Our food environments
The places where we live and spend our time play a huge role in what we eat and drink, and how nourishing these options are.
This is especially important when it comes to children. Food is key to supporting health, wellbeing and learning. What's more, the food habits we develop as children tend to stay with us for life, so starting off on the right foot is really important.
Importantly, the types of foods available and advertised enable us to make the nourishing choice the easy choice.
Food Environments Action Group
We uphold Te Tiriti o Waitangi through our actions to support nourishing food environments. Nourishing food is safe, nutritious and culturally acceptable.
Access to nourishing food is a human right. Communities should have a greater say over what food is available and accessible locally.
Our three priorities are:
Supporting community kai growing spaces
Restricting unhealthy food and drink marketing
Improving access to free public drinking water
We collaborate with partners to raise the profile of key food environment issues and priority populations in Tāmaki Makaurau:
Children, young people and their whānau
Māori and Pacific peoples
Underserved communities
How our food environment affects our health
In Tāmaki Makaurau our current food environment is not designed to make nourishing food choices an easy choice. The options most available, accessible and promoted to us are not the ones we need to live well.
Less-nutritious options dominate our city’s food environments. The foods available in our shops, on our high streets, and even at schools and early learning services do not support our hauora.
It is essential for children to build positive foundations to support their hauora. This is undermined with advertising for less-nutritious foods constantly targeting children (double the amount compared to nutritious foods).
Children in Aotearoa have double the amount of exposure to unhealthy food marketing than healthy food marketing.
On average our children see and hear 27 ads for unhealthy foods and beverages a day .
Lower income communities are disproportionately impacted by unhealthy food environments. Of the top 15 suburbs for junk food sales (2018), 14 are in areas of higher-than-average economic deprivation .
What needs to change
By redesigning our city to have more greenspaces and our streets and roads to be more people-friendly, we can reduce death and serious injury on our roads, help people get more active, and ultimately improve our health and wellbeing. We want to see:
Increasing community say
Communities need to have a greater say over what food outlets can operate in their neighbourhood. This will give communities the power to reject fast food outlets, and prevent them from dominating high streets.
Reducing junk-food marketing
We need to reduce the amount of unhealthy food and beverage marketing we are exposed to. This is especially important around schools and other areas where children may be exposed to excessive unhealthy food advertisements.
Supporting our learning environments
We can help our early learning services, Kōhanga Reo, Language Nests, schools and kura to provide healthier, more balanced food options.
Learning environments can find out more from the Healthy Active Learning programme.
Improving your
food environments
By creating more positive food environments we can help encourage healthier food habits. Simple changes can make a difference, whether that’s at home, at community events, at your school, church or marae.
A balanced healthy diet will include lots of fresh fruits, vegetables, and whole grains, while cutting out fizzy drinks and more calorie dense nutrient-poor options.
Ideas for your community:
make water the main drink for children
include plenty of fresh fruit and vegetables
choose foods that are wholegrain or wholemeal – healthier options include wholegrain rice, noodles, bread, wraps etc
prioritise minimally processed foods, such as fresh, washed, aged, dried, frozen, canned or pasteurized options
limit the amount of snacks, deep fried foods, confectionery and ice-cream.