The food-climate connection - Science Club

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Monday, October 11, 2021

The food-climate connection

It seems obvious, but sometimes we need a reminder. Food comes from nature. The food-climate connection

It seems obvious, but sometimes we need a reminder. Food comes from nature. So everything we eat has an impact on the planet—from how it's grown, to how it's packaged, to how it gets where it’s going, how it's cooked, and at the end of the meal, where it winds up (say, your tummy, the trash or a compost pile).

A lot of that impact is on our climate. Forests like the Amazon and the Gran Chaco, grasslands like the Okavango Delta, savannahs like the Cerrado, mangroves and other habitat are cleared to plant crops or graze livestock. That clearing both causes greenhouse gases to be released and in turn means fewer trees, plants, and healthy soils left to store carbon. Transporting food takes energy and fossil fuels. If you eat animal proteins, they need to eat too which takes more land for more crops—and some of them burp and emit methane, another toxic greenhouse gas. And food that doesn’t get eaten—both edible leftovers and inedible peels and scraps—give off carbon and methane when left to rot in landfills.

Getting Below Zero

All of this adds up. Global food systems are responsible for between 25-35% of human-caused emissions. So, to address the climate crisis—in addition to things like shifting to renewable energy sources and rethinking our transportation systems—we also need to significantly change the ways we use land for agriculture and think differently about what we eat. And with a growing, hungry, diverse population, we need to do it quickly.

Luckily, our food systems also represent our biggest opportunity. We can re-envision agriculture as part of the solution for both climate and nature. Farmers and ranchers can produce enough food to feed everyone using climate-smart methods like planting cover crops, choosing efficient irrigation, and using rotational grazing so livestock help keep grasslands and soils healthy. Businesses can work with local communities and Indigenous peoples to ensure forests and other habitats aren’t destroyed while making their products.

Agriculture is the only sector that has the potential to get below zero, or negative emissions, because rehabilitating soils and re-planting forests can pull carbon out of the atmosphere. Natural habitats and resilient farming systems will also help us prepare to face more extreme weather events and other global challenges like food security.

How You Can Help

We all eat so we can all be part of the solution. Here’s a few of the things you can do:

  • Choose to eat healthy, diverse diets, and try to avoid heavily processed and packaged foods;
  • Vote with our dollars and with our voices for more sustainably sourced and developed products;
  • Avoid overbuying and overconsuming;
  • Eliminate waste from our kitchens and habits and applaud those friends, companies, and food service establishments who join this fight along with us;
  • Compost what you can’t prevent or reuse;
  • Know your food sources, both by getting to know your farmers and ranchers and by choosing brands that emphasize transparent supply chains with sustainable producers.

While there are emerging technologies, alternative food options, and innovative ideas arising every day, there is no silver bullet. We need to put all options on the table, and we need collaboration and innovation across the entire system.


 

It seems obvious, but sometimes we need a reminder. Food comes from nature. The food-climate connection

It seems obvious, but sometimes we need a reminder. Food comes from nature. So everything we eat has an impact on the planet—from how it's grown, to how it's packaged, to how it gets where it’s going, how it's cooked, and at the end of the meal, where it winds up (say, your tummy, the trash or a compost pile).

A lot of that impact is on our climate. Forests like the Amazon and the Gran Chaco, grasslands like the Okavango Delta, savannahs like the Cerrado, mangroves and other habitat are cleared to plant crops or graze livestock. That clearing both causes greenhouse gases to be released and in turn means fewer trees, plants, and healthy soils left to store carbon. Transporting food takes energy and fossil fuels. If you eat animal proteins, they need to eat too which takes more land for more crops—and some of them burp and emit methane, another toxic greenhouse gas. And food that doesn’t get eaten—both edible leftovers and inedible peels and scraps—give off carbon and methane when left to rot in landfills.

Getting Below Zero

All of this adds up. Global food systems are responsible for between 25-35% of human-caused emissions. So, to address the climate crisis—in addition to things like shifting to renewable energy sources and rethinking our transportation systems—we also need to significantly change the ways we use land for agriculture and think differently about what we eat. And with a growing, hungry, diverse population, we need to do it quickly.

Luckily, our food systems also represent our biggest opportunity. We can re-envision agriculture as part of the solution for both climate and nature. Farmers and ranchers can produce enough food to feed everyone using climate-smart methods like planting cover crops, choosing efficient irrigation, and using rotational grazing so livestock help keep grasslands and soils healthy. Businesses can work with local communities and Indigenous peoples to ensure forests and other habitats aren’t destroyed while making their products.

Agriculture is the only sector that has the potential to get below zero, or negative emissions, because rehabilitating soils and re-planting forests can pull carbon out of the atmosphere. Natural habitats and resilient farming systems will also help us prepare to face more extreme weather events and other global challenges like food security.

How You Can Help

We all eat so we can all be part of the solution. Here’s a few of the things you can do:

  • Choose to eat healthy, diverse diets, and try to avoid heavily processed and packaged foods;
  • Vote with our dollars and with our voices for more sustainably sourced and developed products;
  • Avoid overbuying and overconsuming;
  • Eliminate waste from our kitchens and habits and applaud those friends, companies, and food service establishments who join this fight along with us;
  • Compost what you can’t prevent or reuse;
  • Know your food sources, both by getting to know your farmers and ranchers and by choosing brands that emphasize transparent supply chains with sustainable producers.

While there are emerging technologies, alternative food options, and innovative ideas arising every day, there is no silver bullet. We need to put all options on the table, and we need collaboration and innovation across the entire system.


 

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