Benchmarking the Swedish Diet Relative to Global and National Environmental Targets—Identification of Indicator Limitations and Data Gaps

To reduce environmental burdens from the food system, a shift towards environmentally sustainable diets is needed. In this study, the environmental impacts of the Swedish diet were benchmarked relative to global environmental boundaries suggested by the EAT-Lancet Commission. To identify local envir...

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Veröffentlicht in:Sustainability 2020, Vol.12 (4), p.1407
Hauptverfasser: Moberg, Emma, Karlsson Potter, Hanna, Wood, Amanda, Hansson, Per-Anders, Röös, Elin
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container_issue 4
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container_title Sustainability
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creator Moberg, Emma
Karlsson Potter, Hanna
Wood, Amanda
Hansson, Per-Anders
Röös, Elin
description To reduce environmental burdens from the food system, a shift towards environmentally sustainable diets is needed. In this study, the environmental impacts of the Swedish diet were benchmarked relative to global environmental boundaries suggested by the EAT-Lancet Commission. To identify local environmental concerns not captured by the global boundaries, relationships between the global EAT-Lancet variables and the national Swedish Environmental Objectives (SEOs) were analysed and additional indicators for missing aspects were identified. The results showed that the environmental impacts caused by the average Swedish diet exceeded the global boundaries for greenhouse gas emissions, cropland use and application of nutrients by two- to more than four-fold when the boundaries were scaled to per capita level. With regard to biodiversity, the impacts caused by the Swedish diet transgressed the boundary by six-fold. For freshwater use, the diet performed well within the boundary. Comparison of global and local indicators revealed that the EAT-Lancet variables covered many aspects included in the SEOs, but that these global indicators are not always of sufficiently fine resolution to capture local aspects of environmental sustainability, such as eutrophication impacts. To consider aspects and impact categories included in the SEO but not currently covered by the EAT-Lancet variables, such as chemical pollution and acidification, additional indicators and boundaries are needed. This requires better inventory data on e.g., pesticide use and improved traceability for imported foods.
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In this study, the environmental impacts of the Swedish diet were benchmarked relative to global environmental boundaries suggested by the EAT-Lancet Commission. To identify local environmental concerns not captured by the global boundaries, relationships between the global EAT-Lancet variables and the national Swedish Environmental Objectives (SEOs) were analysed and additional indicators for missing aspects were identified. The results showed that the environmental impacts caused by the average Swedish diet exceeded the global boundaries for greenhouse gas emissions, cropland use and application of nutrients by two- to more than four-fold when the boundaries were scaled to per capita level. With regard to biodiversity, the impacts caused by the Swedish diet transgressed the boundary by six-fold. For freshwater use, the diet performed well within the boundary. 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subjects Acidification
Agricultural commodities
Agricultural land
Agriculture
Biodiversity
Boundaries
Chemical pollution
Climate change
Datasets
Diet
Earth
EAT-Lancet
Emissions
Environmental impact
environmental indicators
Environmental Sciences
environmentally sustainable diets
Eutrophication
Food
food consumption
Food supply
Green & Sustainable Science & Technology
Greenhouse effect
Greenhouse gases
Indicators
Inventory
Miljövetenskap
Nutrients
Olives
Per capita
Pesticides
Planetary Boundaries
Sustainability
Sustainable development
Swedish Environmental Objectives
Variables
Vegetarianism
title Benchmarking the Swedish Diet Relative to Global and National Environmental Targets—Identification of Indicator Limitations and Data Gaps
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