Predictions For 2013 In Food Politics Slideshow

Pressures to label genetically modified foods will increase: If approval of the genetically modified salmon does nothing else, it will intensify efforts to push states and the FDA to require GM labeling.

New Year, Same Farm Bill

Whatever Congress does with the farm bill will reflect no fundamental change in policy: Unwilling to stand up to Southern farm lobbies, Congress extended the worst parts of the 2008 Farm Bill until September. Don't count on this Congress to do what's most needed in 2013: Restructure agricultural policy to promote health and sustainability.

FDA and Food Safety Regulation

The FDA will start the formal rule-making process for more effective food safety regulations: President Obama signed the Food Safety Modernization Act in January 2011. Two years later, despite the FDA's best efforts, its regulations — held up by the White House — have just been released for public comment. Lives are at stake on this one.

FDA and Menu Labels

The FDA will issue rules for menu labels: The Affordable Care Act of 2010 required calorie information to be posted by fast-food and chain restaurants and vending machines. The FDA's draft applied to foods served by movie theaters, lunch wagons, bowling alleys, trains, and airlines, but lobbying led the FDA to propose rules that no longer covered those venues. Will its final rules at least apply to movie theaters? Fingers crossed.

More Backlash From Food Companies

The U.S. Department of Agriculture will delay issuing nutrition standards for competitive foods: When the USDA issued nutrition standards for school meals in January 2012, the rules elicited unexpected levels of opposition. Congress intervened and forced the tomato sauce on pizza to count as a vegetable serving. The USDA, reeling, agreed to give schools greater flexibility. Still to come are nutrition standards for snacks and sodas sold in competition with school meals. Unhappy prediction: an uproar from food companies defending their "right" to sell junk foods to kids in schools and more congressional micromanagement.

Food Labels Will Stay the Same, for Now

The FDA will delay revising food labels: Late in 2009, the FDA began research on the understanding of food labels and listed more relevant labels as a goal in its strategic plan for 2012-2016. Although the Institute of Medicine produced two reports on how to deal with front-of-package labeling and advised the FDA to allow only four items — calories, saturated and trans fat, sodium and sugars — in such labels, food companies jumped the gun. They started using Facts Up Front labels that include "good" nutrients as well as "bad."

Will the FDA insist on labels that actually help consumers make better choices? Will it require added sugars to be listed, define "natural" or clarify rules for whole-grain claims? I'm not holding my breath.

Oh SNAP…

Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program participation will increase, but so will pressure to cut benefits: Demands on SNAP — food stamps — reached record levels in 2012 and show no sign of decline. Anti-hunger advocates will be working hard to retain the program's benefits, while anti-obesity advocates work to transform the benefits to promote purchases of healthier foods. My dream: The groups will join forces to do both.

Soda Taxes, Down But Not Out

Sugar-sweetened beverages will continue to be the flash point for efforts to counter childhood obesity: The defeat of soda tax initiatives in Richmond and El Monte (Los Angeles County) will inspire other communities to try their own versions of soda tax and size-cap initiatives. As research increasingly links sugary drinks to poor diets and health, soda companies will find it difficult to oppose such initiatives.

We the People

Grassroots efforts will have greater impact: Because so little progress can be expected from government these days, I'm predicting bigger and noisier grassroots efforts to create systems of food production and consumption that are healthier for people and the planet. Much work needs to be done. This is the year to do it.