Giving Compass' Take:
- The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization highlights a recent study that provides insights on how to decrease greenhouse gas emissions caused by food supply chains.
- How can food systems be redesigned to be carbon-neutral and climate-friendly?
- Read more about greenhouse gas emissions caused by our food system.
What is Giving Compass?
We connect donors to learning resources and ways to support community-led solutions. Learn more about us.
Greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions due to land-use changes such as converting forests to agricultural land have been decreasing over the past 20 years, a decline that has been counterbalanced by increased emissions — notably high in industrialised countries — from off-farm activities before and after food production according to a new study led by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) and published today in Environmental Resource Letters.
The report, “Greenhouse Gas Emissions from the Food System: Building the Evidence Base“, estimates that food-system emissions amounted to 16 billion tonnes of carbon dioxide or equivalents (CO2eq) in 2018, an 8 per cent increase since 1990. They now represent 33 per cent of all human-caused GHG emissions.
That, lead author Francesco Tubiello, a senior statistician and climate change specialist at FAO, highlights how the global food system represents a “larger GHG mitigation opportunity than previously estimated and one that cannot be ignored in efforts to achieve the Paris Agreement goals”.
Governments around the world are pledging to reduce their GHG emissions and pursue carbon neutrality, and many have included mitigation targets for their agriculture sectors in their national plans. However, action in food and agriculture goes well beyond impacts on farms and ecosystems. Analysing emissions trends through the broader lens of food systems offers additional insights and opens a range of possible solutions across the entire food production and consumption chain.
The new study provides rich data sets that are being refined ahead of the UN’s Food Systems Summit 2021, with important components already available for consultation. It considers GHG emissions linked to farm gate production, land-use change at the boundary between farms and natural ecosystems, and supply chains including consumption and waste disposal, to offer a crisper and more granular assessment of trends at the global, regional, and country levels.
Read the full article about food-system greenhouse gas emissions at Eco-Business.