Abstract

With the prevalence of eating out increasing, the food service sector has an increasing role in accelerating the transition towards more sustainable and healthy food systems. While life cycle-based approaches are recommended to be used as reference methods for assessing the environmental sustainability of food systems and supply chains, their application in the food service sector is still relatively scarce. In this study, a systematic review was conducted to examine the use and effectiveness of life-cycle based interventions in improving the sustainability of food services. This review found that life-cycle based approaches are not only useful for identifying hotspots for impact reduction, but also for comparing the performance of different sustainability interventions. In particular, interventions targeting the production phase, such as promoting dietary change through menu planning in which high-impact ingredients (e.g., animal products) are replaced with low-impact ingredients (e.g., plant foods), had the highest improvement potential. Interventions targeting other phases of the catering supply chain (e.g., food storage, meal preparation, waste management) had considerably lower improvement potentials. This review article provides valuable insights on how the sustainability of the food service sector can be improved without the burden shifting of impacts, which interventions to prioritise, and where knowledge gaps in research exist. A key recommendation for future research is to focus on combined life cycle thinking approaches that are capable of addressing sustainability holistically in the food service sector by integrating and assessing the environmental, social and economic dimensions of interventions.

Highlights

  • The food system is at the heart of some of the greatest global environmental and health challenges we face today

  • The most common topic was waste management in the food service sector, with 18 (43%) articles looking at the life cycle assessment (LCA) of food waste and different waste management strategies for catering

  • The remainder of the studies focused on the LCA of food service operations such as the various operational activities arising from the day-to-day running of a restaurant (n = 4), the LCA of different food production and distribution strategies (n = 2) and different methods of food preparation (n = 3)

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Summary

Introduction

The food system is at the heart of some of the greatest global environmental and health challenges we face today. The food system is the single biggest contributor to climate change, responsible for about one third of global anthropogenic greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions [1,2]. Livestock is the single largest user of land, a major driver of biodiversity loss, deforestation, land degradation and pollution [4]. The significant negative impacts of the current food system, ranging from the depletion and inefficient use of natural resources to terrestrial and aquatic biodiversity loss and the degradation of land, ecosystem services, air, soil and water quality [5], are unmistakable. In which traditional diets are progressively being replaced by diets high in processed foods, refined sugars, fats, oils, meat, dairy and animal products, are linked with obesity and other diet-related chronic diseases such as cancer, cardiovascular disease, stroke and diabetes [6,7] but are associated with higher environmental impacts [8]

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