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评估芬兰营养充足且气候影响较低的饮食成本。

Assessing the Cost of Nutritionally Adequate and Low-Climate Impact Diets in Finland.

作者信息

Irz Xavier, Sares-Jäske Laura, Tapanainen Heli, Niemi Jyrki, Paalanen Laura, Saarinen Merja, Valsta Liisa M

机构信息

Department of Economics and Management, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland.

Natural Resources Institute Finland, Bioeconomy Policies and Markets Group, Helsinki, Finland.

出版信息

Curr Dev Nutr. 2024 Apr 3;8(5):102151. doi: 10.1016/j.cdnut.2024.102151. eCollection 2024 May.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Dietary changes form an important component of the sustainability transition of food systems but could be hindered by the cost of sustainable diets.

OBJECTIVES

This study aimed to characterize the cost of nutritionally adequate and culturally acceptable diets with low-greenhouse gas emissions (GHGEs) in Finland.

METHODS

Two optimization models were built to find diets complying with nutritional and emissions requirements. The first model minimizes diet cost and the second one deviation from current diets. Both are calibrated to Finnish sociodemographic groups using dietary intake data, household budget survey data (for prices), and life cycle assessment coefficients (for GHGE). Three scenarios are simulated: "Health only" imposes only compliance with nutritional constraints, whereas "Health and GHGE-33%" and "Health and GHGE-50%" impose, in addition, minimum reductions in GHGE.

RESULTS

Minimum cost diets have a low-carbon footprint [-65% (-73%) for females (males)] and low cost [-69% (-73%) for females (males)] when compared with current diets but lack diversity and cultural acceptability. The more culturally acceptable health-only minimum deviation diets are marginally less costly and have a lower climate impact than baseline diets across all population groups. Reducing GHGE results in a substantial decrease in the cost of the minimum deviation diets. The lower cost of the minimum deviation diets with reduced GHGE results from both intercategory and intracategory substitutions.

CONCLUSIONS

Affordability is not the key obstacle to the adoption of nutritionally adequate and lower GHGE diets, but cultural acceptability is. Reducing the climate footprint of diets can generate side benefits in terms of nutrition and affordability, which confirms that dietary change should be central to the sustainability transition of the Finnish food system. However, more attention should be paid to the issues of taste, convenience, social norms, and other aspects determining the cultural acceptability of sustainable diets.

摘要

背景

饮食变化是食品系统可持续发展转型的重要组成部分,但可持续饮食的成本可能会阻碍这一进程。

目的

本研究旨在描述芬兰营养充足且文化上可接受的低温室气体排放(GHGEs)饮食的成本。

方法

构建了两个优化模型来寻找符合营养和排放要求的饮食。第一个模型使饮食成本最小化,第二个模型使与当前饮食的偏差最小化。两个模型均使用饮食摄入数据、家庭预算调查数据(用于价格)和生命周期评估系数(用于GHGE)针对芬兰社会人口群体进行校准。模拟了三种情景:“仅健康”情景仅要求符合营养限制,而“健康与GHGE-33%”和“健康与GHGE-50%”情景除了要求符合营养限制外,还要求最低限度地减少GHGE。

结果

与当前饮食相比,最低成本饮食的碳足迹较低[女性(男性)为-65%(-73%)]且成本较低[女性(男性)为-69%(-73%)],但缺乏多样性和文化可接受性。在所有人群中,文化上更可接受的仅健康最小偏差饮食比基线饮食成本略低且气候影响较小。减少GHGE会导致最小偏差饮食的成本大幅下降。降低GHGE的最小偏差饮食成本较低是由于类别间和类别内的替代。

结论

可承受性不是采用营养充足且GHGE较低饮食的关键障碍,文化可接受性才是。减少饮食的气候足迹可以在营养和可承受性方面产生附带效益,这证实了饮食变化应是芬兰食品系统可持续发展转型的核心。然而,应更多关注口味、便利性、社会规范以及其他决定可持续饮食文化可接受性的方面。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/7e4c/11090877/e1ea8af0a5b9/gr1.jpg

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