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Food Ethics Council For a fairer food system
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Food Ethics Magazine
Spolit for choice Vol 8 issue 1.jpg
Think critically
Read our latest issue
You are in > The issues

Climate change

photo of parched mud by Christian Guthier
Related topics:
Food security

Latest work

What's cooking? Adaptation and mitigation in the UK food system
Forecasting the perfect storm: the economics of resource scarcity
Competition law and collaboration for sustainable food
Environmental labels for food: scientific, practical and economic issues
Innovation for sustainable food: an example from the Netherlands


Essential reading

What Copenhagen means for us: climate challenges for the food sector
'Food Miles' Or 'Food Minutes': Is sustainability all in the timing?
A Square Meal
Climate change and agriculture – time for a new deal?
Climate change: Food and farming after Copenhagen

Climate change threatens global agriculture, particularly in countries already facing water shortages and areas vulnerable to rising sea levels and flooding.

Agriculture accounts for less than 1% of UK GDP but contributes about 7% of our total GHG emissions, much in the form of methane (from digestion in ruminants and waste decomposition) and nitrous oxide (from fertilisers), which have a stronger warming effect than carbon dioxide. Livestock farming is the biggest GHG emitter within agriculture sector.

When we take into account the production, packaging, transport, retail and preparation of our food, its contribution to climate change is even greater.

Ethical argument

Mitigating agriculture’s contribution to climate change means embracing sustainable farming practices; relying on fewer chemical inputs, and producing less energy and resource intensive foods.

However, there is no benefit in reducing UK agricultural emissions if we offshore our contributions by substituting high GHG-emitting products with similar energy-intensive imports, or if we encourage practices that have unintended consequences – like replacing food for biofuel crops in developing countries.

Priorities

  • Producers, retailers, governments and consumers all have a part to play in mitigating climate change and adapting our food system to it
  • Retailers must be active and transparent in their work along the supply chain, 'editing' consumer choices towards more sustainable products.

Priorities for policy intervention by the UK government include:

  • Future-proofing infrastructure investment
  • Legislate to reduce GHG emissions from agriculture
  • Leading behavioural change campaigns
  • Encouraging trade on processed rather than fresh products from developing countries
  • Ensuring that international commitments to climate change mitigation do not send the problem elsewhere.

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The Food Ethics Council is a registered charity — Charity number 1101885