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SPECIALTY GRAND CHALLENGE article

Front. Nutr., 20 March 2014
Sec. Nutrition and Sustainable Diets

Grand challenges in nutrition and environmental sustainability

  • Nutrition Division, Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, Rome, Italy

Nutrition has always straddled sectors, health and agriculture being the obvious two. The environment sector is a logical and important partner sector for nutrition, although not often recognized as such.

Informally and incidentally, nutritionists have included environment sector issues in their research and practice. For example, food composition databases occasionally turn up nutrient data on food biodiversity (1). Food-based dietary guidelines sometime include a recommendation to decrease environmental footprints by eating locally, the Mediterranean Diet Pyramid being one such example (2).

Other activities are more specific. For example, Total Diet Studies, which analyze environmental contaminants in the food supply, are conducted periodically in many countries (3).

Recent formalized manifestations include the cross-cutting initiative on biodiversity for food and nutrition (4), sustainable diets (5), and sustainable consumption and production (6). As new as it all seems, reference and inferences linking nutrition and environmental sustainability can be found going back millennia in the writings and teachings of doctors and philosophers. If we look back nearly a century and a half we find one of the earliest university-level nutrition programs, developed by Ellen Swallow at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in the late nineteenth century. A nutrition pioneer, Swallow called her subject Human Ecology. Fundamental to this course was the principle that human health and environmental health were linked, with food and nutrition being the key connecting forces (7). Modern iterations of Human Ecology often do not include nutrition, unfortunately.

The era of industrial agriculture emerged in the twentieth century and environmental sustainability was uncoupled from human health. Nutrition became a clinical subject, nutrients became medicine. Meanwhile, food and agriculture became focused on dietary energy production, protein, and little else (8).

In the mid-1980s, there were some efforts to bring environmental sustainability back into the nutrition domain with the work of Gussow and Clancy on dietary guidelines for sustainability (9), but it took another 20+ years, and a host of actual and looming perils for this to take root in mainstream nutrition thinking (10).

The agriculture sector holds much of the blame for environment problems. Industrial agriculture, intensifying production of high-yield starchy staple through monoculture agriculture, leading to significant loss of food biodiversity; excessive use of agricultural chemicals to extract more dietary energy from every hectare while contaminating the very food it produces, along with groundwater and the soil; the greenhouse gas emissions from livestock industries to feed the ever-increasing demand for meat and dairy products. Global gatherings, from the Conference of the Parties of the Convention on Biological Diversity to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, raise alarms which are too often specific to the environment sector and ignored by agriculture. And global gatherings from the World Food Summit to the World Health Assembly raise alarms about dietary patterns, undernutrition, obesity and micronutrient malnutrition, which are too often specific only to health and fail to embrace the environmental implications. Occasionally the sectors come together to explore their common issues, e.g., the Commission on Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture addressing key issues in nutrition (11). Here and elsewhere, it is acknowledged that multi-sectoral solutions are required in order to avert collateral damage in one sector caused by policies and programs in another.

With the world’s population predicted to reach 9 billion by 2015, “sustainable production intensification” is one of the catch-cries. But how should it be defined and put into practice? One pragmatic suggestion is to approach it through a nutrition lens and define sustainable production intensification as, “nutrition-driven agriculture within planetary boundaries” (12).

Policies and actions at all levels require more and better intersectoral research to simultaneously address nutrition and environmental sustainability. Mistakes of the past need to be corrected, present day problems need solutions, and the future urgently needs protection. This is truly a frontier in nutrition.

References

1. FAO/INFOODS. Food Composition Database for Biodiversity (BioFoodComp 2.1). Available from: http://www.fao.org/docrep/019/i3560e/i3560e.pdf

2. Dernini S, Meybeck A, Burlingame B, Gitz V, Lacirignola C, Debs P, et al. Developing a methodological approach for assessing the sustainability of diets: the Mediterranean Diet as a case study. New Mediterr (2013) 3:28–36.

3. WHO. Global Environment Monitoring System – Food Contamination Monitoring and Assessment Programme (GEMS/Food) (2013). Available from: http://www.who.int/foodsafety/chem/gems/en/index.html

4. Convention on Biological Diversity. COP 8 Decision VIII/23, Eighth Meeting of the Conference of the Parties to the Convention on Biological Diversity; 2006 Mar 20-31; Curitiba, Brazil. Available from: http://www.cbd.int/agro/food-nutrition/default.shtml

5. Burlingame B, Dernini S. Sustainable Diets: Directions and Solutions for Policy, Research and Action. Rome: FAO (2012).

6. Moomaw W, Griffin T, Kurczak K, Lomax J. The Critical Role of Global Food Consumption Patterns in Achieving Sustainable Food Systems and Food for All. Paris: United Nations Environment Programme (2012).

7. Merchant C. American Environmental History: An Introduction. New York: Columbia University Press (2007).

8. Barrett CB. Measuring food insecurity. Science (2010) 327:825. doi: 10.1126/science.1182768

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9. Gussow JD, Clancy K. Dietary guidelines for sustainability. J Nutr Educ (1986) 18(1):1–5. doi:10.1016/S0022-3182(86)80255-2

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10. FAO. Greening the economy with agriculture – utilization. In: Meybeck A, Raymond R, editors. Greening the Economy with Agriculture. Rome: Swiss Federation and FAO (2013).

11. FAO. Review of Key Issues on Biodiversity and Nutrition. Rome: Commission on Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture (2013). CGRFA-14/13/8.

12. Garnett T. Food sustainability: problems, perspectives and solutions. Proc Nutr Soc (2013) 72:29–39. doi:10.1017/S0029665112002947

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Keywords: nutrition, biodiversity, sustainable diets, environment, food

Citation: Burlingame B (2014) Grand challenges in nutrition and environmental sustainability. Front. Nutr. 1:3. doi: 10.3389/fnut.2014.00003

Received: 11 February 2014; Accepted: 13 March 2014;
Published online: 20 March 2014.

Edited by:

Sandro Dernini, Forum on the Mediterranean Food Culture, Italy

Copyright: © 2014 Burlingame. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) or licensor are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.

*Correspondence: barbara.burlingame@fao.org

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