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4 successful strategies to get people to eat less meat and more plants amid climate crisis

A plant-based diet can cut greenhouse gas emissions, but meat-eating habits are hard to change. Here are some strategies that are working

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Serving up tasty plant-based dishes such as pasta with broccolini, basil flowers and lemon zest will help propel diners to eat more plant-based meals. Photo: Instagram/@ciaindustryleadership

If you joined Americans in tucking into a Thanksgiving dinner last week, no doubt the centrepiece on the table was roast turkey.

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The custom of focusing a celebratory meal on a decadent meat dish is commonplace at feasts around the world, for Diwali, winter solstice, Christmas, Hanukkah, Easter, the end of Ramadan for Eid ul-Fitr, Passover and Lunar New Year.

“Meat is really intimately tied with a lot of traditions and festivities,” says Emma Garnett, a postdoctoral researcher who studies behaviour change and sustainable diets at the University of Oxford in England. Even outside holiday meals, she says, meat eating has become excessive.

In industrialised countries such as the United States, people often consume far more meat than dietary guidelines recommend. Scientific data now shows this is not only bad for people’s health – but also the planet.

An Asian family having a meal together. Shifting diets away from meat-centric meals to plant-based ones could dramatically cut greenhouse gas emissions, a new study suggests. Photo: Shutterstock
An Asian family having a meal together. Shifting diets away from meat-centric meals to plant-based ones could dramatically cut greenhouse gas emissions, a new study suggests. Photo: Shutterstock

“Food systems are responsible for a third of global greenhouse gas emissions, which is huge,” says Stacy Blondin, a behavioural science associate at the non-profit World Resources Institute (WRI) based in Washington. It is the production, transport and consumption of animal-based foods specifically that are the dominant source of food-related emissions.

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Some of the highest-emission foods come from cows and other animals which roam across hectares of land emitting methane, a greenhouse gas, during their unique digestion process.

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