Abstract

Although vegetables are important for healthy diets, there are concerns about the sustainability of food systems that provide them. For example, half of fresh-market vegetables sold in the United States (US) are produced in California, leading to negative impacts associated with transportation. In Iowa, the focus of this study, 90% of food is imported from outside the state. Previous life cycle assessment (LCA) studies indicate that food consumption patterns affect global warming potential (GWP), with animal products having more negative impacts than vegetables. However, studies focused on how GWP, energy, and water use vary between food systems and vegetable types are less common. The purpose of this study was to examine these environmental impacts to inform decisions to buy locally or grow vegetables in the Midwest. We used a life cycle approach to examine three food systems (large-, mid-, and small-scale) and 18 vegetables commonly grown in/near Des Moines, Iowa. We found differences in GWP, energy, and water use (p ≤ 0.001 for each) for the three food systems with the large-scale scenario producing more emissions. There were also differences among vegetables, with the highest GWP for romaine lettuce (1.92 CO2eq/kg vegetable) approximately three times that of leaf lettuce (0.65 CO2eq/kg vegetable) at the large scale. Hotspots and tradeoffs between GWP, energy, and water use were also identified and could inform vegetable production/consumption based on carbon and water use footprints for the US Midwest.

Highlights

  • Mitigating the effects of climate change is a key challenge of our time

  • We developed an Life cycle assessment (LCA) to evaluate global warming potential (GWP), energy, and water used to produce 18 types of common vegetables at three scales

  • Comparisons for food system scale scenarios and vegetable types revealed that the large scale (LS) scenario produced greater environmental impacts for all vegetable types, whereas much overlap was found between the mid-sized scale (MS) and the SS scenarios

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Summary

Introduction

Mitigating the effects of climate change is a key challenge of our time (per the UNSustainable Development Goal 13 [1]). Mitigating the effects of climate change is a key challenge of our time Climate change currently threatens both human and natural systems [2]. Activists of all ages in the US and around the world have taken to the streets to raise awareness and support policies that will reduce carbon emissions [4,5]. To hit the target of less than a total increase of 1.5 ◦ C as set by the IPCC, carbon emissions need to be reduced by 45% over the ten years [6]. Food systems are a major source of greenhouse gases, and they contribute between 19% and 29% of total anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions (GHGE) world-wide [2]. Food systems include growing and harvesting plants and animals, processing, packaging, transporting, marketing, consuming, and disposing of food-related waste [7]

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