Chiriacò Maria Vincenza, Galli Nikolas, Latella Melissa, Rulli Maria Cristina
Euro-Mediterranean Center on Climate Change, CMCC Foundation, Lecce, Italy.
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Politecnico di Milano, Milano, Italy.
Glob Chang Biol. 2025 Feb;31(2):e70077. doi: 10.1111/gcb.70077.
Global food production faces significant challenges, acting as a primary driver of land use change, biodiversity loss, and greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, while a significant part of the world's population still struggles with food security and nutrition. In response, the EAT-Lancet Commission has proposed a healthy and sustainable planetary diet aimed at reducing resource-intensive foods like meat, starchy vegetables, and eggs, while suggesting a 67% increase in global per capita unsaturated oil consumption (e.g., soybean, sunflower, rapeseed) and the maintenance of the current palm oil intake. Using a spatially explicit land allocation algorithm, we assess how future global food oil demand for the expected 9.2 billion people by 2050 might impact forests and other carbon-rich ecosystems, along with associated land use change GHG emissions. We also evaluate the potential consequences of substituting palm oil with other vegetable oils, noting their different health and environmental implications. Results show that the projected 74% rise in global vegetable oil production for food by 2050 would require 317 million hectares of land-a 68% increase compared to maintaining current consumption. This could escalate pressure on forests and threaten global food security, potentially causing 115-120 million hectares of deforestation and 1163-1210 Mt. CO per year of GHG emissions from land use change, an 87% rise compared to maintaining current consumption rates. However, the EAT-Lancet diet foresees a reduction in other high-impact foods, potentially freeing other lands and reducing overall projected global food GHG emissions. Another relevant finding reveals that replacing palm oil with other oils would result in increasing land needs, up to 385 million hectares with a potential 148 million hectares of deforestation, and GHG emissions, up to 1525 Mt. CO per year, thus not representing a conclusive and viable solution towards sustainability. Instead, along with the growing importance of certification schemes for sustainable and deforestation-free food supply chains, ensuring sustainable production of all vegetable oils emerges as a critical strategy to prevent the conversion of biodiverse and carbon-rich lands.
全球粮食生产面临重大挑战,它是土地利用变化、生物多样性丧失和温室气体(GHG)排放的主要驱动因素,而世界上很大一部分人口仍在为粮食安全和营养问题而挣扎。作为回应,EAT-柳叶刀委员会提出了一种健康且可持续的全球饮食方案,旨在减少肉类、淀粉类蔬菜和蛋类等资源密集型食物的摄入,同时建议将全球人均不饱和油(如大豆油、葵花籽油、菜籽油)的消费量提高67%,并维持目前的棕榈油摄入量。我们使用一种空间明确的土地分配算法,评估到2050年预计的92亿人口未来全球食用油需求可能如何影响森林和其他富含碳的生态系统,以及相关的土地利用变化温室气体排放。我们还评估了用其他植物油替代棕榈油的潜在后果,并指出它们在健康和环境方面的不同影响。结果表明,预计到2050年全球用于食品的植物油产量将增长74%,这将需要3.17亿公顷土地——与维持当前消费量相比增加了68%。这可能会加大对森林的压力并威胁全球粮食安全,可能导致1.15亿至1.2亿公顷的森林砍伐以及每年11.63亿至12.1亿吨因土地利用变化产生的温室气体排放,与维持当前消费率相比增长了87%。然而,EAT-柳叶刀饮食方案预计会减少其他高影响食物的消费,这可能会腾出其他土地并减少预计的全球粮食温室气体总排放量。另一项相关发现表明,用其他油类替代棕榈油会导致土地需求增加,最多可达3.85亿公顷,潜在的森林砍伐面积为1.48亿公顷,温室气体排放最多可达每年15.25亿吨二氧化碳,因此这并不是实现可持续发展的决定性可行解决方案。相反,随着可持续和无森林砍伐的食品供应链认证计划的重要性日益增加,确保所有植物油的可持续生产成为防止生物多样和富含碳的土地被转化的关键战略。