Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5051571 | Ecological Economics | 2008 | 11 Pages |
Abstract
Obesity has become a serious public health problem in both industrialized and rapidly industrializing countries. It increases greenhouse gas emissions through higher fuel needs for transportation of heavier people, lifecycle emissions from additional food production and methane emissions from higher amounts of organic waste. A reduction of average weight by 5Â kg could reduce OECD transport CO2 emissions by more than 10Â million t. While the shift from beef to other forms of meat in industrialized and countries in transition has lead to lifecycle emissions savings of 20Â million t CO2 equivalent between 1990 and 2005, emissions due to obesity-promoting foodstuffs have increased by more than 400Â million t in advanced developing countries. Emissions in OECD countries could be reduced by more than 4Â million t through reduction of associated food waste. Due to the intimate behavioural nature of the obesity problem, policies to reduce obesity such as food taxation, subsidization of human-powered transport, incentives to reduce sedentary leisure and regulation of fat in foodstuffs have not yet been implemented to any extent. The emissions benefits of fiscal and regulatory measures to reduce obesity could accelerate the tipping point where a majority of voters feels that the problem warrants policy action.
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Authors
Axel Michaelowa, Björn Dransfeld,