Estimated Effects of Future Atmospheric CO2 Concentrations on Protein Intake and the Risk of Protein Deficiency by Country and Region
Crops grown under elevated atmospheric CO concentrations (eCO ) contain less protein. Crops particularly affected include rice and wheat, which are primary sources of dietary protein for many countries. We aimed to estimate global and country-specific risks of protein deficiency attributable to anth...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Environmental health perspectives 2017-08, Vol.125 (8), p.087002 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Crops grown under elevated atmospheric CO
concentrations (eCO
) contain less protein. Crops particularly affected include rice and wheat, which are primary sources of dietary protein for many countries.
We aimed to estimate global and country-specific risks of protein deficiency attributable to anthropogenic CO
emissions by 2050.
To model per capita protein intake in countries around the world under eCO
, we first established the effect size of eCO
on the protein concentration of edible portions of crops by performing a meta-analysis of published literature. We then estimated per-country protein intake under current and anticipated future eCO
using global food balance sheets (FBS). We modeled protein intake distributions within countries using Gini coefficients, and we estimated those at risk of deficiency from estimated average protein requirements (EAR) weighted by population age structure.
Under eCO
, rice, wheat, barley, and potato protein contents decreased by 7.6%, 7.8%, 14.1%, and 6.4%, respectively. Consequently, 18 countries may lose >5% of their dietary protein, including India (5.3%). By 2050, assuming today's diets and levels of income inequality, an additional 1.6% or 148.4 million of the world's population may be placed at risk of protein deficiency because of eCO
. In India, an additional 53 million people may become at risk.
Anthropogenic CO
emissions threaten the adequacy of protein intake worldwide. Elevated atmospheric CO
may widen the disparity in protein intake within countries, with plant-based diets being the most vulnerable. https://doi.org/10.1289/EHP41. |
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ISSN: | 0091-6765 1552-9924 |
DOI: | 10.1289/ehp41 |