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Healthy and sustainable diets – PNR 69
Alexi Ernstoff Expert in food systems sustainability – Quantis
Marlyne Sahakian Assistant Professor, Department of Sociology University of Geneva
Olivier Jolliet Professor of Environmental Health Sciences, University of Michigan
12 January 2021
2
What do these things have in common?
3
Priority areas for win-win policies
Swiss men, especially of high education levels
Alcohol
Processed meat (especially imported)
Refined grains
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How to determine where to prioritize?
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Aim to prioritize
https://www.mdpi.com/2072-6643/12/9/2745
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Overview of results for climate change (Food)
Insignificant number of respondents
Insignificant number of respondents
women
men
7
Overview of results for climate change (Food)
Insignificant number of respondents
Insignificant number of respondents
women
men
8
Overview of results for climate change (Food)Total per person carbon budget
Insignificant number of respondents
Insignificant number of respondents
https://www.bafu.admin.ch/bafu/en/home/topics/climate/in-brief.html
women
men
9
Insignificant number of respondents
Insignificant number of respondents
Overview of results for health impacts
women
men
10
Main findings & policy advice
▪ Swiss men have high animal product consumption and alcohol consumption.
▪ Whole grain consumption is too low for the entire population.
▪ All diets have too high of greenhouse gas emission to be sustainable.
How to change this?
▪ Policies that decrease agricultural production impacts.
▪ The work by the sociologists show: policies should take advantage of addressing social context of food choice with respect to desire to eat local, differences between men and women, changes in life (ex: university, pregnancy, moving, marriage), and convenience (ex: healthy and sustainable food at the train station).
Thank you
Alexi Ernstoff [email protected]://www.linkedin.com/in/alexi-ernstoff-0b81bb28/