Urban Food Actions Platform

Private sector engagement in the Rotterdam City Region Food System

Author: Jan Willem van der Schans, Paul de Graaf
Publisher: LEI-Wageningen University & Research Centre, RUAF Foundation
2016

The City Region Food System of Rotterdam is characterised by the paradox of being an international port – a gateway to Europe, particularly for fruit and feed – while at the same time having a small but prolific local food movement that consists of citizens and entrepreneurs who are motivated by environmental and social aims with strong local connections. Rotterdam is still largely supplied by supermarkets and conventional just-in- time distribution, a classical example of food system 2.01 and it is hard to see how this could change in the short term. Nonetheless, the more sectoral approach to food (production, processing, transport and retail) is making way for a more integrated approach to food (i.e. also considering environmental, public health, social justice, education, employment concerns as is characteristic of a more regionally embedded food system 3.0). This is reflected in the increasing participation of players that are traditionally not considered part of the food sector such as health organisations, schools, social housing companies, commercial real estate, innovative start-ups, proactive NGOs and social entrepreneurs.

Topic: Food supply and distribution
Tags: Markets, Private-public partnerships, Social enterprises
Organization: LEI-Wageningen University & Research Centre, RUAF Foundation
Author: Jan Willem van der Schans, Paul de Graaf
Year: 2016
Type: Reports & Case Studies
City (Country): Netherlands (Kingdom of the)
Region: Europe
Resource format: Document
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