By Megan Rowling
Barcelona — By eating less meat and more fruit and vegetables, the world could avoid several million deaths per year by 2050, cut planet-warming emissions substantially, and save billions of dollars annually in healthcare costs and climate damage, researchers said.
A new study,
published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the
United States of America, is the first to estimate both the health and
climate change impacts of a global move towards a more plant-based diet,
they said.
Unbalanced diets
are responsible for the greatest health burden around the world, and our
food system produces more than a quarter of greenhouse gas emissions,
said lead author Marco Springmann of the Oxford Martin Programme on the
Future of Food.
"What we eat greatly influences our personal health and the global environment," he said.
The Oxford
University researchers modelled the effects of four different diets by
mid-century: a 'business as usual' scenario; one that follows global
guidelines including minimum amounts of fruits and vegetables and limits
on red meat, sugar and total calories; a vegetarian diet; and a vegan
diet.
Adopting a diet in
line with the global guidelines could avoid 5.1 million deaths per year
by 2050, while 8.1 million fewer people would die in a world of vegans
who do not consume animal products, including eggs and milk.
When it comes to
climate change, following dietary recommendations would cut food-related
emissions by 29 percent, adopting vegetarian diets would cut them by 63
percent and vegan diets by 70 percent.
Dietary shifts
could produce savings of $700 billion to $1,000 billion per year on
healthcare, unpaid care and lost working days, while the economic
benefit of reduced greenhouse gas emissions could be as much as $570
billion, the study said.
REGIONAL DIFFERENCES
The researchers
found that three-quarters of all benefits would occur in developing
countries, although the per capita impacts of dietary change would be
greatest in developed nations, due to higher rates of meat consumption
and obesity.
The economic value
of health improvements could be comparable with, and possibly larger
than, the value of the avoided damage from climate change, they added.
"The value of those
benefits makes a strong case for increased public and private spending
on programmes aimed to achieve healthier and more environmentally
sustainable diets," Springmann said.
The study looked at
regional differences which could be used to identify the most suitable
interventions for food production and consumption, Springmann said.
For example, lower
red meat consumption would have the biggest effect in East Asia, the
West and Latin America, while boosting fruit and vegetable intake was
found to be the largest factor in cutting deaths in South Asia and
sub-Saharan Africa.
Lower calorie
intake, leading to fewer overweight people, would play a key role in
improving health in the Eastern Mediterranean, Latin America and Western
nations, the study said.
But it will not be
easy. To achieve a diet that sticks to common guidelines would require a
25 percent increase in the number of fruits and vegetables eaten
globally, and a 56 percent cut in red meat.
Overall humans would need to consume 15 percent fewer calories, it said.
"We do not expect
everybody to become vegan," Springmann added. "But climate change
impacts of the food system will be hard to tackle and likely require
more than just technological changes. Adopting healthier and more
environmentally sustainable diets can be a large step in the right
direction."
Reporting by Megan Rowling, editing by Tim Pearce.
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