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Switches in food and beverage product purchases can reduce greenhouse gas emissions in Australia

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posted on 2024-07-09, 01:42 authored by Allison Gaines, Maria Shahid, Daisy Coyle, Eden Barrett, Michalis HadjikakouMichalis Hadjikakou, Jason HY Wu, Fraser Taylor, Simone Pettigrew, Bruce Neal, Paraskevi Seferidi
AbstractSwitching between similar food and beverage products may reduce greenhouse gas emissions (GHGe). Here, using consumer data linked to 23,550 product-specific GHGe values, we estimated annual GHGe attributable to product purchases consumed at home in Australia and calculated reductions from specific switches. Potential changes to mean Health Star Rating, mean energy density and the proportion of ultraprocessed foods purchased were assessed. Approximately 31 million tonnes of GHGe were attributable to products consumed at home in 2019, the three highest contributors of GHGe being ‘meat and meat products’ (49%), ‘dairy’ (17%) and ‘non-alcoholic beverages’ (16%). Switching higher-emission products for ‘very similar’ lower-emission products could reduce total emissions by 26%. Switches to ‘less similar’ lower-emission products could lead to a 71% reduction. Switches had little impact on the average Health Star Rating, energy density of purchases and proportion of ultraprocessed foods purchased. Directing manufacturing and marketing towards lower-environmental-impact products and signposting such options to consumers are key.

History

Journal

Nature Food

Volume

5

Pagination

524-532

Location

Berlin, Germany

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

2662-1355

eISSN

2662-1355

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

6

Publisher

Springer

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