Abstract

Public procurement has been highlighted as an important strategic tool to drive sustainable development. The present study aimed at providing direction for decreasing greenhouse gas emissions (GHGE) by 25% for the food purchased by child-care centers in the City of Copenhagen while simultaneously providing nutritionally adequate, affordable and tasty menus. Baseline data were provided by compiling food purchase data with datasets matching each food item to a proxy food item and further with databases containing nutrient and GHGE information. For each food item, the edible amount was estimated in order to evaluate nutritional content and GHGE per 10 MJ. Two scenarios were modeled, i.e., a plant-rich diet and a lacto-ovo vegetarian diet directed at children two to five years old based on current purchase practice. Finally, the diets were translated into guidelines for menu planning. Amounts of pulses, nuts and seeds, as well as dark green vegetables and plant-based fats, were increased substantially in the two scenarios, while animal fat was decreased and the amount of meat was either reduced or eliminated in the plant-rich and lacto-ovo vegetarian diets, respectively. These kinds of changes in public food procurement have the power to significantly affect the transition toward a more healthy and sustainable food system.

Highlights

  • The global food system, which encompasses production, processing, packaging, distribution, consumption and waste of food is currently responsible for about 25–30% of total human-made greenhouse gas emissions (GHGE) [2] as well as other environmental concerns including substantial biodiversity loss [3]

  • Through a scenario analysis based on actual purchase data from the City of Copenhagen, this paper demonstrates that it is possible to both improve nutritional content to meet dietary recommendations and at the same time decrease climate impact, without compromising cost

  • The present study represents the first step in shifting the food purchase for child-care centers in a more climate-friendly direction while improving nutritional content

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Summary

Introduction

The current Western food consumption pattern is unsustainable from both a health and environmental point of view [1]. The global food system, which encompasses production, processing, packaging, distribution, consumption and waste of food is currently responsible for about 25–30% of total human-made greenhouse gas emissions (GHGE) [2] as well as other environmental concerns including substantial biodiversity loss [3]. It is clear that the desired transition toward sustainable food consumption will not happen without a shift in people’s diets [1]. Several countries have incorporated sustainability of diets into their food-based dietary guidelines (FBDG), e.g., Sweden [4], Germany [5], UK [6] and the Netherlands [7]. In Denmark, a nationally adapted healthy plant-rich diet based on the global EAT-Lancet reference diet has been developed [8], providing the direction for the newly launched revision of climate-friendly

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