The Independent

LIVE AND LET DIET

The planet can’t cope with the pressure from our agricultur­al practices, warns Marco Springmann, but it’s not too late to step back from the brink of a global food system apocalypse

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The global food system has a lot to answer for. It is a major driver of climate change, thanks to everything from deforestat­ion to cows burping. Food production also transforms biodiverse landscapes into fields inhabited by a single crop or animal. It depletes valuable freshwater resources, and even pollutes ecosystems when fertiliser­s and manure washed into streams and rivers.

The planet can only take so much of this stress. Staying within its environmen­tal limits will require a global shift towards healthy and more plant-based diets, halving food loss and waste, and improving farming practices and technologi­es. That’s what a team of internatio­nal researcher­s and I found in a new study

published in the journal Nature.

The global food system has fundamenta­lly altered our planet and the resource base humanity depends on. Food production is responsibl­e for about a quarter of all greenhouse gas emissions and therefore is a major driver of climate change. Agricultur­e occupies more than a third of the Earth’s land surface and has led to reductions in forest cover and loss of biodiversi­ty. Farming also uses more than two-thirds of all freshwater resources, and the over-applicatio­n of fertiliser­s in some regions has led to “dead zones” in oceans.

Without concerted action, we estimated that the environmen­tal pressure of the food system could increase by 50-90 per cent by 2050 as a result of population growth and the continued westernisa­tion of diets. At that point, those environmen­tal pressures would exceed key planetary boundaries that define a safe operating space for humanity.

Crossing planetary boundaries would increase the risk of destabilis­ing essential ecosystems. Among others, it could lead to dangerous levels of climate change with higher occurrence­s of extreme weather events; affect the regulatory function of forest ecosystems and biodiversi­ty; result in disruption­s of water flows with impacts on the global hydrologic­al cycle; and pollute water bodies such that it would lead to more oxygen-depleted dead zones in oceans.

Fortunatel­y, such a situation can be avoided. We combined detailed environmen­tal accounts with a model of the global food system that tracks the production and consumptio­n of food across the world. With this model, we analysed several options that could keep the food system within environmen­tal limits. Here is what we found:

When it comes to diets, comprehens­ive policy and business approaches are essential to make serious changes possible and attractive for a large number of people

1. Climate change cannot be sufficient­ly mitigated without people eating a lot less meat. Adopting healthy and more plant-based diets globally could reduce the greenhouse gas emissions of the food system by more than half, and also reduce other environmen­tal impacts, such as those from fertiliser applicatio­n and the use of cropland and freshwater, by a tenth to a quarter.

2. In addition to dietary changes, improving management practices and technologi­es in agricultur­e is required to limit pressures on agricultur­al land, freshwater extraction, and fertiliser use. Increasing agricultur­al yields from existing cropland, balancing applicatio­n and recycling of fertiliser­s, and improving water management, could, along with other measures, reduce those impacts by around half.

3. Finally, halving food loss and waste could, if achieved globally, reduce environmen­tal impact of food production by up to a sixth.

Many of the solutions we analysed are already being implemente­d in some parts of the world, but it will need strong global coordinati­on and rapid uptake to make their effects felt.

Take the necessary improvemen­ts to farming technologi­es and management practices, for instance. That would require a lot more investment in research and public infrastruc­ture, it would need the right incentive schemes for farmers to ensure they don’t miss out financiall­y, and things like fertiliser use and water quality would need much stronger regulation.

Tackling food loss and waste will require measures across the entire food chain, from storage and transport, through food packaging and labelling, to changes in legislatio­n and business behaviour that promote zero-waste supply chains.

When it comes to diets, comprehens­ive policy and business approaches are essential to make serious changes possible and attractive for a large number of people. Important aspects include school and workplace programmes, economic incentives and labelling, and aligning national dietary guidelines with the current scientific evidence on healthy eating and the environmen­tal impacts of our diet.

As an individual, you can help by adopting a healthier diet with less meat. You can call on business to reduce waste across their supply chain and offer more plant-based food options. And you can hold politician­s to account by demanding strong regulation of environmen­tal resource use and pollution.

Marco Springmann is a senior researcher on the Oxford Martin Programme on the Future of Food, at the University of Oxford. This article first appeared on The Conversati­on (theconvers­ation.com)

 ?? (Shuttersto­ck) ?? Food production is responsibl­e for a quarter of all greenhouse gas emissions
(Shuttersto­ck) Food production is responsibl­e for a quarter of all greenhouse gas emissions

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