Cost of living: Food boss says prices could rise by up to 15%

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A leading food industry boss has warned that prices will spike as a result of the war in Ukraine.

Ronald Kers, the boss of food firm 2 Sisters, told the BBC that the cost of food could rise by up to 15% this year.

He added that the price the company pays for chicken from the farm has jumped.

Russia and Ukraine are some of the world's biggest suppliers of wheat and exports are expected to be affected by the conflict.

In addition, the price of gas - which is used to heat greenhouses and to make fertiliser, which is essential to food production - has soared.

War in the region is likely to exacerbate prices that were already increasing during what has been described as a cost of living crisis, according to some experts.

2 Sisters employs more than 14,000 people in the UK and specialises in poultry and chilled foods.

Its chief executive told the BBC's Today programme that it had already been forced to pay 50% more for chicken it receives from farms.

He suggested that if the war continues for months, "fundamentally it means as a country we may need to start importing less and producing more ourselves".

"We need to work together with all supply chain partners to find a solution... it's a very complex issue."

It comes shortly after the National Farmers Union (NFU) warned that food production could be hit, affecting the affordability of food in the shops for years.

In a letter to the government last week, it called for urgent help for farmers.

"The government must act now, with a clear signal that food security is a priority for the nation," the NFU said.

NFU president Minette Batters also told the BBC last week that the rising cost of producing fruit, vegetables and meat could cause farmers to make less at a time when the nation needs more.

"I think the whole world has got to recognise that this is not something we've faced before, we are going to see wheat price inflation levels that have never happened," she said.

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