Italy's 'Slow Food' founder Carlo Petrini dies at 76

Slow Food ‌was set up in 1986 in ‌protest against McDonald's opening ‌of its first fast food restaurant in Italy

By Reuters Published: 2026-05-22T10:14:00+04:00 1 min read
Carlo Petrini, founder of the Italian ‘Slow Food’ movement that promotes quality food, genuine ingredients and local produce, attends an event in this undated handout picture. SLOW FOOD/Handout via REUTERS
Carlo Petrini, founder of the Italian ‘Slow Food’ movement that promotes quality food, genuine ingredients and local produce, attends an event in this undated handout picture. SLOW FOOD/Handout via REUTERS

ROME: Carlo Petrini, founder of ​the Italian "Slow Food" movement that promotes ‌quality ​food, genuine ingredients and local produce, has died at the age of 76.
The death occurred on Thursday in Petrini's hometown of Bra in the northwestern region ⁠of Piedmont, Slow Food said in a statement on Friday, without giving a cause of death.

Petrini, who led ‌Slow Food as president until 2022, revealed in recent years that he had been ‌diagnosed with prostate cancer.

Slow Food ‌was set up in 1986 in ‌protest against McDonald's opening ‌of its first fast food restaurant in Italy, ​in Rome's historic ‌centre.

Petrini "brought to ​life a global movement ⁠rooted in the values of good, clean, and fair food for all, connecting communities, ​farmers, ⁠food ⁠artisans, cooks, activists, and young people across the world," Slow Food said in its ⁠statement.

Under his leadership, the movement evolved from a small group of friends in the Italian countryside in the 1980s into an internationally renowned global network active ‌in more than 160 countries, Slow Food said.

As an ​international advocate for sustainable agriculture, Petrini was a personal friend of Britain's King Charles, a longstanding champion of organic farming.