a more sustainable future.

More information can be found at https://sustainablefoodtrust.org .