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Take Extinction Off Your PLate

Signed in as:

filler@godaddy.com

  • Home
  • Rewild Your Plate
    • Earth-friendly Recipes
    • Extinction-free BBQ
    • Food Gardens
    • How Meat Harms Wildlife
  • Campaigns
    • Avocados
    • Campus Wild
    • Climate-Friendly Cities
    • Dietary Guidelines
    • Events & Catering
    • Film Festival
    • Food Justice
    • Food Waste
    • Grazing Facts
    • Regenerative Agriculture
    • Restaurants
    • Bird Flu
    • School Food
  • News & Resources
    • Action Alerts
    • Food X Newsletter
    • Medium Blog
    • Op-eds
    • Policy Positions
    • Pop X Newsletter
    • Publications
    • Rooted In Policy Blog
    • Social Media Shareables
    • Webinars & Other Media
  • Factsheets
    • City Food Factsheet
    • Cows and Climate Change
    • Extinction Facts
    • Factory Farms
    • Grazing Facts
    • Regenerative Beef
    • Slaughterhouses
  • Downloadable Guides
    • Beat Food Waste Guides
    • Cheap & Easy Guide
    • Cooking Guide
    • ELI Toolkit
    • Food Waste Hurts Wildlife
    • Impact of Beef Production
    • Municipal Guidelines
    • Refrigerator Guide
    • Restaurant Toolkit
    • Shopping Guide
  • About
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climate-friendly cities

Reduce Food-Related Emissions  .  Read Our Guide  .  Climate Commitments 

Food Procurement  .  Calculating Impacts  .  Access To Healthy Food

Community Outreach  .  Climate Resilient Cities  .  Download the Factsheet

About Our Work

reduce food-related emissions

Cities around the world have declared a climate emergency, and many have committed to carbon neutrality by 2030. Reducing food-related emissions by addressing food production and including meat and dairy reductions in key sustainability initiatives will help cities meet these targets. 


Studies show we cannot meet global emissions-reduction targets without addressing food-related emissions. Food production, transport and disposal account for as much as 37% of global greenhouse gas emissions, with meat and dairy production responsible for more than half of these emissions. 


Adopting bold climate and food policies brings environmental and economic benefits, as well as crucial opportunities for achieving greater equity. Black, Latino, Indigenous and communities of color face disproportionate environmental threats, which are worsened by food production. They’re more likely to be exposed to industrial agricultural practices that pollute air and water, degrade landscapes, and exacerbate climate-related impacts. 


The Center for Biological Diversity strongly encourages decision-makers to set climate-compatible food goals for municipal emissions reductions and adopt policies that make low-carbon food widely accessible throughout their communities.      


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READ OUR GUIDE

Enhancing plant-based offerings in city cafeterias, venues, and institutions can promote healthier, sustainable food choices. Best practices include menu design and food service that center plant-forward options, highlighting cultural value and taste. 

Our Municipal Food and Emissions Guideline helps cities and counties, and the food service providers they contract with, build climate-friendly menus, and implement them successfully. Top-tier actions include adopting default menus for city departments and services, while doubling the number of plant-based entrees. Prioritizing the replacement of beef with plant-based ingredients is also a strong first step along with strengthening food-waste reduction efforts. Working with community organizations and municipal employees and publicly tracking and reporting progress can make these changes a happy success. Read the guide.


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CLIMATE COMMITMENTS

Municipal climate action plans are key to addressing the climate crisis, particularly when national leadership has failed. These plans provide a roadmap for how cities can reduce their emissions and increase resilience. 


Climate Action Plans and other municipal policies are excellent places to make climate-driven commitments that include food targets. Increasingly, cities are holding themselves accountable to specific emissions-reduction targets, such as committing to carbon neutrality by 2030 or reducing emissions from meat purchases 25% by 2025.


Cities can integrate food and agriculture into climate action plans and 

other city policies by:

  • Committing to reduce food-related emissions by 50% by 2025;
  • Committing to reduce meat and dairy purchasing by at least 25% by 2025;
  • Prioritizing reduction in beef procurement (replacement with beans/plant options);
  • Establishing baseline metrics for consumption-based accounting of city food-related emissions;
  • Adopting default plant-based menus and purchasing for city departments and services, and providing resources to encourage local organizations and      businesses to adopt similar policies;
  • Establishing partnerships with community-based organizations to promote healthier, climate-compatible diets and increase local food production and access;


Promoting educational opportunities for people to develop skills in organic gardening, plant-based food preparation and healthy eating.


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FOOD PROCUREMENT

Food procurement policies that determine the types of food purchased by governments or institutions are an important opportunity to reduce consumption-driven emissions. Most emissions come from only a few types of foods. The foods with the highest emissions are meat and dairy products, which are responsible for approximately half of all food-related emissions and at least 16.5% of global greenhouse gases. The overproduction (and consumption) of meat and dairy come with a high cost to the climate, as well as to water, land and biodiversity.
 

Procurement policies can lower food-related emissions by increasing the availability and acceptance of plant-based meals. One such strategy, switching to default plant-based menus (offering animal-based items by request, the reverse of current practices) has resulted in more people choosing low-carbon options. The Harvard School of Public Health changed the default menus from omnivore to vegetarian and the proportion of meat consumption dropped 43%, demonstrating diner satisfaction.  


Some ways to impact food procurement policies include:

  • Using default veggie-focused menus;
  • Purchasing to reduce food emissions;
  • Prioritizing meat reduction strategies over “better” meat tactics;
  • Offering smaller portion sizes;
  • Swapping beef for beans and other climate-compatible proteins that celebrate local cuisine.
     

When possible, after prioritizing meat reduction:

  • Purchased meat should come from local producers committed to climate compatible, organic production with small herd sizes, and those that promote      biodiversity and healthy native habitats. Cities can also set targets for      purchasing food from local producers and maintain a list of local vendors      who can provide climate-compatible, plant-based foods.
  • It’s important for cities to work with schools and purchasing programs to      commit to enhanced procurement guidelines and provide the community      support for them to procure food locally.


Finally, cities can require contracts for city food purchases from non-local vendors to begin to include emissions reporting within the next two years. 


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CALCULATING IMPACTS

To improve a city or county’s food footprint, it’s important to track and publicly report data. This includes which foods are purchased by item and volume. Once a baseline is set, progress toward commitments can be tracked annually. These calculations provide invaluable insights, not only to understanding the climate impacts of food purchases, but land, water, and biodiversity impacts, as well as health and fair access to healthy, sustainable food. To learn more about calculations, see here.


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Access to Healthy Food

Everyone should be able to choose to eat a healthy, sustainable diet. But in most U.S. cities, that is not the case, and already marginalized communities also often lack access to healthy, sustainable food, whether economically or geographically. 


To support equitable access to healthy, sustainable, climate-friendly foods, cities should work to increase local, sustainable food production:

  • Increase productivity of city-owned lands;
  • Support schools;
  • Support community gardens;
  • Support local farmers;
  • Increase affordability of healthy food;
  • Promote sustainable food.


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Community Outreach and Skills Development

Low-carbon diets are well received by the public. A Gallup poll shows 1 in 4 Americans report eating less meat in the past year than previously. Another survey showed 85% of consumers agreed that plant-based foods can be as satisfying as animal products.  Latino respondents are 46% more likely to incorporate plant-based foods.
 

One of the leading factors in a community having a positive response to shifting diets is understanding the link between livestock production and the climate crisis. As people become more aware of the role of food-related emissions, they also become more willing to change what they eat. This is an area where government leadership in policy interventions and outreach can make a difference.


Working with local community leaders on policy initiatives can help shift a city’s population toward climate-friendly foods:

  • Consider Meatless Mondays or Green Mondays strategies to start menu shifts and introduce climate and food-emissions educational outreach;
  • Work with the community to help create commitments to reducing food waste;
  • Support community garden and university extension programs;
  • Engage local businesses;
  • Work with food banks and faith-based organizations.


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Climate Resilient Cities: First Steps

Cities can increase community resilience, reduce emissions, and expand access to healthy, sustainable food by integrating food policy as climate policy in city planning and operations. These measures establish a food system that nourishes the community, celebrates cultural and biological diversity, and supports a thriving local food economy with minimal contribution to the climate crisis. 


Climate-compatible food production also makes cities an attractive place for businesses and keeps more food dollars local, stimulates job creation, generates cost savings for households and improves public health. By strengthening sustainable food production and procurement, cities can address environmental quality and improve the quality of life for city residents.


Cities that enact climate-compatible policies for food and agriculture position themselves as leaders in both food and climate while grounding solutions deeply in their communities. In municipalities where cities have successfully integrated new strategies for low-emissions food procurement and policies, community support has been key. 


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ABOUT OUR WORK

The Center works with municipalities to establish climate-friendly food commitments, baseline emissions and environmental impact analyses, and provides recommendations for tracking and implementing changes to food service in city and county cafeterias, menus and catering. Most recently, we have worked with Los Angeles County on its contracts and commitments and an exciting new plant-forward policy with its Department of Health.


If you’d like more information, please contact: EarthFriendlyDiet@biologicaldiversity.org.


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