Title: Food and Climate Change
1Food and Climate Change
- The world on a plate
- Tara Garnett
- Food Climate Research Network
2This presentation
- Brief overview of climate change
- Food its GHG emissions an LCA perspective
- Specific foods veg, alcohol, meat dairy
- Focus on transport
- The health / climate change relationship
- Impact of climate change on food system
- The population issue
- Reducing food GHGs - some options
- What is the industry doing?
- What is the policy framework?
- Observations / conclusions
- A bit about the FCRN
31. Climate change an overview
4The facts
- Latest (2007) IPCC report
- Warming of the climate system is unequivocal
- Most of the observed increase in globally
averaged temperatures since the mid-20th century
is very likely over 90 certainty due to the
observed increase in anthropogenic greenhouse gas
concentrations
5What is more
- Under BAU temperatures to rise by about 3C by
2100 (range 2 to 4.5C ). - 2C rise dangerous climate change
- Were already committed to 1C rise even if we
stop producing any more GHGs right now. - Developed world needs to achieve at least 80
cuts by 2050
6Defining terms
- GHGs greenhouse gas emissions
- CO2 the main GHG but
- others also important especially for food
- Methane 23x more potent than CO2
- Nitrous oxide 296x more potent than CO2
- Refrigerant gases thousands of times more potent
72. Overall food related GHG emissions
8The LCA perspective
9Overall food-related contribution to GHG
emissions
- EU EIPRO report 31 all EU consumption related
GHGs - FCRN UK estimates around 19 (probably an
underestimate) - Defra estimates similar - World agriculture contribution 17 - 32 total
global emissions - Huge uncertainty / variability between countries
/ differences in whats included and whats not
intensity of other industry sectors
10Food GHG impacts by life cycle stage - UK
As of UK consumption related GHG emissions est
.at 234 MTCe
11But the hotspots vary by food
- Meat dairy Agriculture
- Field veg Transport and cooking
- Protected veg Agriculture
- Crisps bread Agriculture processing
transport combined - Small bottle beer Packaging
- Baked potato, pasta, tea Cooking
123. Impacts by food type
13 FCRN work so far
- Meat and dairy about 8.5
- Fruit and veg - about 2.5
- Alcoholic drinks about 1.5
- This is of the UKs TOTAL GHG emissions
- Similar to this Dutch study
14Klaas Jan Kramer, Henri C Moll, Sanderine
Nonhebel, Harry C Wilting, Greenhouse gas
emissions related to Dutch food consumption,
Energy Policy 27 (1999) 203-216, Elsevier
Publications
15Snapshot findings
- Fruit and veg
- High impact air freighted, ratatouille veg,
perishable/squashable - Low impact field grown/seasonal shipped robust
- Alcoholic drinks
- Impact areas transport, packaging, consumption
(hospitality sector )
16Livestock the main concern
- Global 18 global emissions (FAO 2006)
- EU15 EU GHGs or 50 of all food impacts (EIPRO
2006) - Kramer et al (1999) 50 of all food impacts
- UK (from FCRN study) about 8.5
- Variation depends on whats included (eg. LU
change) baseline consumption GHGs
17Livestocks impacts significant even when...
- Foods are highly processed
- Ready meal vs. home cooking study (Sonesson et al
2005) - Cadburys chocolate bar
- Or come from far away
- New Zealand study
18Livestock benefits disbenefits
19BUT global trends in demand...
Source FAO 2006
...are unsustainable
20Inequality continues p.c. meat to 2050
Source FAO 2006
21Per cap. milk to 2050
22Livestock emission reduction options
- Nutrient use optimisation fertiliser
applications breeding crops for better N use
efficiency - Build soil carbon stocks
- On farm energy efficiency
- Anaerobic digestion
- Managing the diet feed inputs, grass breeding
- Animal genomics breeding for longevity,
fertility, low methane, productivity - 2nd order impacts?
- Cereal/ oilseed inputs and land use change
- Animal welfare implications
- Biodiversity
23How low can you go with technology good
management?
- UK Committee on Climate Change report 25-30 by
2020 (agriculture as a whole) - Industry led milk road map 20- 30 by 2020
aspirational - Cooking up a storm report 30 without behaviour
change...(agriculture as a whole)
24But even if tech improvements cut livestock
impacts by 50
- (and this is ambitious)
- We wouldnt have a reduction in GHG emissions
just no increase - Reduction in consumption needed too
- But by how much?
25If yr 2000 consumption levels were maintained
- At 9 billion people this would mean
- Meat 25 kg year (500g/week)
- Dairy 53 kg a year (a litre a week).
- In other words
- 2 sausages, 1 small chicken piece and small pork
chop a week - And milk for cereal tea OR 100 g cheese (3
sandwiches?) a week - Similar to developing world levels today.
26Implications for livestock production
- Not technology management VERSUS demand
reduction either alone insufficient. - Both needed.
274. Focus on transport
28Transport What about food miles?
- 2.5 3.5 of UK GHG emissions (incl imports)
- Is nearer better? It depends.
- There are trade-offs to consider
- Eg. agricultural production, manufacturing
efficiency, energy mix, cold storage, waste - On the other handrelationship between transport
distance refrigeration, waste - Structural impacts on economy and infrastructure
investment - Answer now might be different to answer in 5
10 years time
29What about air freight?
- The most GHG intensive form of transport
- Less than 1 all food carried by air but 11
total food transport CO2 (including car trips) - Kenyan green beans 20-26 times more GHG intensive
than seasonal UK beans
30Air freight continued.
- Absolute impacts small but in relative terms
growing and it subsidises passenger transport - The greater the volume, the cheaper it is to fly
food - Food is the fastest growing air freighted
commodity - Growth slowed in current climate... Long term
trend?
31Is air always the worst option?
- Sometimes other options can be more GHG
- intensive (eg. hothouse flowers in February
- from Holland)
- BUT
- This doesnt meant that air freight is okay
- It just means that both have very high
- impacts!
32Howeverair freight and LDCs
- Of top 20 air freight importers by volume, almost
all less developed countries - 1-1.5 mill people dependent on export
horticulture in SSA (up to 120,000 directly
employed) - Lives depend upon it some excellent projects
- Policy needs to achieve max devt for minimum GHG
cost... But isnt thinking this way.
335. The nutrition / CC relationship
34Health Is healthy food less GHG intensive?
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36Two balanced mealsA ninefold GHG difference
Health AND environment policy approach or health
VERSUS environment?
37The nutrition challenge different for rich and
poor
- The rich Less meat, less fat, less sugar more
grains veg win-win for health environment - The poor Develop food production systems that
maximise nutrition at minimum GHG cost - Some livestock products nutritionally useful for
vulnerable groups - Role for area-specific livestock production
- Need to integrate nutrition/CC policy
386. Impact of climate change on the food system
39Impacts on agriculture
- Huge uncertainty... Impacts depend on
- interplay between
- Gradual temperature increase
- CO2 effect
- Wildcards (extreme drought, flooding)
- Water
- Economics, demographics, infrastructure
40Impacts continued
- Northern countries some benefits to 2050 - then
negative - Southern (poor) countries negative and then
more negative - Changes in crop suitability
- Crop and livestock diseases
- Water
- Poor will suffer most
41The picture by 2050
Source IPCC 2004 Wkg Gp II Ch5
42Post harvest impacts
- Food sourcing, processing and distribution
- Disruptions to transport stationary
infrastructure - Unpredictability can lead to crop spoilage
waste - Changes in sourcing decisions?
- More imports to developing world
- Consumption
- Changes in consumer demand?
- Consequences for food industry household energy
use? - Food safety problems?
43The CC context
- Need to consider the social, economic, political,
demographic and infrastructural context - Climate change exacerbates existing
vulnerabilities of poor in developing world - The more rapid the climate change the harder it
will be to adapt - Poor farmers less likely to be able to adapt
infrastructural, political, economic barriers - CHALLENGE is to combine mitigation with
adaptation role for research and policy
447. The population issue
- Is the problem just too many people?
45Which people?
Source World Development Movement 2004
46Whos responsible?
- USA 5 world population contributes 22 to
world emissions (WRI) - 25 of Chinas emissions are due to exports
(Tyndall Centre 2007) - Development necessary - balance will change
- Challenge for wealthy world is to support low
carbon sustainable development - And to lead by example hypocrisy isnt helpful
478. Reducing foods GHG contribution
48How far will technology get us?
- Agriculture plant breeding better nutrient use
alternative fuel sources for greenhouses
anaerobic digestion - Manufacturing CHP / trigeneration / life cycle
costing - Refrigeration 20-50 efficiency savings
possible novel technologies including non HFC
refrigeration, trigeneration (increases
efficiency from 38 to 76). - Packaging lightweighting, alternative materials,
ambient storage packaging
49Technology continued...
- Transport modal shift, efficient supply chains
cleaner fuels (in future years) - Retailing massive scope for improvements in
lighting and refrigeration renewables - Domestic energy efficient appliances
- Lots of little impacts/solutions rather than one
big one
50But
- Will this get us to an 80 cut by 2050?
- (And is 80 possible for food?)
- Do we need to change our patterns of consumption?
51What might a low GHG diet look like?
- Not overeating
- Much less meat and dairy
- Seasonal field grown foods
- Not eating certain foods
- Reducing dependence on cold chain
- But wasting less
- Efficient cooking
- Redefining quality
52How?
- Life is complicated and
- food is a complex part of life
53Food and its meanings
Entertainment
Nurture
Neurosis
Pleasure
Need
Guilt
Ritual
Food
Habit
Satisfaction
Social glue
Love
Status
Power
Bribery
Comfort
Religious significance
Time-pass
54Influenced by wider forces
- Price / affordability
- Availability
- Time work / stressed leisure syndrome
- Culture, social family expectations, norms,
aspirations - Knowledge, information, fashions beliefs
(education, media, marketing) - Demographic changes ageing population, single
person society, wealth - Technological changes
- Season
- Tastes
- Habits
55You cannot wait for consumers to change their
behaviour
- They dont know enough
- They dont care enough
- They wont unless they have to... Govt and
industry must take the lead change the context
of consumption policies, prices, sticks and
carrots
5670 reduction for food is possible
- If we combine technological improvement with
behaviour change
579. What is the food industry doing?
58Food industry initiatives agriculture
- Sustainable Agriculture Initiative (Nestle,
Unilever, Danone, Kraft etc) dairy work - EUREPGAP (not climate focused though)
- Roundtables on sustainable soy / palm oil
- Unilever LCA work long history .. Others
starting too - Bayer CropSciences 15 CO2 reduction by 2020
stress tolerant crops biofuels
59Food industry initiatives retailers
- M S
- 200 million Plan A
- All operations carbon neutral by 2012
- 25 energy cut power stores with green
electricity - Label and reduce air freighted produce
- Tesco
- Label and reduce air freighted produce
- 50 energy cut in stores and DCs by 2020
- 100 million renewables fund / SCI in Manchester
- Halve distribution emissions / case in 5 yrs
60Food industry initiatives manufacturers
- Tate Lyle biomass boiler to replace 70 fossil
energy - McCain's up to 70 electricity needs from
renewables including wind turbines and CHP plant
running on biogas - Cadburys 50 absolute cut in carbon emissions
by 2020 - Many others starting to carbon footprint their
operations - But focus of food industry is on efficiency
rather than shifts in consumption.
61Carbon footprinting
- PAS 2050
- Carbon labelling UK
- Carbon labelling France, Switzerland,
Australia, New Zealand, Germany
6210.The policy context global and UK
63The global context
- Rising population 9 billion by 2050
- Long term growth in oil prices
- Dash for biofuels (slightly mitigated in EU / UK)
- Nutrition transition
- More wealthy more poor people
- Land pressures
- (Climate change legislation...)
64A few framing policies/initiatives
- Kyoto Protocol
- Bali 2007 agreement on deforestation
- EU Emissions Trading Scheme ( devts in Australia
and NZ too) - European Commission Energy Policy
- 20 GHG cut by 2020 (should be 30)
- Biofuels 10 transport fuels by 2020 (modified)
- Copenhagen Climate Change Summit 2009 (Poznan
now)
65Climate relevant legislation and initiatives - UK
- Climate Change Act 80 target (up from 60)
- Committee on Climate Change report - highlights
agriculture behaviour change - Stern Review on climate change costs of
inaction up to 20 GDP - Climate Change Agreements / Levy
- Carbon Reduction Commitment (consultation)
- PAS 2050 (plus Carbon Trust label).
- Carbon Trust initiatives advice
66And for food...
- Cabinet Office Food Matters report
- Council of food policy advisors to advise on a
strategic approach to food policy - Foresight land use project... ditto global
agriculture - Things are happening in the UK, but slowly
67More strategic thinking needed
- Principle Contraction Convergence
- Tools Carbon pricing, global cap trade,
personal carbon trading ... - Food sits within this larger framework...
68 Source Global Commons Institute www.gci.org.uk
6911. Observations and conclusions
70Foods impacts
- Climate change is happening
- Food contributes to a significant proportion of
global GHG emissions - All stages in the supply chain contribute to
emissions - Agriculture most significant stage / meat and
dairy most GHG intensive food - Global food demand is moving in more GHG
intensive directions
71- Climate change will affect global food supply -
poor regions will suffer most - Technology unlikely to get us where we need to be
- Consumption shifts needed too
- Policy and govt beginning to tackle problem but
only from efficiency perspective
72Land the big challenge
- In the context of 9 billion on planet by 2050
- What is the best use of global land so that
- We are all fed adequately ...
- At minimum GHG cost?
- Stored carbon is not released?
- Biodiversity is protected?
- Other ethical non-negotiables upheld??
- Meeting Needs rather than demand - only feasible
approach
73Implications for sustainable agriculture
- Sustainable agriculture only makes sense in the
context of sustainable consumption and
nutritional needs - Not just how we grow or rear it but what we
choose to grow or rear - And how it links with our basic need for
nutritious food
74Sustainable agriculture
Nutritional needs food security
Sustainable consumption
7512. About the FCRN
76The FCRN
- Funded by UK research council Defra
- Based at Surrey University
- Focuses on
- Researching food chain contribution to GHG
emissions and options for emissions reduction
technology, behaviour, policy - Sharing and communicating information on food
climate change with member network
77FCRN outputs
- Five comprehensive studies so far
- Fruit vegetables
- Alcoholic drinks
- Food refrigeration
- Meat dairy
- Synthesis paper
- All at www.fcrn.org.uk
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79- Comprehensive website see www.fcrn.org.uk
- Working seminars To inform research
- Networking To catalyse further research
- E-news on food/GHGs to over a thousand members
- Please join...
80Thank you
- Tara Garnett
- taragarnett_at_blueyonder.co.uk
- www.fcrn.org.uk
- Food Climate Research Network