AI Article Synopsis

  • Food systems must respect natural resource limits, and localized production and dietary changes are suggested solutions, yet there's a lack of U.S. analysis on their scalability across various diets.! -
  • A study modeled the biophysical capacity for regional food systems in the U.S., estimating the "foodshed size" or average distance food travels for different land types and dietary scenarios from current diets to vegan options.! -
  • Results show that localized food potential varies by region, with a significant portion of the population able to meet food needs within 250 km depending on dietary choices, while unused land could serve other purposes like export or conservation.!

Article Abstract

In the long term, food systems must heed natural resource limits. Localized production and dietary changes are often suggested as potential solutions. However, no U.S. analyses fully evaluate the feasibility to scale localization across a range of diets. We therefore modeled the biophysical capacity for regional food systems based on agricultural land area and productivity, population, and 7 diet scenarios ranging in meat-intensity, from current consumption to vegan. We estimated foodshed size, colloquially known as "food miles" for 378 U.S. metropolitan centers, in a hypothetical nationwide closed system that prioritizes localized food. We found that foodshed size (weighted average distance traveled) for three land types ranged from 351-428 km (cultivated cropland), 80-492 km (perennial forage cropland), and 117-799 km (grazing land). Localized potential varies regionally: foodsheds are generally larger in the populous Northeast, Southeast, and Southwest than in the Northwest and the center of the country. However, depending on consumption of animal-based foods, a sizable proportion of the population could meet its food needs within 250km: from 35%-53% (cultivated cropland), 39%-94% (perennial forage cropland, 100% for vegan), and 26%-88% (grazing land, 100% for ovolacto-vegetarian and vegan). All seven scenarios leave some land unused. This reserve capacity might be used to supply food to the global market, grow bioenergy crops, or for conservation.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.9b07582DOI Listing

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