Wednesday, April 22, 2009

"Thanks
to a new tool called Life Cycle Analysis, scientists can pinpoint much
more precisely what foods produce those climate-warming gases, and what
stage in their "life cycle" is most carbon intensive," according to an
article by Leslie Cole which in the April 21
Oregonian,
"Your climate-friendly kitchen." [...] "The results," the article
continues, "show some clear steps all of us can take to a more
climate-friendly diet."
To build a "low-carbon diet," Cole suggests:
More green, less moo.
To
eat green, vegetables should be the focus of your meal. Meat and dairy
products should be kept to a minimum, because "livestock products
account for more than half of the food sector's contribution to
greenhouse gases."
Kick the can.
Food, when thrown into landfills, releases methane gas. Instead, compost food waste and buy only what you need.
Keep it real.
Real
foods--or whole foods--are better than processed foods. Eat an apple
instead of apple juice, a potato instead of potato chips, because "new
research shows that food production, not transportation, takes the
heaviest toll on the environment."
Buy foods in season.
Eating
fresh fruits and vegetables preserves energy, because "processing
requires energy, which uses fossil fuel and creates emissions."
Break your bag habit.
Plastic bags are made from petroleum, so they fill our landfills, landscapes, and waterways without breaking down.
© Cole, Leslie. "Your climate-friendly kitchen," The Oregonian. 21 April 2009.