Emissions from animal-based food production twice that of plant-based food

Publicly released:
International
Photo by Martin Bisof on Unsplash
Photo by Martin Bisof on Unsplash

Global emissions from the production of animal-based food are about double the amount of emissions from plant-based food production, according to a model by international researchers. The researchers aimed to create a more consistent model to estimate the emissions from global food production as of 2010, and found the sector is responsible for 17.318 billion metric tonnes of CO2 emissions per year. 57 per cent of that figure comes from animal-based production, 29 per cent plant-based foods and 14 per cent other materials like rubber and cotton, the researchers say. 

Media release

From: Springer Nature

Environment: Quantifying food-related global greenhouse gas emissions

Global food production is responsible for greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions equivalent to 17,318 teragrams (17.318 billion metric tonnes) of CO2 per year — 57% of which corresponds to the production of animal-based foods and 29% to plant-based foodsestimates a study published in Nature Food. This calculation — based on data from over 200 countries circa 2010 — includes GHGs associated with animal feed, transportation and international trade, among other factors.

The adoption of plant-based diets has been widely recognized as an effective strategy to mitigate climate change, however, the exact potential contribution of such dietary shifts has yet to be calculated. Despite previous efforts to assess GHG emissions from agriculture, forestry and land use, food sector data are sparse, spatially inexplicit and methodologically inconsistent across agricultural sub-sectors.

By developing a consistent, unified data-modelling framework, Atul Jain and colleagues were able to build an open-access database to allow for the estimation of global GHG emissions (CO2, methane and nitrous oxide) from plant- and animal-based human food. This database includes a wide range of farming practices, agricultural products — totaling 171 crops and 16 animal products — and data from more than 200 countries around the year 2010. The team estimates that global food production was responsible for GHG emissions equivalent to 17,318 teragrams of CO2 per year, of which 57% corresponds to the production of animal-based food, 29% to plant-based foods and 14% to other utilizations, such as rubber and cotton. Farmland management and land-use change represented major estimated shares of the total GHG emissions (38% and 29%, respectively), and rice and beef were the largest contributing plant- and animal-based commodities (12% and 25%, respectively). South and Southeast Asia and South America were the largest emitters of production-based GHGs.

Attachments

Note: Not all attachments are visible to the general public. Research URLs will go live after the embargo ends.

Research Springer Nature, Web page The URL will go live after the embargo ends
Journal/
conference:
Nature Food
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: University of Illinois, USA
Funder: This research is partly supported by the US Department of Energy (number DE-SC0016323).
Media Contact/s
Contact details are only visible to registered journalists.