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The relative greenhouse gas impacts of realistic dietary choices

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The relative greenhouse gas impacts of realistic dietary choices. / Berners-Lee, Mike; Hoolohan, C.; Cammack, H. et al.
In: Energy Policy, Vol. 43, 2012, p. 184-190.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Berners-Lee M, Hoolohan C, Cammack H, Hewitt CN. The relative greenhouse gas impacts of realistic dietary choices. Energy Policy. 2012;43:184-190. doi: 10.1016/j.enpol.2011.12.054

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Berners-Lee, Mike ; Hoolohan, C. ; Cammack, H. et al. / The relative greenhouse gas impacts of realistic dietary choices. In: Energy Policy. 2012 ; Vol. 43. pp. 184-190.

Bibtex

@article{7f25471b23f44bacad5d2aea719752e7,
title = "The relative greenhouse gas impacts of realistic dietary choices",
abstract = "The greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions embodied in 61 different categories of food are used, with information on the diet of different groups of the population (omnivorous, vegetarian and vegan), to calculate the embodied GHG emissions in different dietary scenarios. We calculate that the embodied GHG content of the current UK food supply is 7.4 kg CO2e person−1 day−1, or 2.7 t CO2e person−1 y−1. This gives total food-related GHG emissions of 167 Mt CO2e (1 Mt=106 metric tonnes; CO2e being the mass of CO2 that would have the same global warming potential, when measured over 100 years, as a given mixture of greenhouse gases) for the entire UK population in 2009. This is 27% of total direct GHG emissions in the UK, or 19% of total GHG emissions from the UK, including those embodied in goods produced abroad. We calculate that potential GHG savings of 22% and 26% can be made by changing from the current UK-average diet to a vegetarian or vegan diet, respectively. Taking the average GHG saving from six vegetarian or vegan dietary scenarios compared with the current UK-average diet gives a potential national GHG saving of 40 Mt CO2e y−1. This is equivalent to a 50% reduction in current exhaust pipe emissions from the entire UK passenger car fleet. Hence realistic choices about diet can make substantial differences to embodied GHG emissions.",
keywords = "Greenhouse gas emissions, Food, Diet",
author = "Mike Berners-Lee and C. Hoolohan and H. Cammack and Hewitt, {C. N.}",
year = "2012",
doi = "10.1016/j.enpol.2011.12.054",
language = "English",
volume = "43",
pages = "184--190",
journal = "Energy Policy",
issn = "0301-4215",
publisher = "Elsevier BV",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The relative greenhouse gas impacts of realistic dietary choices

AU - Berners-Lee, Mike

AU - Hoolohan, C.

AU - Cammack, H.

AU - Hewitt, C. N.

PY - 2012

Y1 - 2012

N2 - The greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions embodied in 61 different categories of food are used, with information on the diet of different groups of the population (omnivorous, vegetarian and vegan), to calculate the embodied GHG emissions in different dietary scenarios. We calculate that the embodied GHG content of the current UK food supply is 7.4 kg CO2e person−1 day−1, or 2.7 t CO2e person−1 y−1. This gives total food-related GHG emissions of 167 Mt CO2e (1 Mt=106 metric tonnes; CO2e being the mass of CO2 that would have the same global warming potential, when measured over 100 years, as a given mixture of greenhouse gases) for the entire UK population in 2009. This is 27% of total direct GHG emissions in the UK, or 19% of total GHG emissions from the UK, including those embodied in goods produced abroad. We calculate that potential GHG savings of 22% and 26% can be made by changing from the current UK-average diet to a vegetarian or vegan diet, respectively. Taking the average GHG saving from six vegetarian or vegan dietary scenarios compared with the current UK-average diet gives a potential national GHG saving of 40 Mt CO2e y−1. This is equivalent to a 50% reduction in current exhaust pipe emissions from the entire UK passenger car fleet. Hence realistic choices about diet can make substantial differences to embodied GHG emissions.

AB - The greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions embodied in 61 different categories of food are used, with information on the diet of different groups of the population (omnivorous, vegetarian and vegan), to calculate the embodied GHG emissions in different dietary scenarios. We calculate that the embodied GHG content of the current UK food supply is 7.4 kg CO2e person−1 day−1, or 2.7 t CO2e person−1 y−1. This gives total food-related GHG emissions of 167 Mt CO2e (1 Mt=106 metric tonnes; CO2e being the mass of CO2 that would have the same global warming potential, when measured over 100 years, as a given mixture of greenhouse gases) for the entire UK population in 2009. This is 27% of total direct GHG emissions in the UK, or 19% of total GHG emissions from the UK, including those embodied in goods produced abroad. We calculate that potential GHG savings of 22% and 26% can be made by changing from the current UK-average diet to a vegetarian or vegan diet, respectively. Taking the average GHG saving from six vegetarian or vegan dietary scenarios compared with the current UK-average diet gives a potential national GHG saving of 40 Mt CO2e y−1. This is equivalent to a 50% reduction in current exhaust pipe emissions from the entire UK passenger car fleet. Hence realistic choices about diet can make substantial differences to embodied GHG emissions.

KW - Greenhouse gas emissions

KW - Food

KW - Diet

U2 - 10.1016/j.enpol.2011.12.054

DO - 10.1016/j.enpol.2011.12.054

M3 - Journal article

VL - 43

SP - 184

EP - 190

JO - Energy Policy

JF - Energy Policy

SN - 0301-4215

ER -