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The distribution of environmental pressures from global dietary shift

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The distribution of environmental pressures from global dietary shift. / DeCesaro, Joseph M; Allison, Edward H; Clawson, Gage et al.
In: Environmental Research Letters, Vol. 19, No. 12, 124006, 01.12.2024.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

DeCesaro, JM, Allison, EH, Clawson, G, Frazier, M, Gephart, JA, Hicks, CC, Nash, KL, Williams, DR & Halpern, BS 2024, 'The distribution of environmental pressures from global dietary shift', Environmental Research Letters, vol. 19, no. 12, 124006. https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/ad8509

APA

DeCesaro, J. M., Allison, E. H., Clawson, G., Frazier, M., Gephart, J. A., Hicks, C. C., Nash, K. L., Williams, D. R., & Halpern, B. S. (2024). The distribution of environmental pressures from global dietary shift. Environmental Research Letters, 19(12), Article 124006. https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/ad8509

Vancouver

DeCesaro JM, Allison EH, Clawson G, Frazier M, Gephart JA, Hicks CC et al. The distribution of environmental pressures from global dietary shift. Environmental Research Letters. 2024 Dec 1;19(12):124006. Epub 2024 Oct 28. doi: 10.1088/1748-9326/ad8509

Author

DeCesaro, Joseph M ; Allison, Edward H ; Clawson, Gage et al. / The distribution of environmental pressures from global dietary shift. In: Environmental Research Letters. 2024 ; Vol. 19, No. 12.

Bibtex

@article{734b8acfc41542b3a74d1cfc15c6f4ef,
title = "The distribution of environmental pressures from global dietary shift",
abstract = "The production and consumption of food is one of the main drivers of environmental change globally. Meanwhile, many populations remain malnourished due to insufficient or unhealthy diets. Increasingly, dietary shifts are proposed as a means to address both environmental and health concerns. We have a limited understanding of how dietary shifts could alter where food is produced and consumed and how these changes would affect the distribution of environmental pressures both globally and across different groups of people. Here we combine new food flow data linking producing to consuming country with environmental pressures to estimate how a global shift to each of four diets (Indian, EAT-Lancet, Mediterranean, and mean Food Based Dietary Guidelines (FBDGs)) could affect environmental pressures at the global, country income group, and country level. Globally, cumulative pressures decrease under the Indian, EAT-Lancet, and Mediterranean scenarios and increase under FBDGs. On average, low income countries increase their cumulative consumption and production pressures while high income countries decrease their consumption pressures, and typically decrease their production pressures. Increases in low income countries are likely due to the nutritional inadequacy of current diets and the corresponding increases in consumption quantities with a shift to our diet scenarios. Despite these increases, we believe that three out four of our simulated dietary shifts can be seen as a net benefit by decreasing global pressures while low income countries increase pressures to adequately feed their populations. Additionally, considering principles of fairness applied, some nations are more responsible for causing historical environmental pressures and should shoulder more of the change. To facilitate more equitable shifts in global diets, resources, capacity, and knowledge sharing of sustainable agricultural practices are critical to minimize the increases in pressures that low income countries would incur to adequately feed their populations.",
keywords = "justice, food systems, climate change, agriculture and food, sustainable development",
author = "DeCesaro, {Joseph M} and Allison, {Edward H} and Gage Clawson and Melanie Frazier and Gephart, {Jessica A} and Hicks, {Christina C} and Nash, {Kirsty L} and Williams, {David R} and Halpern, {Benjamin S}",
year = "2024",
month = dec,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1088/1748-9326/ad8509",
language = "English",
volume = "19",
journal = "Environmental Research Letters",
issn = "1748-9326",
publisher = "IOP Publishing Ltd",
number = "12",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The distribution of environmental pressures from global dietary shift

AU - DeCesaro, Joseph M

AU - Allison, Edward H

AU - Clawson, Gage

AU - Frazier, Melanie

AU - Gephart, Jessica A

AU - Hicks, Christina C

AU - Nash, Kirsty L

AU - Williams, David R

AU - Halpern, Benjamin S

PY - 2024/12/1

Y1 - 2024/12/1

N2 - The production and consumption of food is one of the main drivers of environmental change globally. Meanwhile, many populations remain malnourished due to insufficient or unhealthy diets. Increasingly, dietary shifts are proposed as a means to address both environmental and health concerns. We have a limited understanding of how dietary shifts could alter where food is produced and consumed and how these changes would affect the distribution of environmental pressures both globally and across different groups of people. Here we combine new food flow data linking producing to consuming country with environmental pressures to estimate how a global shift to each of four diets (Indian, EAT-Lancet, Mediterranean, and mean Food Based Dietary Guidelines (FBDGs)) could affect environmental pressures at the global, country income group, and country level. Globally, cumulative pressures decrease under the Indian, EAT-Lancet, and Mediterranean scenarios and increase under FBDGs. On average, low income countries increase their cumulative consumption and production pressures while high income countries decrease their consumption pressures, and typically decrease their production pressures. Increases in low income countries are likely due to the nutritional inadequacy of current diets and the corresponding increases in consumption quantities with a shift to our diet scenarios. Despite these increases, we believe that three out four of our simulated dietary shifts can be seen as a net benefit by decreasing global pressures while low income countries increase pressures to adequately feed their populations. Additionally, considering principles of fairness applied, some nations are more responsible for causing historical environmental pressures and should shoulder more of the change. To facilitate more equitable shifts in global diets, resources, capacity, and knowledge sharing of sustainable agricultural practices are critical to minimize the increases in pressures that low income countries would incur to adequately feed their populations.

AB - The production and consumption of food is one of the main drivers of environmental change globally. Meanwhile, many populations remain malnourished due to insufficient or unhealthy diets. Increasingly, dietary shifts are proposed as a means to address both environmental and health concerns. We have a limited understanding of how dietary shifts could alter where food is produced and consumed and how these changes would affect the distribution of environmental pressures both globally and across different groups of people. Here we combine new food flow data linking producing to consuming country with environmental pressures to estimate how a global shift to each of four diets (Indian, EAT-Lancet, Mediterranean, and mean Food Based Dietary Guidelines (FBDGs)) could affect environmental pressures at the global, country income group, and country level. Globally, cumulative pressures decrease under the Indian, EAT-Lancet, and Mediterranean scenarios and increase under FBDGs. On average, low income countries increase their cumulative consumption and production pressures while high income countries decrease their consumption pressures, and typically decrease their production pressures. Increases in low income countries are likely due to the nutritional inadequacy of current diets and the corresponding increases in consumption quantities with a shift to our diet scenarios. Despite these increases, we believe that three out four of our simulated dietary shifts can be seen as a net benefit by decreasing global pressures while low income countries increase pressures to adequately feed their populations. Additionally, considering principles of fairness applied, some nations are more responsible for causing historical environmental pressures and should shoulder more of the change. To facilitate more equitable shifts in global diets, resources, capacity, and knowledge sharing of sustainable agricultural practices are critical to minimize the increases in pressures that low income countries would incur to adequately feed their populations.

KW - justice

KW - food systems

KW - climate change

KW - agriculture and food

KW - sustainable development

U2 - 10.1088/1748-9326/ad8509

DO - 10.1088/1748-9326/ad8509

M3 - Journal article

VL - 19

JO - Environmental Research Letters

JF - Environmental Research Letters

SN - 1748-9326

IS - 12

M1 - 124006

ER -