Home Food Circular approach could cut meat and dairy emissions by 31% but dietary guidelines would need rethinking

Circular approach could cut meat and dairy emissions by 31% but dietary guidelines would need rethinking

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Circular approach could cut meat and dairy emissions by 31% but dietary guidelines would need rethinking

The food people eat is contributing to climate change. Thirty-seven percent of GHG emissions are linked to the industry, a fact that has sparked discussion around whether we need to change our diets. Roughly one-quarter of all human-induced GHG emissions originate in agriculture.

In particular, the footprint of animal agriculture is frequently singled-out for scrutiny. Resource-intensive foods like meat are a major contributor to overall emissions – animal-based foods produce roughly twice the emissions of plant-based nutrition and globally about 40% of all arable land is dedicated to growing feed for farm animals.

Back in 2019, the EAT-Lancet Commission released a landmark paper that established the world’s first scientific targets for a healthy diet that places food production within planetary boundaries​. The researchers suggested that global consumption of red meat and sugar will need to decrease by more than 50% by 2050. Consumption of nuts, fruits, legumes and vegetables will need to increase more than twofold, they claimed.

But new research published this month in Nature Food​ highlights the complex connections between animal agriculture, European food choices and their impact on ‘a rapidly warming planet’, and questions some of the EAT-Lancet conclusions about animal agriculture.

The balance between chicken, pork and beef

“The foods societies produce and eat today have a climatic ripple effect that extends far into the future,”​ said study co-author Mario Herrero, professor of sustainable food systems and global change at Cornell. “It’s imperative that we reimagine how food is produced if we are to stave off the worst impacts of global climate change.”