Geographies of Green Diets
July 24, 2010 Edited by Sarah Goggin
Filed under Human Geography, Physical Geography, World Regional Geography
With the discursive onset of “global warming” in the global lexicon, seemingly inconsequential personal choices are subject to questions of ‘Greenness’ (Green indicating an alternative that is better for the environment than the status quo). In a world that is increasingly linked technologically, economically, and culturally in a complicated web of globalization, your diet (what you eat, not your weight loss plan) raises convoluted issues of scale, politics and environment that are not always so easy to comprehend.
Perhaps the most interesting characteristic of the questions behind a “Green Diet” is how geography is implicated in all aspects. Whether this is a question of agricultural and land-use practices, of environmental problems or solutions, of scale from the local to global, or of socio-economic, culture or politics, each has a spatial component and consequence.
The United Nations International Panel for Sustainable Resource Management argues in a June 2010 report that, “Current patterns of production and consumption of both fossil fuels and food are draining freshwater supplies; triggering losses of economically-important ecosystems such as forests; intensifying disease and death rates and raising levels of pollution to unsustainable levels.” The report calls for a controversial shift in global diets to reduce such environmental pressures. This shift would be away from those including a large amount of animal-based products to those including more vegetable-based foods. This report was certainly not the first to call for such a dietary shift, another contribution came from well-known author and activist, Michael Pollan who challenged readers to eat whole fresh foods, a little meat, and avoid processed foods.
Yet, after the UN-backed report, there seems to be a resurgence of dialogue over the greenness of our diets. An author from the Atlantic asks, “Can Meat Eaters be environmentalists?” arguing that the two are not a contradiction. She has also authored the New York Times article “The Carnivore’s Dilemma” researching the connection between meat and global warming. An excellent Mother Jones article tackles the “merits of vegetarianism” by taking the question to a panel of experts and to readers, cheekily poised as “Bacon Lovers vs. Soy Huggers.” This article is an outstanding source for both sides of the debate and includes plenty of interesting, albeit covert, geographical references from trophic structures to cultural preferences. Another aspect of greening diets comes from the Local Foods movement, dubbed by the USDA as “Know your Farmer, Know your food”, which focuses more on where your food comes from rather that what you eat. An NPR program and article offers a very interesting once over of the movement, but also of the economic and logistical challenges, combined with the overall reluctance of food distributors to make the change.
Overall, the underlying issues behind these questions have to do with various ‘costs’: energy costs, food supply costs, economic costs, and environmental costs. Each of these costs indicates difficulties that can be best understood in a holistic, interconnected way. Indeed, geographers best understand the human-environment connections behind our diets:
- How fossil fuel use may be translating into warmer climates;
- How most crop agriculture is devoted to animal agriculture, creating fossil fuel and economic entanglements in between, and then topping it all off with the addition of more heat-trapping methane into the atmosphere;
- How the economic networks associated with status quo crop and animal agriculture mean jobs, taxes, and livelihoods to large populations of Midwestern and Central United States;
- How environmentally costly, both looking back and forward, commercial agriculture has been for native grassland ecosystems and rainforest ecosystems, freshwater supplies, and perhaps for climates throughout the globe.
Discussion Questions:
- Do you know where your food comes from or how it is produced? When you are out at your local grocery store, favorite restaurant, school cafeteria, café, farmer’s market, etc. look for clues about where food products come from, how they are produced, and how they are delivered.
- What do you think about the arguments made in the “Bacon Lovers vs. Soy Huggers” article? What conclusions can you draw about which diet is greener? What are some further questions you might have?
- Think about the connection between food production (meat, vegetables, and processed foods) and climate. List the various ways that production, distribution, and consumption contribute or neutralize effects on climate.
Sarah Goggin
