Environmental analyses to inform transitions to sustainable diets in developing countries: case studies for Vietnam and Kenya

Purpose Sustainable diets are an environmental, economic, and public health imperative, but identifying clear intervention points is challenging. Decision-making will require descriptive analyses from a variety of perspectives, even under the inevitable uncertainty introduced by limited data. This...

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Autores principales: Heller, Martin C., Walchale, Abhijeet, Heard, Brent R., Hoey, Lesli, Khoury, Colin K., Haan, Stef de, Burra, Dharani Dhar, Thi, Thanh Duong, Osiemo, Jamleck, Thi Huong, Trinh, Jones, Andrew D.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Springer 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/101990
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author Heller, Martin C.
Walchale, Abhijeet
Heard, Brent R.
Hoey, Lesli
Khoury, Colin K.
Haan, Stef de
Burra, Dharani Dhar
Thi, Thanh Duong
Osiemo, Jamleck
Thi Huong, Trinh
Jones, Andrew D.
author_browse Burra, Dharani Dhar
Haan, Stef de
Heard, Brent R.
Heller, Martin C.
Hoey, Lesli
Jones, Andrew D.
Khoury, Colin K.
Osiemo, Jamleck
Thi Huong, Trinh
Thi, Thanh Duong
Walchale, Abhijeet
author_facet Heller, Martin C.
Walchale, Abhijeet
Heard, Brent R.
Hoey, Lesli
Khoury, Colin K.
Haan, Stef de
Burra, Dharani Dhar
Thi, Thanh Duong
Osiemo, Jamleck
Thi Huong, Trinh
Jones, Andrew D.
author_sort Heller, Martin C.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Purpose Sustainable diets are an environmental, economic, and public health imperative, but identifying clear intervention points is challenging. Decision-making will require descriptive analyses from a variety of perspectives, even under the inevitable uncertainty introduced by limited data. This study uses existing data to provide a diet-level perspective on environmental impact from food production in the case study countries of Vietnam and Kenya. Methods FAO food supply data at decadal time steps were used as a proxy for national average diets in Vietnam and Kenya. We combined these data with estimates of the greenhouse gas emissions (GHGE) and water use impact associated with producing food commodities. Generic GHGE factors were derived from a survey of the life cycle assessment literature. Country- and commodity-specific blue water use estimates were used, reflecting country-of-origin for import-dominated commodities. The AWARE characterization model was used to offer a diet-associated water scarcity footprint. Trends in diet-associated environmental impacts were interpreted in light of diet shifts, economic development trends, and other factors. Results and discussion Increasing per capita food supply in Vietnam, and in particular increases in meat, have led to rising diet-associated per capita GHGE. While supply of beef remains 5.2 times smaller than pork—the dominant meat—increases in beef demand in the past decade have resulted in it becoming second only to rice in contribution to diet GHGE. The water use and water scarcity footprint in Vietnam follow an increasing trend comparable to food supply. On the other hand, historically consistent levels of dairy and beef in Kenya dominate diet-level GHGE. Water use associated with the Kenyan diet shows marked increases between the 1990s and 2000s due to imports of wheat and rice from water-stressed regions. Environmental performance data for characteristic food production systems in these and other developing countries are needed to improve the representativeness and reliability of such assessments. Conclusions Despite data limitations, the methods and results presented here may offer a fresh perspective in sustainable development policy deliberations, as they offer an entry point to linking environmental impact and consumption behaviors and can elucidate otherwise obscure or unexpected outcomes. A clear need emerges for further environmental analysis of dominant production systems within both Vietnam and Kenya.
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spelling CGSpace1019902025-11-12T05:56:04Z Environmental analyses to inform transitions to sustainable diets in developing countries: case studies for Vietnam and Kenya Heller, Martin C. Walchale, Abhijeet Heard, Brent R. Hoey, Lesli Khoury, Colin K. Haan, Stef de Burra, Dharani Dhar Thi, Thanh Duong Osiemo, Jamleck Thi Huong, Trinh Jones, Andrew D. decision making toma de decisiones greenhouse gases gases de efecto invernadero sustainable development food production kenya food supply vietnam Purpose Sustainable diets are an environmental, economic, and public health imperative, but identifying clear intervention points is challenging. Decision-making will require descriptive analyses from a variety of perspectives, even under the inevitable uncertainty introduced by limited data. This study uses existing data to provide a diet-level perspective on environmental impact from food production in the case study countries of Vietnam and Kenya. Methods FAO food supply data at decadal time steps were used as a proxy for national average diets in Vietnam and Kenya. We combined these data with estimates of the greenhouse gas emissions (GHGE) and water use impact associated with producing food commodities. Generic GHGE factors were derived from a survey of the life cycle assessment literature. Country- and commodity-specific blue water use estimates were used, reflecting country-of-origin for import-dominated commodities. The AWARE characterization model was used to offer a diet-associated water scarcity footprint. Trends in diet-associated environmental impacts were interpreted in light of diet shifts, economic development trends, and other factors. Results and discussion Increasing per capita food supply in Vietnam, and in particular increases in meat, have led to rising diet-associated per capita GHGE. While supply of beef remains 5.2 times smaller than pork—the dominant meat—increases in beef demand in the past decade have resulted in it becoming second only to rice in contribution to diet GHGE. The water use and water scarcity footprint in Vietnam follow an increasing trend comparable to food supply. On the other hand, historically consistent levels of dairy and beef in Kenya dominate diet-level GHGE. Water use associated with the Kenyan diet shows marked increases between the 1990s and 2000s due to imports of wheat and rice from water-stressed regions. Environmental performance data for characteristic food production systems in these and other developing countries are needed to improve the representativeness and reliability of such assessments. Conclusions Despite data limitations, the methods and results presented here may offer a fresh perspective in sustainable development policy deliberations, as they offer an entry point to linking environmental impact and consumption behaviors and can elucidate otherwise obscure or unexpected outcomes. A clear need emerges for further environmental analysis of dominant production systems within both Vietnam and Kenya. 2020-07 2019-07-02T13:19:13Z 2019-07-02T13:19:13Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/101990 en Open Access application/pdf Springer Heller, Martin C.; Walchale, Abhijeet; Heard, Brent R.; Hoey, Lesli ; Khoury, Colin K.; Haan, Stef de; Burra, Dharani Dhar; Thi, Thanh Duong; Osiemo, Jamleck ; Thi Huong, Trinh & Jones, Andrew D. (2020). Environmental analyses to inform transitions to sustainable diets in developing countries: case studies for Vietnam and Kenya. International Journal of Life Cycle Assessment, 25 p. 1183-1196.
spellingShingle decision making
toma de decisiones
greenhouse gases
gases de efecto invernadero
sustainable development
food production
kenya
food supply
vietnam
Heller, Martin C.
Walchale, Abhijeet
Heard, Brent R.
Hoey, Lesli
Khoury, Colin K.
Haan, Stef de
Burra, Dharani Dhar
Thi, Thanh Duong
Osiemo, Jamleck
Thi Huong, Trinh
Jones, Andrew D.
Environmental analyses to inform transitions to sustainable diets in developing countries: case studies for Vietnam and Kenya
title Environmental analyses to inform transitions to sustainable diets in developing countries: case studies for Vietnam and Kenya
title_full Environmental analyses to inform transitions to sustainable diets in developing countries: case studies for Vietnam and Kenya
title_fullStr Environmental analyses to inform transitions to sustainable diets in developing countries: case studies for Vietnam and Kenya
title_full_unstemmed Environmental analyses to inform transitions to sustainable diets in developing countries: case studies for Vietnam and Kenya
title_short Environmental analyses to inform transitions to sustainable diets in developing countries: case studies for Vietnam and Kenya
title_sort environmental analyses to inform transitions to sustainable diets in developing countries case studies for vietnam and kenya
topic decision making
toma de decisiones
greenhouse gases
gases de efecto invernadero
sustainable development
food production
kenya
food supply
vietnam
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/101990
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