Center for Public Health Nutrition, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, United States.
Adv Nutr. 2024 May;15(5):100213. doi: 10.1016/j.advnut.2024.100213. Epub 2024 Mar 18.
The food systems sustainability framework has 4 domains: nutrition, economics, environment, and society. To qualify as sustainable, individual foods and total diets need to be nutrient-rich, affordable, environmentally friendly, and socially acceptable. Pork is the most consumed meat globally, providing high-quality protein and several priority micronutrients. With research attention focused on plant-based diets, it is time to assess the place of pork meat protein in the global sustainability framework. First, not all proteins are equal. The United States Department of Agriculture category of protein foods includes meat, poultry and fish, eggs, beans and legumes, and nuts and seeds. These protein sources have different protein digestibility profiles, different per-calorie prices, and different environmental footprints, measured in terms of greenhouse gas emissions. Second, most analyses of animal-source proteins combine beef, pork, and lamb into a single category of red meat. Beef, pork, and lamb have different nutrient profiles, different protein costs, and different impacts on the environment. Future analyses of nutrient density and monetary and carbon costs of alternative diets would do well to separate pork from beef, lamb, and chicken. There are also different profiles of global food demand. Prior analyses of global Food and Agriculture Organization Statistical Database food balance sheets joined with World Bank country incomes have consistently shown that rising incomes across lower- and middle-income countries (LMIC) create a growing demand for meat to replace traditional plant proteins. Most of the observed increase has been for pork and chicken rather than beef. This ongoing LMIC protein transition toward more animal proteins may be irreversible as long as incomes grow. The present analyses explore the place of pork in sustainable healthy diets worldwide, given the need for high-quality protein and the predictable patterns of global food demand.
食品系统可持续性框架有 4 个领域:营养、经济、环境和社会。要想实现可持续性,单一食品和总膳食需要富含营养、价格实惠、对环境友好且被社会接受。猪肉是全球消费最多的肉类,提供高质量的蛋白质和几种优先微量营养素。随着研究注意力集中在植物性饮食上,现在是时候评估猪肉在全球可持续性框架中的地位了。首先,并非所有蛋白质都一样。美国农业部的蛋白质食品类别包括肉类、家禽和鱼类、蛋类、豆类和豆类以及坚果和种子。这些蛋白质来源具有不同的蛋白质消化率、不同的每卡路里价格和不同的环境足迹,以温室气体排放量来衡量。其次,大多数动物源蛋白质的分析将牛肉、猪肉和羊肉合并为一个红肉类别。牛肉、猪肉和羊肉具有不同的营养成分、不同的蛋白质成本和不同的环境影响。未来对替代饮食的营养密度和货币及碳成本的分析最好将猪肉与牛肉、羊肉和鸡肉分开。全球食品需求也存在不同的模式。先前对全球粮食及农业组织统计数据库粮食平衡表与世界银行国家收入的分析一致表明,低收入和中等收入国家(LMIC)的收入上升导致对肉类的需求增加,以取代传统的植物蛋白。观察到的增长大部分是猪肉和鸡肉,而不是牛肉。只要收入继续增长,这种 LMIC 蛋白质向更多动物蛋白的转变可能是不可逆转的。鉴于对高质量蛋白质的需求以及可预测的全球食品需求模式,本分析探讨了猪肉在全球可持续健康饮食中的地位。