Diet Impacts on Climate and Health: New Zealand’s Experience

This figure shows packages of ground beef.

emissions associated with seven life cycle stages: farming and processing, transportation, transit packaging, consumer packaging, warehousing and distribution, refrigeration, and supermarket overheads.
Beef and lamb ranked at the top of the list, representing 21 and 17 kg of carbon dioxide equivalents per kilogram of food (kgCO 2 e=kg)-a measure of what is known as climate impactalthough these figures are below previously reported global averages of 27 and 26 kgCO 2 e=kg. 8 Butter and cheese, meanwhile, were rated at 11 and 10 kgCO 2 e=kg, respectively, whereas eggs were rated at 4:9 kgCO 2 e=kg.
Highly processed sugary items (including baked goods, ice cream, and soft drinks) averaged in the 2-4 kgCO 2 e=kg range. Most plant-based foods contributed less than 2 kgCO 2 e=kg, although rice had a climate impact of 4:1 kgCO 2 e=kg and the nuts, seeds, and dried fruit category clocked in at 3:6 kgCO 2 e=kg. Rice production emits methane as organic material decomposes in flooded fields. The farming and processing of nuts, seeds, and dried fruit, on the other hand, requires more inputs of energy (e.g., fuel for irrigation, dehulling, and drying) and material (e.g., fertilizer). These foods are therefore relatively emissionsintensive, compared with other plant-based foods, Drew says.
Moreover, in a secondary analysis the researchers estimated that switching New Zealand's adult population to climate-friendly Even in New Zealand, where grazing is the norm for livestock production, beef had by far the highest estimated climate impact of all the foods assessed in this study. Image: © Salena Stinchcombe/Shutterstock.

Environmental Health Perspectives
094005-1 128(9) September 2020 A Section 508-conformant HTML version of this article is available at https://doi.org/10.1289/EHP6957. diets, while conforming to existing dietary guidelines, would lead to tens of billions of dollars in health care savings-and generally to longer, healthier lives. Despite local differences, "their analyses came to very similar conclusions as we reported for the world as a whole," says Walter Willett, a professor of epidemiology and nutrition at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, who served as cochair of the EAT-Lancet Commission's 2019 global study of human health and sustainable food production. 9 "Shifting to diets lower in animal-sourced foods-especially beef and lamb-and higher in legumes, nuts, soy foods, fruits, and vegetables would substantially reduce greenhouse gas production from the food system and also have many important health benefits." The authors echo the EAT-Lancet Commission's exhortation 9 that such shifts are not merely warranted but increasingly urgent in the face of accelerating climate change. Yet for a variety of reasons, progress will not come easily, says study coauthor Alex Macmillan, a University of Otago associate professor in environmental health. That is true even in environmentally conscious New Zealand, where more than 80% of the electricity is derived from renewable sources. 10 Population-scale change through revised dietary guidelines, financial incentives, and other policies is likely to encounter resistance from commercial interests, Macmillan says. Another challenge will be altering many individuals' long-held beliefs that meat and dairy products are essential parts of a healthy diet. "I think it's pretty clear from the evidence 11 that they don't have to be, and that we can have a healthy plant-based diet," she says.
Macmillan emphasizes that a successful transition to a healthier and more climate-friendly food system in New Zealand depends on the implementation of equitable policies that support the country's various population groups. "In a country with high levels of food poverty, we now need to focus on designing food policies that ensure all individuals have access to healthy and affordable climate-friendly food options," she explains.
Boyd Swinburn, a professor of population nutrition and global health at the University of Auckland who was not involved in the study, says he plans to incorporate the team's data into a dietmodeling program he first helped develop in 2018. 12 This will allow researchers and policy makers to compare the carbon footprints and costs of current New Zealander diets against a wide range of healthier options. "A lot of people are personally invested in a high-meat diet," Swinburn says, "so there is a lot of work to get the science out there to overcome some of these beliefs and the commercial pushback."