Resolving the twin human and environmental health hazards of a plant-based diet
Author(s)
Wyckhuys, Kris A.G.
Bijleveld van Lexmond, Maarten F.I.J.
Bojaca, Carlos R.
Bonmatin, Jean-Marc
Furlan, Lorenzo
Guerrero, Jairo A.
Mai, Trinh V.
Pham, Hoi V.
Sanchez-Bayo, Francisco
Ikenaka, Yoshinori
Publisher
Elsevier BV
Date issued
November 2020
In
Environment International
Vol
144
No
106081
From page
1 p.
To page
11 p.
Reviewed by peer
true
Subjects
Food safety Food toxicology Pesticide residue Integrated pest management IPM Dietary risk assessment One Health Organic agriculture
Abstract
Food can be health-giving. A global transition towards plant-based diets may equally help curb carbon emissions, slow land-system change and conserve finite resources. Yet, projected benefits of such ‘planetary health’ diets imperfectly capture the environmental or societal health outcomes tied to food production. Here, we examine pesticide-related hazards of fruit and vegetable consumption, and list proven management alternatives per commodity, geography and chemical compound. Across countries, pesticide use in these alleged healthful foods is extensive with up to 97% food items containing residues and up to 42% posing dietary risks to consumers. Multiple residues are present in 70–92% of US- and China-grown stone fruit while 58% US cauliflower is tainted with neonicotinoid insecticides. Science-based alternatives and decision-support frameworks can help food producers reduce risks and potential harm by deliberately abstaining from pesticide use. As such, opportunities abound to advance ‘win-win’ diets that simultaneously nurture human health and conserve global biodiversity.
ISSN
0160-4120
Publication type
journal article
File(s)
