The Royal Societies of Australia (RSA) will be holding a two-day international conference on Food Security/Food Resilience entitled Facing the Future in Melbourne on 8 and 9 October 2026.
The conference is aimed at a broad audience: food producers, distributors, retailers, government agencies, researchers, policy makers and so on. The underlying premise of the conference is that we have to achieve a transition to many new ways of addressing food and resilience issues now which are consistent with Australia’s unique social and natural systems.
Background – the new normal
The economic, social and food production systems that we have taken for granted are being increasingly disrupted. Geopolitical shocks and changing climate and weather patterns show how dramatic these disruptions can be, with serious consequences for food security and jeopardy for the resilience of our current systems, from farm to consumer. Continual environmental degradation will limit food production potential. Rising inequality means more people will suffer food insecurity.
We can be confident that the overall framework we will have in the years to come will be different from now in ways we cannot easily predict. There will continue to be international and natural influences we cannot control. We must, therefore, review where we are now to identify potential problems which if left unattended may decrease food security and hamper achieving resilient food systems. The RSA Food Security conference will do this. In addition, it will examine how we develop new frameworks and delineate our preferred futures, and how we implement them. Simply extrapolating from history will not be good enough. We cannot become captive to the past.
Addressing the issues
At the conference, experts from academia, government, industry, peak bodies and not-for-profits working in areas including food production, food safety and nutrition, trade, transport and logistics, social inclusion, national security and the environment will examine the issues that require attention now to bring together practical cross-sector solutions as the world around us changes. These issues include:
1. The burden of history – reliance on food customs, and production and farming techniques imported here by waves of migration and imposed on the different Australian circumstances – acclimatisation persists, even though the inherited and imported ways of thinking and patterns of living we have deployed here simply do not fit this land.
2. The changing world, with its cascading impact of geopolitical disruptions, technological developments, demographic changes, and damaging global changes to the natural world – climate change, coastal zone damage, soil degradation, biodiversity loss, and the continuing impact of diseases, pathogens and pest plants and animals.
3. Perverse laws and incentives affecting producers and consumers – maintaining our natural environment is fundamental to food production and resilient food systems, but environmental law is easily overridden by other laws, or by the way they are administered, and there is still no general agreement on incentives and information strategies needed to support a transition to effective food security and resilient food systems.
4. Poverty and health – poverty, inadequate access to health care and to dietary knowledge limit capacity to take advantage of food systems, regardless of how good they are.
Conference outcomes
The aims of the two-day conference program are to generate:
1. awareness of the changing world that provides the context for challenges to our food security and to our food systems, while highlighting the problems we will face from trying to continue with a business-as-usual approach, or from just making marginal changes within our existing framework,
2. suggestions for changes in the overall framework to transition to a brave new world within which food systems exist if the identified challenges are to be met, and if we are to maximise value from the many more specific initiatives now underway
3. useful inputs into the Feeding Australia: A National Food Security Strategy processes, into the AgriFutures project Systems Thinking: how agriculture can drive national resilience and into decision making affecting inequality issues, the structure of the Australian economy and Australia’s international relations.
We invite those interested in this important topic to contact the RSA to see how you might be able to contribute.