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The global warming potential of two healthy Nordic diets compared with the average Danish diet

The potential greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from the production of food for three different diets are compared using consequential Life Cycle Assessment. Diet 1 is an Average Danish Diet (ADD); diet 2 is based on the Nordic Nutritional Recommendations (NNR), whilst diet 3 is a New Nordic Diet (NND)...

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Published in:Climatic change 2013, Vol.116 (2), p.249-262
Main Authors: Saxe, Henrik, Larsen, Thomas Meinert, Mogensen, Lisbeth
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Language:English
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description The potential greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from the production of food for three different diets are compared using consequential Life Cycle Assessment. Diet 1 is an Average Danish Diet (ADD); diet 2 is based on the Nordic Nutritional Recommendations (NNR), whilst diet 3 is a New Nordic Diet (NND) developed by the OPUS project. The NND contains locally produced Nordic foods where more than 75 % is organically produced. NNR and NND include less meat and more fruit and vegetables than the ADD. All diets were adjusted to contain a similar energy and protein content. The GHG emissions from the provision of NNR and NND were lower than for ADD, 8 % and 7 % respectively. If GHG emissions from transport (locally produced versus imported food) are also taken into account, the difference in GHG emissions between NND and ADD increases to 12 %. If the production method (organic versus conventional) is taken into account so that the ADD contains the actual ratio of organically produced food (6.6 %) and the NND contains 80 %, the GHG emissions for the NND are only 6 % less than for the ADD. When the NND was optimised to be more climate friendly, the global warming potential of the NND was 27 % lower than it was for the ADD. This was achieved by including less beef, and only including organic produce if the GHG emissions are lower than for the conventional version, or by substituting all meat with legumes, dairy products and eggs.
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subjects Air pollution
Atmospheric Sciences
Biological and medical sciences
Climate change
Climate Change/Climate Change Impacts
Climatology. Bioclimatology. Climate change
Dairy products
Diet
Diets
Earth and Environmental Science
Earth Sciences
Earth, ocean, space
Emissions
Exact sciences and technology
External geophysics
Food
Food industries
Foods
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
General aspects
Global warming
Greenhouse effect
Greenhouse gases
Legumes
Life cycle analysis
Life cycle assessment
Life cycle engineering
Meat
Meteorology
Miscellaneous
Nutrition research
Proteins
title The global warming potential of two healthy Nordic diets compared with the average Danish diet
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