Ultra-processed food intake and diet carbon and water footprints: a national study in Brazil

Mar 3, 2022Revista de saude publica

Ultra-processed food consumption linked to diet-related carbon and water footprints in Brazil

AI simplified

Abstract

The contribution of to total energy intake is associated with a 10.1% increase in the water footprint of the Brazilian diet.

  • Higher consumption of ultra-processed foods correlates with increased water usage in the Brazilian diet.
  • The association between ultra-processed food intake and water footprint remains significant after adjusting for age, sex, education, income, and region.
  • Adjusting for total energy intake eliminated the association, suggesting that increased energy intake may mediate the relationship.
  • This finding highlights the environmental impact of dietary choices, particularly regarding water resources.

AI simplified

Key numbers

10.1%
Increase in Diet Water Footprint
Change from lowest to highest quintile of ultra-processed food consumption
19.61%
Contribution to Energy Intake
Percentage of total energy intake from

Full Text

What this is

  • This research examines the relationship between ultra-processed food consumption and the environmental impact of diets in Brazil.
  • Using data from a national dietary survey, the study assesses carbon and water footprints associated with different food types.
  • The findings indicate that higher consumption of correlates with increased water footprint but not carbon footprint.

Essence

  • Higher intake of in Brazil is linked to a 10.1% increase in the diet water footprint between the lowest and highest consumption quintiles, while the carbon footprint association is not significant after adjustments.

Key takeaways

  • contribute 19.61% of total energy intake but only account for 11.85% of the carbon footprint and 15.04% of the water footprint, showing a lower environmental impact per unit of energy compared to the overall diet.
  • The dietary water footprint increased by 10.1% from the lowest to the highest quintile of ultra-processed food consumption, indicating a significant association that is mediated by total energy intake.

Caveats

  • The study only evaluates carbon and water footprints, omitting other environmental impacts like biodiversity and waste generation. Additionally, the environmental coefficients used may not fully reflect local conditions.

Definitions

  • ultra-processed foods: Industrial formulations made mostly or entirely with substances extracted from foods, often chemically modified, with little whole food added.

AI simplified

what lands in your inbox each week:

  • 📚7 fresh studies
  • 📝plain-language summaries
  • direct links to original studies
  • 🏅top journal indicators
  • 📅weekly delivery
  • 🧘‍♂️always free