The American journal of clinical nutrition

Replacing one food item can greatly lower the carbon and water use of US diets

Updated

Abstract

Substituting beef with poultry or pork could reduce carbon and water scarcity footprints by an average of 9.6% and 5.9%, respectively.

  • 19.8% of individuals consumed beef items, which had the highest impact on greenhouse gas emissions.
  • Substitutions led to a significant mean decrease in carbon footprints of 48.4% and water scarcity footprints of 29.9% among those who made the changes.
  • Overall, the substitutions resulted in a mean increase in diet quality, as measured by the Healthy Eating Index, by 3.6%.
  • No other food substitutions had population impacts as large as those from replacing beef.

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