Department of Nutritional Sciences, Temerty Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
School of Life and Environmental Sciences, Faculty of Science, Engineering and Built Environment, Deakin University, Melbourne, VIC, Australia.
Lancet Planet Health. 2024 Apr;8 Suppl 1:S18. doi: 10.1016/S2542-5196(24)00083-4.
Given the urgency of transitioning towards sustainable nutrition, dietary shifts that provide co-benefits to human health and the environment are imperative. There is currently no database of the environmental impacts of foods that reflects Canada's unique geographical and agri-climatic context and regional inputs and emissions. To determine sustainable diets, harmonising nutritional considerations with environmental impacts is also essential for an equitable comparison of foods. We aimed to develop a Canadian Food Life Cycle Inventory database and a multidimensional index to enable a joint assessment of the health and environmental impacts of foods in Canada.
The Canadian Food Life Cycle Inventory database uses life cycle assessment methodology to evaluate environmental impacts. The datasets mirror Canada's food consumption patterns, averaging the spectrum of agricultural practices weighted by domestic production and import shares. The database is structured according to the nomenclature and categorisation of the Canadian Nutrient File. Environmental sustainability is assessed using a cradle-to-grave approach, including indicators such as greenhouse gas emissions, eutrophication, particulate matter, freshwater usage, land use, non-renewable energy consumption, and food loss and waste. Environmental impacts are quantified through an environmental impact score (EIS) assigned to each impact category for a given food. The EIS-nutrition (EIS-N) integrates the evaluation of nutritional quality with environmental impacts using Nutri-Score, a validated food nutrient-profiling tool. The EIS-N is modelled as a ratio of the EIS to the Nutri-Score values.
Preliminary results show the greatest environmental impacts for animal-based foods, particularly beef, in agreement with current literature. Foods with greater nutritional quality also generally show greater environmental sustainability, with some exceptions for particular impact categories.
The database and index have potential to serve as powerful tools to support researchers, policy makers, and consumers, harnessing big data to drive efficient food and climate solutions for systems transformation.
Province of Ontario and University of Toronto, CIHR SMART Healthy Cities Training Platform, and University of Toronto's Temerty Faculty of Medicine.
鉴于向可持续营养过渡的紧迫性,必须进行既能改善人类健康又能有益于环境的饮食结构转变。目前,没有一个数据库可以反映加拿大独特的地理和农业气候背景以及区域投入和排放情况,从而对食品的环境影响进行全面评估。为了确定可持续饮食,协调营养考虑因素与环境影响对于公平比较食品也至关重要。我们旨在开发一个加拿大食品生命周期清单数据库和一个多维指数,以实现对加拿大食品的健康和环境影响进行联合评估。
加拿大食品生命周期清单数据库使用生命周期评估方法来评估环境影响。该数据集反映了加拿大的食品消费模式,平均加权了国内生产和进口份额的各种农业实践范围。该数据库根据加拿大营养文件的命名法和分类结构进行构建。环境可持续性采用从摇篮到坟墓的方法进行评估,包括温室气体排放、富营养化、颗粒物、淡水使用、土地利用、不可再生能源消耗以及食物损失和浪费等指标。通过为给定食品分配每个影响类别中的环境影响得分 (EIS) 来量化环境影响。EIS-营养 (EIS-N) 使用经过验证的食品营养成分分析工具 Nutri-Score ,将营养质量评估与环境影响相结合进行整合。EIS-N 被建模为 EIS 与 Nutri-Score 值的比值。
初步结果表明,动物源性食品,尤其是牛肉,对环境的影响最大,这与当前文献一致。具有更高营养质量的食品通常也具有更高的环境可持续性,但某些特定影响类别除外。
该数据库和指数有可能成为支持研究人员、政策制定者和消费者的强大工具,利用大数据为系统转型推动高效的食品和气候解决方案。
安大略省和多伦多大学、加拿大卫生研究院 SMART 健康城市培训平台以及多伦多大学 Temerty 医学院。