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As the Biden administration finalizes its climate change action plan ahead of the president’s climate summit on April 22 (Earth Day), it should focus on the tremendous opportunities for emissions reductions that lie in the food system. Many measures that would reduce food system emissions would also improve public health, strengthen rural livelihoods, and protect natural ecosystems.
Food system emissions are enormous. A study published in Nature last month found that 34% of global greenhouse emissions come from the food system. In the U.S., the figure is 22%. These emissions come from all parts of the food system, including food production, transport, processing, packaging, storage, cooking and disposal.
We recommend federal action in 11 areas. Our preliminary analysis suggests that these actions could reduce emissions by nearly 400 million tons of carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2e) in 2030 and more in the years beyond.
Summary of 11 potential actions the Biden administration could take to reduce food system emissions reductions by 2030. (Data sources are listed at the end of the piece.)
A comprehensive approach for reducing greenhouse emissions from the food system
If global food system emissions continue to increase at their current pace, meeting the Paris Agreement’s goals would be impossible even if non-food system emissions fell to zero immediately.
Strategies for reducing food system emissions are often divided into supply-side and demand-side solutions. Supply-side solutions focus on food producers and distributors, identifying opportunities to cut emissions related to agricultural land use patterns, crop and livestock production techniques, and food supply chains. Demand-side (or “consumption-based”) solutions, such as reducing food waste and encouraging shifts in dietary patterns, focus on pathways for reducing emissions through changes at the consumer level. Both have a vital role to play in achieving a net-zero food sector.
We recommend focusing on three priority topics, which have impacts that cut across the food system:
1. Reducing food loss and waste
Roughly a third of food that is produced is never eaten. Since 2015, the US Department of Agriculture and Environmental Protection Agency have had a goal of cutting food loss and waste in half by 2030. Meeting that goal could save energy that goes into producing lost and wasted food, and reduce methane emissions from food waste in landfills — both of which contribute significant amounts of greenhouse gas emissions. Reducing food loss and waste could also reduce the amount of land that is needed to produce food, taking pressure off of the country’s grasslands, which emit greenhouse gases when converted into farmland.
Options for reducing food loss and waste include standardizing date labels on food containers, launching consumer education campaigns, promoting better food packaging, encouraging smaller portion sizes, supporting activities that glean leftover crops from fields that have already been harvested, and incentivizing donations from commercial retailers and institutional actors to food banks and charities. Policies that foster secondary markets for surplus food have the potential to both reduce waste and create new streams of income for farmers and food retailers alike. Food waste policies should be pursued in tandem with policies that promote more efficient refrigeration, since efforts to reduce food waste could also increase energy use from household and commercial refrigeration systems.
Policies can also promote climate-smart agricultural practices by establishing a “carbon bank” as a funding source to scale up the USDA’s current incentives programs. The carbon bank could designate the aforementioned practices as “high priority” items across all states and USDA regions, invest in a multi-model approach to assess existing soil carbon levels and determine payment rates, and facilitate the growth of markets that provide inputs into sustainable farming systems.
Conclusion
Food system measures offer enormous potential to combat the climate crisis while also improving public health, strengthening rural communities and protecting natural ecosystems. Mitigation measures should be coordinated across all stages of the food system to help ensure a more productive, sustainable and resilient food system for all.
Summary of potential food system emissions reductions (in Mt Co2eq yr-1) from the 11 actions mentioned above. (Data sources listed below.)
Data for the figures in this piece came from the following sources:
Commercial refrigeration: Based on a study showing the impact of low-GWP refrigerants and more efficient supermarket refrigeration systems.
Conservation tillage: Based on a study of the soil carbon sequestration potential of no-till practices in the United States.
Federal food procurement: Based on estimates of annual food spending by the USDA, DOD, and BOP, and assuming federally procured meals have the same carbon footprint per dollar spent as the median income U.S. household.
President Donald Trump has made energy a clear focus for his second term in the White House. Having campaigned on an “America First” platform that highlighted domestic fossil-fuel growth, the reversal of climate policies and clean energy incentives advanced by the Biden administration, and substantial tariffs on key US trading partners, he declared an “energy emergency” on his first day in office.