OmniAction metrics
Meeting the urgency for change
Hundreds of conflicting ways to measure the impacts of food have left us with no agreed metric. Child labour and labour rights often go without independent monitoring and land sovereignty is almost impossible for consumers to track in their food choices.
The environmental damage caused by agriculture and food is gaining attention, but its full impacts are not captured in one complete metric.
While nutrition and food safety measurements are taken for granted in some countries, through poor diet, hunger and malnutrition, food remains the biggest cause of death in the world.
OmniAction takes existing metrics and methodologies from across the food system, supports the development of those that are less established, and harmonises the data into one global and unifying framework. We are a not-for-profit making this resource available for the public good.
Our unified, global framework will inform social and sustainability goals for business, finance and policy. It will help establish an agreed ESG food benchmark. And it will make the full impacts of food choices available to consumers for the first time.
The framework is active. This means that advancements in science, monitoring, and standards will be reflected in realtime, with the framework iterating constantly. It will be formally updated every two years.
Advisory, science and technical committees will meet regularly to ensure the best developments are captured and to oversee OmniAction’s work.
OmniAction will set life-cycle assessment guidelines. It will apply true value of food accounting across all metrics. It will incorporate established data sets and create guidelines for those which are less established. It will then harmonise all this data into one framework.
Researchers across the food system are invited to contribute anonymised metrics and methodologies as they are established, folding them into OmniAction’s unified framework. The intellectual property of contributors remains full protected.
Across agribusiness, the need for harmonised standards has been long-established, as it’s generally accepted that the benefits of conflicting proprietary standards are very limited. OmniAction’s unified framework will serve the business and finance need for agreed metrics.
With the OmniFramework now available, below, we expect to see the producer, corporate, finance and consumer worlds adapt, applying the metrics to address labour rights, land sovereignty, environmental damage, poor food safety and nutritional guidance.
Experts are welcome to participate as we discuss the ongoing development of the framework, please sign up here to join us.
Take a look at our framework so far, below, contact us to suggest updates, and join us as we discuss its evolution.
The OmniFramework
This is how to apply the OmniFramework