Abstract
Food production creates 70% of the total anthropogenic water footprint, and it is the main cause of water pollution. Thus, more sustainable diets could contribute to the achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals. A linear programming-based stepwise optimization was designed to create dietary water footprint-reduced, culturally acceptable, and healthier diets in the case of Hungary based on a representative dietary survey. Optimization resulted in a considerable total dietary water footprint reduction (women: 18%; men: 28%) with a moderate dietary shift (~32%). Milk and dairies (observed: ~31.5%, optimized: ~20.5%) and meats and meat products (observed: ~28.0%, optimized: 28.9%) contributed the most to the dietary water footprint. In the water footprint–healthiness synergy, the vegetables, eggs, poultries, and fermented dairies were the most beneficial, increasing in amount, while fatty dairies, foods high in added sugar, and meat products were the most non-beneficial food sub-groups, decreasing in amount in the optimized diets. The problematic nutrients to fulfill in the optimized diets were energy, dietary fibers, sodium, vitamin D, zinc, vitamin B12, calcium, iron, and potassium at the maximum water footprint reduction. The study provides supporting evidence about the dietary water footprint–healthiness synergy for the further improvement of the national food-based dietary guideline.
Highlights
The Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) were defined to address the threatening global challenge of population growth, depleting natural resources, and climate change.In order to achieve the SDGs, several acts and action plans were developed to protect the environment and natural resources and to keep human activity within the local and planetary boundaries [1,2]
At phase-1 optimization (WFP_MIN models), the maximum possible total dietary water footprint reduction was 19.5% (557.0 l/day/capita) for women and 28.2% (1084.8 l/day/capita) for men, respectively
Dairies and milk were the major contributors to the total dietary water footprint for both sexes in the observed diets, while in the optimized diets the meats for men and dairies and milk for women indicated that meat consumption is not necessarily the center of the sustainable diet problem in the context of Hungary and the water footprint
Summary
The Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) were defined to address the threatening global challenge of population growth, depleting natural resources, and climate change. According to the concept of Water–Energy–Food (WEF) nexus, water, energy, and food security are closely connected to each other and related to the consumer level, and the issues linked to this nexus are targeted by the 2nd, 6th, and 7th SDGs [1]. The European Union policymakers set a target to ensure Europe’s food and nutrition security through the SUSFANS Sustainable nutrition is a holistic and complex approach to address the harmful environmental pollution and resource use related to food production and consumption
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