Understanding how alternative
agricultural production systems, agricultural input efficiency, and food
choice drive environmental degradation is necessary for reducing
agriculture's environmental impacts. A meta-analysis of life cycle
assessments that includes 742 agricultural systems and over 90 unique
foods shows that, per unit of
food, organic systems require more land, cause more eutrophication, use
less energy, but emit similar greenhouse gas emissions (GHGs) as
conventional systems; that grass-fed beef requires more land and emits
similar GHG emissions as grain-feed beef; and that low-input aquaculture
and non-trawling fisheries have much lower GHG emissions than trawling
fisheries. For all environmental indicators and nutritional units
examined, plant-based foods have the lowest environmental impacts;
eggs, dairy, pork, poultry, non-trawling fisheries, and
non-recirculating aquaculture have intermediate impacts; and ruminant
meat has impacts ~100 times those of plant-based foods. Our analyses
show that dietary shifts towards low-impact foods and increases in
agricultural input use efficiency would offer larger environmental
benefits than would switches from conventional agricultural systems to organic.
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