A PRIMARY school is to benefit from a project by supermarket giant Tesco to give young people fruit and vegetables in school every day. 

The retailer is to invest £4m in the new scheme Tesco Fruit & Veg for Schools, which has been developed in partnership with the British Nutrition Foundation and Groundwork UK, to help hundreds of schools across the country.

This will provide funding for pupils in Broad Oak Community Primary School, in Parr, to receive at least one piece of fruit or veg a day, giving their diets a healthy and nutritious boost.

Broad Oak Community Primary School will benefit from the fundBroad Oak Community Primary School will benefit from the fund (Image: Google Street View)

The funding will support pupils in schools where there is a higher-than-average free school meal ratio.

In total, 400 schools across the UK will receive around 16 million pieces of fruit and vegetables. Over a school year, that’s the equivalent of on average 110 portions per child.  

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Research among 10,000 teachers by the charity FareShare found that 28 per cent of teachers across England have brought in food for pupils in the last term, which is up from 26% in summer term 2023.

And in a recent survey by brand and social impact agency We Are Futures, 71% of teachers said that they would prioritise the availability of ‘fruit and veg for all pupils’ if more funding was available.

Only 12 per cent per cent of children aged between 11 and 18 are currently meeting the five-a-day recommendation, and Tesco expects to see their overall fruit and veg intake of children taking part in the scheme to increase by 23 per cent.

The British Nutrition Foundation estimates that, over the school year, this would increase intakes by seven per cent for vitamin A, 25 per cent for vitamin C, 14 per cent for folate and 10 per cent for fibre, based on average intakes of these nutrients in children.

The focus on areas with higher free school meal participation is particularly important because data shows that families on lower incomes struggle to afford a healthy diet.

The schools taking part in the scheme will be able to shop for the fruit and veg the school needs in stores local to their school. 

Ken Murphy, Tesco Group chief executive, said: “Our aim is to enable schools to provide enough fruit and veg for every child to have at least one piece every day. Tesco Fruit & Veg for Schools will make a real difference by providing something that young people look forward to receiving every day, and we hope it will be another little nudge to get them eating healthy food.

“We know we can’t change habits overnight, but we can ensure that young people in some of the most challenged communities in the UK get access to more fruit and veg. We want to help them try something new, learn about food and how to prepare and cook it.”