Abstract

There is great potential for reducing greenhouse gas emissions (GHGE) from public-sector meals. This paper aimed to develop a strategy for reducing GHGE in the Swedish school food supply while ensuring nutritional adequacy, affordability, and cultural acceptability. Amounts, prices and GHGE-values for all foods and drinks supplied to three schools over one year were gathered. The amounts were optimized by linear programming. Four nutritionally adequate models were developed: Model 1 minimized GHGE while constraining the relative deviation (RD) from the observed food supply, Model 2 minimized total RD while imposing stepwise GHGE reductions, Model 3 additionally constrained RD for individual foods to an upper and lower limit, and Model 4 further controlled how pair-wise ratios of 15 food groups could deviate. Models 1 and 2 reduced GHGE by up to 95% but omitted entire food categories or increased the supply of some individual foods by more than 800% and were deemed unfeasible. Model 3 reduced GHGE by up to 60%, excluded no foods, avoided high RDs of individual foods, but resulted in large changes in food-group ratios. Model 4 limited the changes in food-group ratios but resulted in a higher number of foods deviating from the observed supply and limited the potential of reducing GHGE in one school to 20%. Cost was reduced in almost all solutions. An omnivorous, nutritionally adequate, and affordable school food supply with considerably lower GHGE is achievable with moderate changes to the observed food supply; i.e., with Models 3 and 4. Trade-offs will always have to be made between achieving GHGE reductions and preserving similarity to the current supply.

Highlights

  • The emission of anthropogenic greenhouse gases has been established as a driver of climate change

  • We have shown that considerable reductions in greenhouse gas emissions (GHGE) could be with only small changes to the observed school food supply while ensuring nutritional quality or achieved with only small changes to the observed school food supply without compromising cost

  • Minimizing total relative deviation (TRD) enabled a greater degree of similarity to the observed food supply than models nutritional quality or cost

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Summary

Introduction

The emission of anthropogenic (human-induced) greenhouse gases has been established as a driver of climate change. It is one of three earth system processes that has reached critical levels [1] and is a major threat to the health of humans, animals, and natural habitats [2,3]. Today’s food production systems account for about 25% of the world’s anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions (GHGE), and contribute substantially to deforestation, the exploitation of land and freshwater, nitrogen. Res. Public Health 2019, 16, 3019; doi:10.3390/ijerph16173019 www.mdpi.com/journal/ijerph

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