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MINI REVIEW article

Front. Sustain., 04 May 2022
Sec. Sustainable Consumption
This article is part of the Research Topic Achieving health equity: Sustainability of plant-based diets for human and planetary health View all 9 articles

Environmental Impact of Animal-Based Food Production and the Feasibility of a Shift Toward Sustainable Plant-Based Diets in the United States

\nAlan Espinosa-MarrnAlan Espinosa-Marrón1Kate AdamsKate Adams2Lea SinnoLea Sinno2Alejandra Cantu-AldanaAlejandra Cantu-Aldana2Martha TamezMartha Tamez2Abrania MarreroAbrania Marrero2Shilpa N. BhupathirajuShilpa N. Bhupathiraju2Josiemer Mattei
Josiemer Mattei2*
  • 1Department of Epidemiology, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA, United States
  • 2Department of Nutrition, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA, United States

Evidence consistently suggests that plant-based diets promote human and planetary health. Reducing large-scale animal-based food production generates environmental benefits, as the entire livestock agriculture chain plays an outsized role in greenhouse gas emissions, land change and degradation, and scarcity-weighted water use. However, substituting animal products with their plant-based counterparts must come with consideration of the nutritional quality and resource usage of plant-based food production and processing operations. Several policy reforms have been implemented at the national, state, and municipal levels in the United States to support a transition toward more plant-based diets. Federal programs such as the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program and the Dietary Guidelines for Americans generally promote the consumption of unprocessed plant-based foods but include little to no information on sustainability and the harmful environmental impact of animal-based foods. National policies are complemented by state efforts aimed at incentivizing produce purchased from local suppliers and encouraging resource-conserving agriculture. At the local level, public schools are implementing programs to promote plant-based protein on their menus, and urban gardens are sprouting across the country to increase access to organic farming. This mini-review examines these policy reforms and behavioral intervention strategies, based on the social-ecological model, and discuss their capacity and limitations to promote a shift toward sustainably produced plant-based diets in the United States. We conclude that transforming the food systems toward plant-based diets in the animal-centered United States requires multi-sector collaboration and context-specific policy solutions to address diet-related climate concerns without neglecting health, social, and financial constraints.

Introduction

Human nutrition and planetary health are deeply intertwined with food systems. Myriad studies demonstrate the significant potential of diets to both advance human health and environmental sustainability (Tilman and Clark, 2014; Aleksandrowicz et al., 2016; Alsaffar, 2016; Springmann et al., 2018; Clark et al., 2019; Eshel et al., 2019; Fresán and Sabaté, 2019; Hu et al., 2019; Willett et al., 2019; Jarmul et al., 2020; van Vliet et al., 2020). As more research on the stress that the current food system—particularly animal-based food production—places on the global environment comes into focus, food industry leaders, climate activists, and policymakers are driving change to promote diets rich in plant-sourced foods (Tziva et al., 2020).

According to the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics, plant-based dietary patterns—also referred to as plant-forward diets—entirely exclude or substantially decrease animal product consumption while maximizing fruits, vegetables, whole grains, legumes, nuts, and seeds intake (Melina et al., 2016). Extensive research has associated plant-based diets with a lower risk of chronic diseases (Melina et al., 2016; Yokoyama et al., 2017; Johannesen et al., 2020; Tran et al., 2020). The potential biological mechanisms underlying those health effects are mainly associated with the lower energy density, appropriate saturated/unsaturated fat ratio, and high fiber and antioxidant content (particularly polyphenols, carotenoids, vitamin C, and vitamin E) of minimally processed plant-based diets (Satija and Hu, 2018). However, limited availability of healthy, plant-based foods in some latitudes, together with processing and manufacturing techniques that can strip plant-derived foods of nutritional quality, present barriers to increasing access to quality plant-based diets. The regular consumption of highly processed plant-based products, including sugar-sweetened beverages; snacks high in added sugars, refined starches, sodium, and/or saturated fats; and other energy-dense, hyper-palatable products is one example (Gallagher et al., 2021).

The well-established environmental benefits of decreasing animal-sourced food consumption have led to a rise in popularity of plant-based diets, particularly in developed nations (Fresán and Sabaté, 2019). Animal production and consumption are responsible for a wide variety of environmental burdens that threaten sustainability, including greenhouse gas emissions (GHGEs), land use and degradation, scarcity-weighted water use, nutrient pollution (e.g., acidification and eutrophication), use of fertilizers and pesticides, and consumer-level food waste through the entire product food chain (Magkos et al., 2020). Among these, GHGEs, land degradation, and water use are large-scale and upstream environmental impacts that exacerbate climate change and ultimately determine subsequent environmental deterioration (e.g., natural disaster propensity, habitat and biodiversity loss, freshwater scarcity) in food systems (Aleksandrowicz et al., 2016). As such, we selected these three impact indicators to succinctly capture system-wide threats to the sustainability of global food production, which itself necessitates the mitigation of climate change and efficient natural resource use (García-Oliveira et al., 2022). Conscious that agriculture (primarily for animal-based food production) is responsible for ~30% of GHGEs, 70% of water use, and exceeds the one-third occupation of potentially cultivatable land (Herrero et al., 2013; Smith et al., 2015; Whitmee et al., 2015), this review examines the sustainability of the United States (US) food system by discussing GHGEs, land degradation and implications in water supply–widely regarded as the leading dietary-related indicators of environmental impact.

The environmental analysis draws upon research from global contexts, as the implications of dietary behavior and the food system in the US has far-reaching climate implications. In light of the extensive evidence available, this narrative review aimed to summarize the most influential environmental effects of a food system reliant on animal-based food products, contextualize examples of public health policies supporting production and consumption of plant-based foods using the social-ecological model, and discuss factors that accelerate and hinder a shift toward sustainable plant-based diets for US consumers.

Environmental Impact of Animal-Derived Foods

Sustainable diets are protective and respectful of biodiversity and ecosystems, culturally acceptable, accessible, economically fair and affordable, and nutritionally adequate. Land degradation, GHGs, and water use for food production are critical proxy metrics to evaluate dietary sustainability, as depicted in the following sections (Fanzo et al., 2012).

The Role of Meat Production and Consumption in GHGEs

Extensive literature suggests that current levels of animal production are unsustainable in the global food system, resulting in irresponsible natural resource use and substantial environmental harms (Alsaffar, 2016; Fresán and Sabaté, 2019; Jarmul et al., 2020). The EAT-Lancet Commission estimated that animal-derived food production, especially red meat, is responsible for a large proportion of GHGEs in the food system, including carbon dioxide, methane, and nitrous oxide (Willett et al., 2019). An estimated 88% of emissions in the life cycle of animal products are generated on-farm, with only 12% derived from food system activities after agricultural production (e.g., processing, refrigeration, transport, retail, waste). Feed crop production activities, including synthetic fertilizer production, irresponsible land and soil management, and non-renewable energy use, are major sources of these emissions (Woods et al., 2010; Vibart et al., 2021). On-farm emissions produced by activities during livestock rearing include enteric fermentation and manure management. Together, environmental livestock production alone accounts for 14–51% of total anthropogenic GHGEs (Soret et al., 2014). Differences in the impact of certain animal products, however, do exist. Lamb production, for example, emits an estimated 39 kg of carbon dioxide equivalents per kilogram of food (kgCO2eq/kg) compared to lower levels for beef (27 kgCO2eq/kg), cheese (14 kgCO2eq/kg), and eggs (4.8 kgCO2eq/kg). Plant-based foods generally produce less GHGEs across their life cycles, including rice (4.1 kgCO2eq/kg), dried fruit (3.6 kgCO2eq/kg), almonds (2.1 kgCO2eq/kg), tofu (2.0 kgCO2eq/kg), avocados (0.9 kgCO2eq/kg), tomatoes (1.1 kgCO2eq/kg), and peanuts (0.6 kgCO2eq/kg) (Environmental Working Group, 2011; Mejia et al., 2018; Willett et al., 2019; Seltenrich, 2020).

Of note, relative differences in the total GHGEs of plant-based products are largely influenced by production, processing, and other post-farm-gate activities. For example, air-freighted fruits and vegetables significantly contribute to total energy use and CO2 emissions in food supply chains (Saunders and Hayes, 2007). Certain rice cultivation strategies (e.g., continuous flooding, nitrogen fertilizer use) and low-yielding varieties also emit extensive quantities of methane (Jiang et al., 2017; Wang et al., 2021). The farming and processing of nuts, seeds, and dried fruit sometimes requires greater energy inputs (e.g., fuel for irrigation, dehulling, and drying), material (e.g., fertilizer) and water resources than equivalent volumes of animal-derived foods (Eshel et al., 2019; Seltenrich, 2020). Thus, a reduction in meat consumption by itself may not necessarily lead to improvements in sustainability. Replacement of animal foods in the diet must be thoroughly evaluated according to the nature of the substituted product. This approach encompasses public and private initiatives to shift food consumption toward a sustainable diet with foods consistently associated with low environmental impacts (Hyland et al., 2017).

Implications of Livestock Agriculture on Land Degradation

Land used as cropland or pastureland reaches about half of the ice-free land area of Earth, contributing to habitat clearance and species extinction (Tilman and Clark, 2014). Animal foods have particularly high ecological footprints, including milk and dairy products, and animal fat (Rosi et al., 2017). Estimations suggest that 0.85 ha/person (8,500 m2/person) are required annually to support an average global diet, with animal products accounting for as high as 87% of land use. Meat and fish alone account for almost half (44%) of land deterioration, largely due to terrestrial feed crop production for large-scale livestock and aquaculture operations (Davis et al., 2016; Rosi et al., 2017; Froehlich et al., 2018).

The US, a major global agricultural producer, contains approximately 391.5 M acres (1.58 M kilometers) of cropland, about a fifth of its total landmass and only 20% of which is used to grow food intended for direct human consumption; up to 42%, in contrast, is used for livestock feed or exports (Merrill and Leatherby, 2018). The high-intensity use of land for monoculture crop production results in a rapid rate of soil erosion and degradation, with about 90% of cropland losing soil at a rate 13 times above sustainable levels. US pastureland is similarly losing soil, with approximately 60% being overgrazed and subject to accelerated erosion (Baden et al., 2019). Using land for staple crops and livestock feed also implies carbon stock loss, with forest conversion (a proxy of deforestation) accounting for an estimated 2.9 Gt CO2 emissions (metric system) globally every year (Food Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, 2021).

Finite Boundaries of Water Supply Associated With Animal-Based Food Production

Freshwater use refers to the consumption of surface water (e.g., lakes, rivers, streams, reservoirs) and groundwater (e.g., aquifers) (Springmann et al., 2018). US food production uses about 80% of the country's available freshwater supply, more than any other activity (Clark et al., 2019). The water required to produce various foods and forage crops ranges from 500 to 2,000 L of water per kilogram of food produced, with animal protein production requiring about 100 times more water than that of grain. Although livestock watering directly uses only 1.3% of total agricultural water use, the water required for forage and grain production dramatically increase water requirements (Pimentel and Pimentel, 2003).

In the US, critical water issues exacerbated by agricultural practices include the pollution of surface and groundwater sources, over-drafting of aquifers, waterlogging and salinization of soils, wetlands loss and runoff, evaporation, and leakage from irrigation systems (Marlow et al., 2009). Studies suggest that progressively replacing animal products with plant-based foods could increase freshwater use up to 16% due to water-demanding crops, such as legumes, vegetables, and fruits (Aleksandrowicz et al., 2016; Springmann et al., 2018). Specific foods, such as nuts, also result in higher scarcity-weighted water use compared to dairy, eggs, processed meat, and fish (Clark et al., 2019). Transitions to plant-based diets in the US will thus require careful consideration of freshwater availability as well as innovations to improve irrigation efficiencies and reduce water pollution in plant-based food production.

An Overview of the Plant-Based Meat's Role in Sustainable Diets

With an abundance of research demonstrating the harmful environmental impact of the current animal agriculture-based food systems, protein alternatives to large-scale animal food production continue to emerge. Substituting animal products with their plant-based counterparts must come with consideration of the adopted food's nutritional quality and resource requirements used in production and processing. Plant-based meat alternatives (PBMAs), or meat analogs, are designed to imitate properties of traditional animal meat products such as texture, taste, and appearance. Ingredients commonly found in PBMAs include soy, peas, coconut oil, and wheat gluten (Michel et al., 2021). A recent review suggests that PBMAs can potentially reduce global meat consumption, deliver adequate nutritional value, and confer environmental benefit as compared with its animal-meat counterpart (van Vliet et al., 2020). While improvements to flavor and appearance of PBMAs have bolstered demand for these products in recent years (Narayanan Nair, 2021), ambiguity surrounding the nutritional benefit of PBMAs, ultra-processed in particular, persists (Hu et al., 2019; He et al., 2020). Consumer acceptance of these products among the general population is mixed. Culture, taste, texture, convenience, and social and financial constraints may hinder the likelihood of consumers sampling and regularly incorporating PBMAs into the diet (Wyker and Davison, 2010). Availability of PBMAs is another consideration, as access to these products may be limited in lower- and middle-income communities due to marketing strategies of placement and distribution, costs, and customers' perception. This challenge underscores the need for a fundamental change in the food system that requires policies and actions to create a culture in which healthy and sustainable food choices are accessible and affordable to everyone (Hu et al., 2019; Jiang et al., 2020).

Though choosing to consume sustainably produced PBMAs in place of animal meat has potential for significant environmental preservation (Khan et al., 2019), more research is needed not only to produce impartial reports on environmental sustainability of production for emerging and established PBMA companies, but to recommend nutritional improvements. Indeed, given their highly processed nature and use of purified plant proteins that may lead to excess energy intake, the healthfulness of these products should be called into question. PBMAs are also typically elevated in sodium and saturated fat and lower in some micronutrients naturally present in plant foods (e.g., phytochemicals), which does not support a healthy diet (Hu et al., 2019).

Beyond PBMAs, improved access to and demand for nutritionally-sound and minimally processed plant protein sources (e.g., nuts, legumes, whole grains) must accompany a shift toward plant-based diets to improve human health and environmental sustainability. Importantly, all plant-based diets are not necessarily healthy. Studies show much variety in diet quality among non-meat eaters in the US; replacing animal-derived protein with unhealthy plant-based foods from refined grains, for example, may worsen diet-related health outcomes (Neff et al., 2018). Plant-based diet index scores had been developed to characterize the overall dietary quality according to evidence-based recommendations for disease prevention. The healthful plant-based diet index is based on whole grains, fruits, vegetables, nuts, legumes, vegetable oils, and tea/coffee, whereas the unhealthful plant-based diet index includes fruit juices, sugar-sweetened beverages, refined grains, potatoes, and sweets/desserts consistently associated with the risk of health impairment (Satija et al., 2016).

Discussion

Policy Advances to Support Sustainable, Plant-Based Diets

Policies to accelerate environmentally sustainable production of plant-based foods have emerged in recent years at the federal, state, and municipal level. Strategies including incentivizing production and consumption of sustainable plant foods, prohibiting excessive use of natural resources in production, and funding conservation agriculture technology are needed to address the environmental impacts of the current food system. No-till farming techniques, for example, promote carbon sequestration in the soil (Islam and Reeder, 2014), enriching the nutrient quality of harvests (Montgomery and Biklé, 2021) while preventing eutrophication through runoff (Kleinman et al., 2015). Investments in low-resource crops such as legumes promote water conservation and preserve farmland, as they occupy minimal arable land; as such, production of these crops, consumed directly as food for humans instead of animal feed, can be combined with decreases in livestock grazing land to limit land use changes and preserve natural environments. Many species' root systems also efficiently facilitate water retention in the soil, diminishing excess water use and preserving soil health (Rubiales and Mikic, 2015; Stagnari et al., 2017; Ferreira et al., 2021).

Much evidence indicates that solutions to reduce the environmental impact of food production and augment sustainability require multi-sector collaboration, and context-specific policy solutions are needed across food systems sectors to adequately address diet-related climate concerns. While this review contextualizes intervention strategies in the US, there is great need to align domestic food systems initiatives with global frameworks. The United Nations Sustainable Development Goals are a collection of 17 goals that address interrelated global challenges including poverty, inequality, climate change, and environmental degradation (United Nations Department of Economic Social Affairs, 2015). This urgent appeal has spurred nations into action around climate-smart agriculture and advancing plant-based, sustainable diets (Food Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, 2019; European Commission, 2020). This review discusses existing national, state, and municipal policies in the US around food systems and sustainability using the social-ecological framework (Figure 1). Public health professionals must consider the range of interdependent policies that impact our food system and work together to improve human and planetary health.

FIGURE 1
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Figure 1. National, state, and municipal policies in the US addressing food systems and sustainability according to the social-ecological model.

National Policy

Several US federal programs, such as the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), SNAP-Ed (an accompanying educational program with cooking, grocery shopping, and nutritional literacy curricula), and Eat Smart, Live Strong (a nutrition education program for older adults) generally promote fruit and vegetable consumption to their more than 40 million participants (Committee on Examination of the Adequacy of Food Resources SNAP Allotments, 2013). However, these federal nutrition programs do not explicitly discuss benefits of sustainable plant foods, nor the environmental concerns that arise with current reliance on animal products. Further, despite mounting evidence of the link between diet and environmental sustainability (Willett et al., 2019), the Dietary Guidelines for Americans Advisory Committee excluded sustainability as a topic of interest in the 2020 report (U.S. Department of Agriculture, 2017). A 2021 executive order establishing a National Climate Task Force to “increase resilience to the impacts of climate change, protect public health, conserve our lands, waters, and biodiversity” failed to mention the negative impact animal agriculture has on the planet and the positive impact that diets rich in plants can have on the environment (The White House, 2021). Omitted discussion on the sustainability of foods are a missed opportunity to empower consumers with education about environmentally responsible food choices.

Given the nutrition community's recommendations of a greater emphasis on plant foods in our diets (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, 2018), the intersection of nutrition and sustainability is exceedingly relevant information to include in population-level dietary guidelines and education. However, we cannot rely solely on reframing federal nutrition education to fix our food system, as these policy reforms alone may not inspire change that reflects the urgency of environmental and human health crises (National Academies of Sciences, 2019; Bowman, 2020). It has been suggested to the United States Department of Agriculture Farm Bill to increase investment in resource-conserving agriculture and to limit the expansion of large-scale livestock operations (Dewey et al., 2017; Miller, 2017). Bold messaging is needed to explicitly promote sustainable, plant-based diets and must be brought to the forefront in these federal food programs with a multifaceted agricultural and consumer educational approach.

State Policy

While food systems reform on the federal level has moved at a slower pace (Muller et al., 2009), state and municipal governance typically have more agility to enact climate- and food-related policies.

The US state of Massachusetts, for example, offers the Healthy Incentives Program (HIP) which reimburses SNAP participants when they purchase fruits and vegetables from local retailers including farmers' markets, community-supported agriculture programs, farm stands, and mobile markets (Commonwealth of Massachusetts, 2021). Program evaluation for the Massachusetts HIP show that more than 165,000 individuals increased their fruit and vegetable intake by one serving per day in between 2017 and 2021 (Commonwealth of Massachusetts, 2021). Of note, this increase does not necessarily imply a direct reduction in animal food consumption; however, this policy encourages behavior change that decreases demand for resource-intensive agriculture practices while increasing demand of healthy foods from local producers, representing a strong investment in health and nutrition for low-income consumers and local producers. Furthermore, local retail operations that provide food for programs like HIP are better positioned than conventional agriculture to mitigate the effects of climate change as they motivate positive behavioral changes and, thus, reduce demand for intensive agricultural practices (Goh, 2011).

The US state of California has also demonstrated innovation in promoting environmentally responsible plant food production in rural agricultural settings. Assembly Bill 1289, entitled “Smart Climate Agriculture Program: Plant-Based Agriculture,” aims to support small and mid-sized farmers who wish to transition their lands from livestock farming to low-resource plant-based agriculture, excluding crop production for livestock feed. If passed, the bill will provide technical assistance and best practices for transitioning farmland to participating farmers (California Legislature, 2010). While this initiative does not explicitly promote the consumption of plant foods, it represents a substantial commitment to sustainable diets by incentivizing the production of low-resource plant foods instead of high-resource animal food farming.

Municipal Policy

The C40 Good Food Cities Declaration is a coalition of cities worldwide to increase planetary health diets in the next 20 years (C40 CITIES, 2019). Los Angeles, California, the only US city to adopt this climate leadership initiative, has promised to leverage public property for plant-based, urban agriculture by increasing the number of produce gardens in parks and public libraries by 50% by 2021 (C40 CITIES, 2019). While urban farming is limited in scale and is not the sole solution to ensuring availability of nutritious and environmentally-sound food, this demonstrates an innovative and promising commitment to sustainable plant food production.

In efforts to boost the number of nutritious, sustainable lunch options in public schools, Sacramento passed the California School Plant-Based Food and Beverage Program in 2019 that incentivizes plant-based food in schools and provides additional funding to schools serving a plant-based entrée and non-dairy milk (California Legislautre, 2019). Though schools across the country are interested in increasing plant-based options, districts face cost barriers as animal-based foods and cow milk are more heavily federally subsidized than plant-based options (Sewell, 2020). Funding these initiatives will entail large-scale government buy-in for schools to be able to afford the high costs.

Behavioral Interventions to Encourage Plant-Based Eating

Behavior intervention strategies promise to be effective tools to nudge consumers toward plant-based food choices. A study performed in three university cafeterias, for example, showed that doubling the proportion of vegetarian meals offered increased sales of between 41% and 79%, indicating that food availability and substitution may be an effective strategy for increasing consumption of plant-based meals (Garnett et al., 2019). Another study measuring food choices in a university cafeteria demonstrated that taste-focused labeling of vegetables in dining halls increased vegetable consumption by 39%, compared to health-centered labeling of the same dish (Turnwald et al., 2017), adding to a growing body of evidence indicating that menu design and labeling can influence consumer acceptance (Vadiveloo et al., 2017). This compelling research suggests that enhancing the variety and availability of vegetarian dishes and using messaging that emphasizes indulgent flavor and culinary technique may be effective behavioral nudging strategies to increase consumption of plant-based foods in school or food establishment settings.

While these outcomes encourage choice architecture innovation to nudge consumers toward healthier choices (Ensaff et al., 2015; Mikic, 2020), behavioral interventions have limitations. For instance, campaigns promoting environmentally responsible consumption, labeling systems addressing ecological footprint, and other interventions targeting customers' food conduct are generally less effective than fiscal tools, advertising bans, and other restrictive market regulations (National Academies of Sciences, 2019). Focusing on individual-centered interventions rather than population-scale measurements has questioned the social-ecological validity of public strategies based on behavioral theory. The remaining gaps in the chain of evidence from small-scale controlled efficacy trials to population frameworks should be addressed to interpret behavioral interventions' effectiveness and generalizability (Hagger and Weed, 2019).

Conclusion

The environmental implications of large-scale livestock farming are too pressing to ignore. While both the increasing climate-related challenges that farmers face and mounting concerns about diet-related chronic disease, we need multidisciplinary collaboration between public and private sectors. Policy reform at the societal and community levels and behavioral intervention strategies at the interpersonal and individual levels have the potential to reshape our food system and support a shift toward more sustainably produced plant-based diets in the US. Because these layers interact to influence individual behavior, public health strategies must be intersectional and coordinated across multiple sectors. Continued research and development investments in consumer behavior, sustainable agriculture, and nutritional value of diets high in plant foods and low in animal foods are essential to inform policy decisions for a sustainable future.

Author Contributions

AE-M, KA, AC-A, and LS conceptualized the manuscript, performed the literature search and manuscript drafting. JM, SB, AM, and MT supervised and revised the manuscript. All authors contributed to the article and approved the submitted version.

Funding

This project was supported by scholarships from the Mexican Council of Science and Technology (Spanish acronym: CONACYT), Fundacion Mexico en Harvard, and Harvard University provided to AE-M. Additionally, AC-A received funding from Fundacion Mexico en Harvard. Funders had no role in the study design, interpretation, preparation, review, approval, or decision to submit this review for publication.

Conflict of Interest

The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.

Publisher's Note

All claims expressed in this article are solely those of the authors and do not necessarily represent those of their affiliated organizations, or those of the publisher, the editors and the reviewers. Any product that may be evaluated in this article, or claim that may be made by its manufacturer, is not guaranteed or endorsed by the publisher.

Acknowledgments

The authors wish to thank Rushabh Doshi of the Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health for contributing to this project. The authors also appreciate the comments and feedback from colleagues from the 2020 Introduction to Nutrition in Public Health course at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health.

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Keywords: plant-forward diet, plant-based diet, animal-based diet, planetary health, food production, food policy, social-ecological model

Citation: Espinosa-Marrón A, Adams K, Sinno L, Cantu-Aldana A, Tamez M, Marrero A, Bhupathiraju SN and Mattei J (2022) Environmental Impact of Animal-Based Food Production and the Feasibility of a Shift Toward Sustainable Plant-Based Diets in the United States. Front. Sustain. 3:841106. doi: 10.3389/frsus.2022.841106

Received: 21 December 2021; Accepted: 15 March 2022;
Published: 04 May 2022.

Edited by:

Manu V. Mathai, Azim Premji University, India

Reviewed by:

Michael Martin, Swedish Environmental Research Institute (IVL), Sweden

Copyright © 2022 Espinosa-Marrón, Adams, Sinno, Cantu-Aldana, Tamez, Marrero, Bhupathiraju and Mattei. 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) and the copyright owner(s) 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: Josiemer Mattei, jmattei@hsph.harvard.edu

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