私たちが食べるものの隠れたコストを明らかにする(Revealing the hidden costs of what we eat)

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2024-11-18 カリフォルニア大学サンタバーバラ校(UCSB)

カリフォルニア大学サンタバーバラ校の研究者らは、インド、地中海、EAT-Lancet(主に植物ベースのフレキシタリアン)、各国の食事ガイドラインに基づく4種類の食事パターンへの世界的な移行が環境に与える影響を分析しました。その結果、インドの食事パターンは食料生産に伴う環境負荷を約20.9%削減する一方、各国の食事ガイドラインに基づくパターンは約35.2%の増加をもたらす可能性があることが判明しました。この研究は、食事の選択が地球規模での環境負荷に与える影響を明らかにし、持続可能な食生活への移行の重要性を強調しています。

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世界的な食生活の変化による環境圧力の分布 The distribution of environmental pressures from global dietary shift

Joseph M DeCesaro, Edward H Allison, Gage Clawson, Melanie Frazier, Jessica A Gephart, Christina C Hicks, Kirsty L Nash, David R Williams and Benjamin S Halpern

Environmental Research Letters  Published: 28 October 2024

DOI:10.1088/1748-9326/ad8509

私たちが食べるものの隠れたコストを明らかにする(Revealing the hidden costs of what we eat)

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.

1900環境一般
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