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Friday, June 8, 2018

London Mayor Sadiq Khan plans TfL 'junk food' advert ban

London Mayor Sadiq Khan plans TfL 'junk food' advert ban


Junk food advertising could be banned across the entire Transport for London (TfL) network, City Hall has announced.
The Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, says he wants to tackle the "ticking time bomb" of child obesity in the capital.
If the proposal is approved, adverts for "unhealthy food and drink" will be banned on the London Underground, Overground, buses and bus shelters.
The scheme is backed by child health experts but the Advertising Association said it would have "little impact".
The junk food advertising ban forms part of Mr Khan's London Food Strategy, which has been published for consultation.
TfL's director of TfL's transport strategy Lilli Matson said it had a "large advertising estate with a diverse audience", and is supporting the mayor's attempts to make London healthier.
Mr Khan wants to "reduce the influence and pressure that can be put on children and families to make unhealthy choices".
He said: "I am determined to do all I can to tackle this issue with the powers I have and help Londoners make healthy food choices for themselves and their families.
"That is why I am proposing to ban adverts for harmful junk food from our entire Tube and bus network."
Mr Khan intends to ban adverts for food and drinks high in fat, salt or sugar.
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 spokesman for the mayor's office said if the ban comes in "everyone will be affected, whether it's the biggest fast food chain or the most niche", and their products will be assessed against the nutrient profiling model developed by the Food Standards Agency.
Companies could, he added, choose to swap their adverts for burgers or fizzy drinks for "healthier products within their range, such as salads or bottled water".

Analysis: Karl Mercer, political correspondent

The burgers may be banned, the fizzy drinks may fizzle out, but have we seen the last of adverts from companies who make their money selling such things to Londoners? The truth is, probably not.
It seems the mayor is trying to have his (low-calorie) cake and eat it.
Perhaps aware that high sugar, fat and salt ads bring in around £13m for TfL he says his new ban will not apply to companies - just to their less healthy products.
Advertise with us, he'll say, as long as you're pushing your healthier wares.
That could cut the expected losses to TfL, but how does the policy fit into a wider business plan that sees shops at stations selling unhealthy snacks? Or kiosks on the Tube selling chocolates and crisps?
"We can all indulge occasionally," the mayor told me.
Advertisers will now have to decide how occasionally they wish to indulge when it comes to the big sell on London's Tube and buses.

Chef and health campaigner Jamie Oliver - who has said London "now has the most overweight and obese children of any major global city" - described the proposal as "bold".

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