Ongoing food supply chain issues have forced Britain’s largest supermarkets to impose strict rations on produce.1 The U.K. Secretary of State for Environment, Food, and Rural Affairs suggested that those struggling to keep pace with the past year’s near 20 percent rise in food costs should “get a higher income” and deal with shortages by “cherish[ing]” root vegetables, and an unexploded WWII-era bomb caused train delays between Ashford and Staines.
Weekly Review
Weekly Review
Weekly Review
Ongoing food supply chain issues have forced Britain’s largest supermarkets to impose strict rations on produce.1 The U.K. Secretary of State for Environment, Food, and Rural Affairs suggested that those struggling to keep pace with the past year’s near 20 percent rise in food costs should “get a higher income” and deal with shortages by “cherish[ing]” root vegetables, and an unexploded WWII-era bomb caused train delays between Ashford and Staines.