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Food and Climate Change without the hot air: Change Your Diet: the Easiest Way to Help Save the Planet

1 Introduction I Breakfast 2. Tea and coffee 3. Sugar 4. Milk 5. Bread and toast 6. A bowl of cereal 7. Eggs 8. Breakfast summary II Lunch 9. A cheese sandwich 10. Ham, pork and bacon 11. Salad 12. Pizza 13. A baked potato, or fries 14. Beans and other legumes 15. Yogurt and cream 16. Lunch summary III Snacks 17. A piece of fruit 18. Chocolate and sweets 19. Nuts 20. Potato crisps/chips 21. Soft drinks and juices 22. A piece of cake 23. Snacks summary IV Evening meal 24 Spaghetti bolognese 25 Chicken curry tikka masala 26 Rice 27 Fish and chips 28 Veg 29 Beer or wine? 30 Dessert 31 Evening meal summary V Looking ahead 32 Food emissions for a whole day 33 Leftovers and food waste 34 Health 35 Vegan and other climate-motivated diets 36 How can governments help? 37 Food as part of the solution 38 Making the change Appendixes A Climate change B Impacts of climate change on food C Food in the future
Publisher: UIT Cambridge LTD
ISBN: 9780857845030
Products specifications
Author S L Bridle
Pub Date 03/09/2020
Binding Paperback / softback
Pages 256
Country United Kingdom
Dewey 363.738746
GBPPrice 19.99
Availability Available
€24.08
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A quarter of the greenhouse-gas emissions that cause climate change come from food. In Food and Climate Change without the hot air, Sarah Bridle details the carbon footprint of the food we eat, from breakfast to lunch, from snacks to supper. She breaks down the environmental impact of each food, so we can see where the emissions are highest and where we can make sustainable food choices. With this knowledge, we can make changes to our diet - e.g. eating more locally grown produce and introducing meat-free days. This will reduce the greenhouse gas emissions so damaging to our planet and probably be healthier for us, too. Food and Climate Change without the hot air considers: How to reduce the greenhouse gas emissions that come from food - currently 25%. What effect the food we eat has on the environment of our planet. How climate change will affect the food we will eat in the future. How consumers can play their part in reducing food-based carbon emissions. Bridle looks at popular breakfast, lunch, snack and dinner options, such as tea and coffee, eggs, cheese and chicken sandwiches, salad, pizza, baked potatoes, chocolate, nuts, soft drinks, alcoholic beverages, steak and fries, fish suppers, Spaghetti Bolognese and more. She calculates the greenhouse gas emissions of those meals, breaking down the different ingredients and cooking methods, which makes it easy to compare different options within the same meal. This takes into account all the gases that contribute to global warming: carbon dioxide, methane and nitrous oxide (gCO2e). Bridle also dives into the important topic of food waste and gives valuable tips to avoid leftovers. Inspired by the author's former mentor David MacKay (Sustainable Energy without the hot air), Food and Climate Change is a rigorously researched discussion of how food and climate change are intimately connected. In this ground-breaking and accessible work, Prof Sarah Bridle focuses on the facts so that they speak for themselves. The book is highly illustrated in full colour throughout, making it an attractive read, as well as an inspiring one. It shows how anyone can reduce the climate impact of their food. It also suggests how the food system must change, with: Incentives for farmers to switch to more efficient, climate-friendly technologies. Food labelling to show a product's 'food miles' and how it has been produced. Research into non-traditional production methods. How to waste less food and use all the water, energy and nutrients used in its production more wisely and sustainably.
A quarter of the greenhouse-gas emissions that cause climate change come from food. In Food and Climate Change without the hot air, Sarah Bridle details the carbon footprint of the food we eat, from breakfast to lunch, from snacks to supper. She breaks down the environmental impact of each food, so we can see where the emissions are highest and where we can make sustainable food choices. With this knowledge, we can make changes to our diet - e.g. eating more locally grown produce and introducing meat-free days. This will reduce the greenhouse gas emissions so damaging to our planet and probably be healthier for us, too. Food and Climate Change without the hot air considers: How to reduce the greenhouse gas emissions that come from food - currently 25%. What effect the food we eat has on the environment of our planet. How climate change will affect the food we will eat in the future. How consumers can play their part in reducing food-based carbon emissions. Bridle looks at popular breakfast, lunch, snack and dinner options, such as tea and coffee, eggs, cheese and chicken sandwiches, salad, pizza, baked potatoes, chocolate, nuts, soft drinks, alcoholic beverages, steak and fries, fish suppers, Spaghetti Bolognese and more. She calculates the greenhouse gas emissions of those meals, breaking down the different ingredients and cooking methods, which makes it easy to compare different options within the same meal. This takes into account all the gases that contribute to global warming: carbon dioxide, methane and nitrous oxide (gCO2e). Bridle also dives into the important topic of food waste and gives valuable tips to avoid leftovers. Inspired by the author's former mentor David MacKay (Sustainable Energy without the hot air), Food and Climate Change is a rigorously researched discussion of how food and climate change are intimately connected. In this ground-breaking and accessible work, Prof Sarah Bridle focuses on the facts so that they speak for themselves. The book is highly illustrated in full colour throughout, making it an attractive read, as well as an inspiring one. It shows how anyone can reduce the climate impact of their food. It also suggests how the food system must change, with: Incentives for farmers to switch to more efficient, climate-friendly technologies. Food labelling to show a product's 'food miles' and how it has been produced. Research into non-traditional production methods. How to waste less food and use all the water, energy and nutrients used in its production more wisely and sustainably.
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