A Planet-First Diet Can Feed the World by 2050 While Improving the Environment, New Scientific Analysis Finds
The Planetary Health Diet could prevent 15 million deaths yearly by cutting meat and dairy to reduce climate and biodiversity impacts, experts say.
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9 Articles
Meat, especially red meat, should count for only a small part of a healthy diet, an international commission of experts estimated on Friday, now previous conclusions that had led to a sharp rejection of the lobbies of the agro-food industry.
A planet-first diet can feed the world by 2050 while improving the environment, new scientific analysis finds
Focusing on a planet-healthy diet can provide nutritious food to the global population while reducing environmental damage, a new EAT-Lancet Commission report says.
There is no need to stop eating meat, but vegetables, dried fruit and fruit have to gain a central place in our diet. Otherwise, global warming will go beyond 1.5 degrees, says study.
Delivery of egg boxes to a food store in the shopping district of Eminonu, Istanbul, Friday, September 26, 2025. FRANCISCO SECO / AP How to feed nearly 10 billion people healthyly by 2050, while preserving the planetary resources? It is to answer this major question that the EAT-Lancet Commission, a multidisciplinary scientific team founded by the EAT research platform and the British medical journal The Lancet, was formed several years ago.
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