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Decreasing the overall environmental impact of the Dutch diet: how to find healthy and sustainable diets with limited changes

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 March 2017

Gerard FH Kramer
Affiliation:
Blonk Consultants, Gravin Beatrixstraat 34, 3111 PX Gouda, The Netherlands
Marcelo Tyszler
Affiliation:
Department of Sustainable Economic Development, Royal Tropical Institute (KIT), Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Pieter van’t Veer
Affiliation:
Division of Human Nutrition, Wageningen University, Wageningen, The Netherlands
Hans Blonk*
Affiliation:
Blonk Consultants, Gravin Beatrixstraat 34, 3111 PX Gouda, The Netherlands
*
* Corresponding author: Email hans@blonkconsultants.nl
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Abstract

Objective

To find diets optimised on nutrition and environmental impact close to the current Dutch diet and to identify the most effective and acceptable options for mitigating environmental impact.

Design

Linear programming was used to optimise diets of Dutch men and women aged 9–69 years, divided into ten age–gender groups. The analysis included nutrient composition, a metric for popularity and life cycle assessments of 207 food products. Greenhouse gas emissions, fossil energy use and land occupation were used to calculate a weighted score for the overall environmental impact. Optimised diets were solutions that minimised changes to the current diet while satisfying all nutritional constraints, with stepwise reductions in environmental impact.

Setting

The Netherlands.

Subjects

Dutch children and adults aged 9–69 years.

Results

Meat was always reduced. Vegetable, fruit and dairy contents remained similar, while bread, fatty fish and legumes increased. The extent of changes depended on age and gender. Beverages were not heavily reduced. Nutrients critical for the outcome were α-linoleic acid, retinol, Ca, Na, Se, dietary fibre, SFA, thiamin and Fe (women of childbearing age). Total protein, essential amino acids and carbohydrates were not critical.

Conclusions

Reducing meat is the most effective option for lowering the environmental impact of diets in all age–gender groups. Reducing alcoholic and non-alcoholic beverages is another option. Leaving out fish and dairy products are not. The differences in nutritional requirements related to age and gender have a significant effect on the composition of the optimised diets.

Information

Type
Research Papers
Copyright
Copyright © The Authors 2017 
Figure 0

Table 1 Selection of included nutrient requirements applied as lower and upper limits in the linear programming model

Figure 1

Fig. 1 Amounts of selected food groups and penalty score during the lowering of the constraint for overall environmental impact of the diet in pReCiPe points. Dutch men aged 31–50 years

Figure 2

Table 2 Composition and environmental impacts (pReCiPe, GHGE, FEU, LO) of current diets, diets optimised without environmental constraints (‘nutritionally optimised’) and diets at the ‘critical point’; as well as the contribution of each food group to the overall environmental impact of the total diet in pReCiPe (%pReCiPe). Dutch men and women aged 31–50 years

Figure 3

Table 3 Critical nutrients determining the outcome of optimal solutions in each age–gender group: men aged 31–50 years (m), men aged 51–69 years (M), women aged 31–50 years (w) and women aged 51–69 years (W). The count shows how often a nutrient was either outside the model boundaries or critical

Figure 4

Fig. 2 Contributions made by food groups to the overall environmental impact (pReCiPe) when the constraint on environmental impact is gradually lowered. Dutch men aged 31–50 years

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