Division of Human Nutrition and Health, Wageningen University and Research, Postbox 17, 6700 AA, Wageningen, Gelderland, The Netherlands.
Operations Research and Logistics Group, Wageningen University and Research, Wageningen, Gelderland, The Netherlands.
Eur J Nutr. 2023 Aug;62(5):2115-2128. doi: 10.1007/s00394-023-03135-7. Epub 2023 Mar 23.
To reduce the environmental impact of Western diets, a reduction of meat consumption and a substitution by plant-based protein sources is needed. This protein transition will affect the quantity and quality of dietary protein. Therefore, the aim of this study was to evaluate the protein adequacy of diets optimized for nutritional health and diet-related greenhouse gas emission (GHGE).
Data from 2150 adult participants of the Dutch National Food Consumption Survey were used, with diet assessed using two non-consecutive 24 h dietary recalls. Utilizable protein of current diets per day was based on meal composition and the Protein Digestibility-Corrected Amino Acid Score and was compared to protein requirements. Optimized diets were derived as linear combinations of current diets that minimized GHGE and maximized the Dutch Healthy Diet 2015 score, with/without constraints to keep dietary change within 33% of current consumption. Protein adequacy was evaluated in both current and optimized diets.
In all age and gender strata, the healthiest diets had higher GHGE, the most sustainable diets had the lowest dietary quality, though higher than current diets, and protein adequacy remained sufficient. When limiting dietary change to 33% of current consumption, in the most promising trade-off diet GHGE was reduced by 12-16%. The current diet provided 1.4-2.2 times the required amount of utilizable protein.
These results suggest that a realistic aim for the next decade might be to reduce diet-related GHGE to 12-16% of the current levels without compromising protein adequacy and diet quality. To achieve global targets, upstream food system transformations are needed with subsequent dietary changes.
为了减少西方饮食对环境的影响,需要减少肉类消费,并以植物性蛋白质来源替代。这种蛋白质的转变将影响膳食蛋白质的数量和质量。因此,本研究旨在评估为营养健康和与饮食相关的温室气体排放(GHGE)优化的饮食的蛋白质充足性。
使用了 2150 名荷兰国家食品消费调查的成年参与者的数据,通过两次非连续的 24 小时膳食回忆来评估饮食。每天当前饮食的可利用蛋白质基于膳食组成和蛋白质消化率校正氨基酸评分,并与蛋白质需求进行比较。优化的饮食是通过最小化 GHGE 并最大化荷兰健康饮食 2015 评分的当前饮食的线性组合得出的,有/没有约束条件,使饮食变化保持在当前消费的 33%以内。在当前和优化的饮食中都评估了蛋白质的充足性。
在所有年龄和性别阶层中,最健康的饮食具有更高的 GHGE,最可持续的饮食具有最低的饮食质量,尽管高于当前饮食,但蛋白质充足性仍然充足。当将饮食变化限制在当前消费的 33%以内时,在最有前途的权衡饮食中,GHGE 减少了 12-16%。当前饮食提供的可利用蛋白质是所需量的 1.4-2.2 倍。
这些结果表明,未来十年的一个现实目标可能是将与饮食相关的 GHGE 减少到当前水平的 12-16%,而不影响蛋白质充足性和饮食质量。为了实现全球目标,需要对上游食品系统进行转型,随后进行饮食变化。