Challenges and opportunities when moving food production and consumption toward sustainable diets in the Nordics: a scoping review for Nordic Nutrition Recommendations 2023

IF 3.5 4区 医学 Q2 FOOD SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY Food & Nutrition Research Pub Date : 2024-02-01 DOI:10.29219/fnr.v68.10489
Helle Margrete Meltzer, Hanna Eneroth, Maijaliisa Erkkola, Ellen Trolle, Peter Fantke, Juha Helenius, Jørgen Eivind Olesen, Merja Saarinen, Amund Maage, Trond Arild Ydersbond
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Abstract

In Press
This article has been accepted for publication and undergone full peer review. It has gone through copyediting and typesetting but not yet final proofreading. Although final publication galleys will be added at a later stage, articles are fully citable using the DOI number.

The terms ‘Nordic countries’ or ‘The Nordics’ include the five countries Denmark, Finland, Island, Norway, and Sweden. This review includes evaluation of the Nordic countries against Food and Agricultural Organisation (FAO)/World Health Organizations’ (WHO) guiding principles for healthy, sustainable diets with respect to environmental impact (principles #9 – #13) and sociocultural aspects (principles #14 – #16). A food systems perspective is taken to summarize and discuss the most important challenges and opportu- nities for achieving sustainable diets. Food system, food security, self-sufficiency, and resilience perspectives are applied. The information can underpin decisions when developing and implementing Food Based Dietary Guidelines (FBDG) in the Nordics. None of the Nordic countries are on track to reach the 2030 UN climate and biodiversity goals. We describe how food production, processing, and consumption contribute to these and other environmental challenges, and what kinds of dietary changes/transitions consistent with these goals are required. A major challenge is the high production and consumption of meat and too low consumption of fish, vegetables, and fruits. Meat production is a major source of emissions and, together with farmed fish, heavily dependent on imported feed ingredients, leaving a large land-use and water footprint in exporting countries while domestic land resources are not used optimally. Dietary patterns have changed drastically over the past 50 years, and in large parts of the population, meat consumption has doubled since the 1970s, rendering historic food culture less useful as a basis for present-day recommendations. The Nordics have Europe’s lowest use of antibiotics in animal and fish production and have made some progress in reducing food waste along the food chain. A major opportunity is better alignment of food consumption and pro- duction based on local or regional production potentials, in conjunction with better and more construc- tive integration with the global food system while integrating novel technologies to reduce emissions and resource use.

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北欧食品生产和消费迈向可持续膳食的挑战和机遇:《2023 年北欧营养建议》范围界定审查
出版中这篇文章已被接受发表,并经过了全面的同行评审。文章已通过校对和排版,但尚未完成最终校对。尽管最终的出版样稿将在稍后阶段添加,但文章完全可以使用 DOI 编号进行引用。北欧国家 "或 "北欧 "包括丹麦、芬兰、岛国、挪威和瑞典五个国家。本综述包括根据联合国粮农组织(FAO)/世界卫生组织(WHO)关于健康、可持续膳食的指导原则,从环境影响(原则 9 - 13)和社会文化方面(原则 14 - 16)对北欧国家进行评估。从粮食系统的角度总结和讨论了实现可持续膳食最重要的挑战和机遇。采用了粮食系统、粮食安全、自给自足和复原力等视角。这些信息可为北欧国家制定和实施《以食物为基础的膳食指南》(FBDG)提供决策依据。北欧国家均未如期实现 2030 年联合国气候和生物多样性目标。我们介绍了食品生产、加工和消费如何导致这些和其他环境挑战,以及需要哪些符合这些目标的膳食变化/转变。一个主要挑战是肉类生产和消费过高,而鱼类、蔬菜和水果消费过低。肉类生产是主要的排放源,而且与养殖鱼类一样,严重依赖进口饲料原料,在出口国留下了大量的土地使用和水足迹,而国内土地资源却没有得到最佳利用。在过去 50 年里,饮食结构发生了巨大变化,自 20 世纪 70 年代以来,大部分人口的肉类消费量翻了一番,这使得历史上的饮食文化无法作为当今建议的依据。北欧是欧洲动物和鱼类生产中使用抗生素最少的国家,在减少食物链中的食物浪费方面也取得了一些进展。一个重要的机遇是根据当地或区域的生产潜力,更好地调整粮食消费和生产,同时更好、更有建设性地与全球粮食系统相结合,同时整合新技术以减少排放和资源使用。
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来源期刊
Food & Nutrition Research
Food & Nutrition Research FOOD SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY-NUTRITION & DIETETICS
CiteScore
5.20
自引率
9.10%
发文量
47
审稿时长
14 weeks
期刊介绍: Food & Nutrition Research is a peer-reviewed journal that presents the latest scientific research in various fields focusing on human nutrition. The journal publishes both quantitative and qualitative research papers. Through an Open Access publishing model, Food & Nutrition Research opens an important forum for researchers from academic and private arenas to exchange the latest results from research on human nutrition in a broad sense, both original papers and reviews, including: * Associations and effects of foods and nutrients on health * Dietary patterns and health * Molecular nutrition * Health claims on foods * Nutrition and cognitive functions * Nutritional effects of food composition and processing * Nutrition in developing countries * Animal and in vitro models with clear relevance for human nutrition * Nutrition and the Environment * Food and Nutrition Education * Nutrition and Economics Research papers on food chemistry (focus on chemical composition and analysis of foods) are generally not considered eligible, unless the results have a clear impact on human nutrition. The journal focuses on the different aspects of nutrition for people involved in nutrition research such as Dentists, Dieticians, Medical doctors, Nutritionists, Teachers, Journalists and Manufacturers in the food and pharmaceutical industries.
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