Greenhouse gas emissions from agricultural food production to supply Indian diets: Implications for climate change mitigation

Agriculture is a major source of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions globally. The growing global population is putting pressure on agricultural production systems that aim to secure food production while minimising GHG emissions. In this study, the GHG emissions associated with the production of major f...

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Autores principales: Vetter, Sylvia H., Sapkota, Tek Bahadur, Hillier, John, Stirling, Clare M., MacDiarmid, Jennie I., Aleksandrowicz, Lukasz, Green, Rosemary, Joy, Edward J. M., Dangour, Alan D., Smith, Pete
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Elsevier 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/79433
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author Vetter, Sylvia H.
Sapkota, Tek Bahadur
Hillier, John
Stirling, Clare M.
MacDiarmid, Jennie I.
Aleksandrowicz, Lukasz
Green, Rosemary
Joy, Edward J. M.
Dangour, Alan D.
Smith, Pete
author_browse Aleksandrowicz, Lukasz
Dangour, Alan D.
Green, Rosemary
Hillier, John
Joy, Edward J. M.
MacDiarmid, Jennie I.
Sapkota, Tek Bahadur
Smith, Pete
Stirling, Clare M.
Vetter, Sylvia H.
author_facet Vetter, Sylvia H.
Sapkota, Tek Bahadur
Hillier, John
Stirling, Clare M.
MacDiarmid, Jennie I.
Aleksandrowicz, Lukasz
Green, Rosemary
Joy, Edward J. M.
Dangour, Alan D.
Smith, Pete
author_sort Vetter, Sylvia H.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Agriculture is a major source of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions globally. The growing global population is putting pressure on agricultural production systems that aim to secure food production while minimising GHG emissions. In this study, the GHG emissions associated with the production of major food commodities in India are calculated using the Cool Farm Tool. GHG emissions, based on farm management for major crops (including cereals like wheat and rice, pulses, potatoes, fruits and vegetables) and livestock-based products (milk, eggs, chicken and mutton meat), are quantified and compared. Livestock and rice production were found to be the main sources of GHG emissions in Indian agriculture with a country average of 5.65 kg CO2eq kg−1 rice, 45.54 kg CO2eq kg−1 mutton meat and 2.4 kg CO2eq kg−1 milk. Production of cereals (except rice), fruits and vegetables in India emits comparatively less GHGs with <1 kg CO2eq kg−1 product. These findings suggest that a shift towards dietary patterns with greater consumption of animal source foods could greatly increase GHG emissions from Indian agriculture. A range of mitigation options are available that could reduce emissions from current levels and may be compatible with increased future food production and consumption demands in India.
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spelling CGSpace794332025-02-19T14:22:09Z Greenhouse gas emissions from agricultural food production to supply Indian diets: Implications for climate change mitigation Vetter, Sylvia H. Sapkota, Tek Bahadur Hillier, John Stirling, Clare M. MacDiarmid, Jennie I. Aleksandrowicz, Lukasz Green, Rosemary Joy, Edward J. M. Dangour, Alan D. Smith, Pete food security climate change agriculture diet greenhouse gas emission ecology Agriculture is a major source of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions globally. The growing global population is putting pressure on agricultural production systems that aim to secure food production while minimising GHG emissions. In this study, the GHG emissions associated with the production of major food commodities in India are calculated using the Cool Farm Tool. GHG emissions, based on farm management for major crops (including cereals like wheat and rice, pulses, potatoes, fruits and vegetables) and livestock-based products (milk, eggs, chicken and mutton meat), are quantified and compared. Livestock and rice production were found to be the main sources of GHG emissions in Indian agriculture with a country average of 5.65 kg CO2eq kg−1 rice, 45.54 kg CO2eq kg−1 mutton meat and 2.4 kg CO2eq kg−1 milk. Production of cereals (except rice), fruits and vegetables in India emits comparatively less GHGs with <1 kg CO2eq kg−1 product. These findings suggest that a shift towards dietary patterns with greater consumption of animal source foods could greatly increase GHG emissions from Indian agriculture. A range of mitigation options are available that could reduce emissions from current levels and may be compatible with increased future food production and consumption demands in India. 2017-01 2017-01-27T19:56:07Z 2017-01-27T19:56:07Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/79433 en Open Access Elsevier Vetter SH, Sapkota TB, Hillier J, Stirling CM, Macdiarmid JI, Aleksandrowicz L, Green R, Joy EJM, Dangour PD, Smith P. Greenhouse gas emissions from agricultural food production to supply Indian diets: Implications for climate change mitigation. Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment 237:234–241.
spellingShingle food security
climate change
agriculture
diet
greenhouse gas
emission
ecology
Vetter, Sylvia H.
Sapkota, Tek Bahadur
Hillier, John
Stirling, Clare M.
MacDiarmid, Jennie I.
Aleksandrowicz, Lukasz
Green, Rosemary
Joy, Edward J. M.
Dangour, Alan D.
Smith, Pete
Greenhouse gas emissions from agricultural food production to supply Indian diets: Implications for climate change mitigation
title Greenhouse gas emissions from agricultural food production to supply Indian diets: Implications for climate change mitigation
title_full Greenhouse gas emissions from agricultural food production to supply Indian diets: Implications for climate change mitigation
title_fullStr Greenhouse gas emissions from agricultural food production to supply Indian diets: Implications for climate change mitigation
title_full_unstemmed Greenhouse gas emissions from agricultural food production to supply Indian diets: Implications for climate change mitigation
title_short Greenhouse gas emissions from agricultural food production to supply Indian diets: Implications for climate change mitigation
title_sort greenhouse gas emissions from agricultural food production to supply indian diets implications for climate change mitigation
topic food security
climate change
agriculture
diet
greenhouse gas
emission
ecology
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/79433
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