It's Impossible To Eat Healthfully. Here's Why.

There are hidden killers in our broken food system, says a new report released at the World Economic Forum.
More people are thinking about the health consequences of what they eat, but few consider the health consequences of how food is produced.
More people are thinking about the health consequences of what they eat, but few consider the health consequences of how food is produced.
Lisovskaya via Getty Images

Increasing awareness of the impact of diet on health has led many people to reconsider what’s on their plate. For some, this may mean steering clear of processed foods and sugary drinks, for others cutting down on red meat. But eating healthily is not just about what we eat. It’s also about how food is produced.

For millions around the world, hidden killers in our broken food system make healthy eating impossible, says a new report that warns of the damage from air pollution, water contamination and antibiotic resistance. The report, released on Wednesday at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, calls for a redesign of the food industry.

Food has been identified as a major cause of health problems in the U.S., with poor diet to blame for nearly half of all deaths due to heart disease, stroke and diabetes. Yet, even if we improve diet, we are still exposed to the damaging health impacts of what the report from the Ellen MacArthur Foundation calls the “industrial” way that food is produced. By 2050, warns the report, around 5 million people a year could die.

“The way we produce food today is not only extremely wasteful and damaging to the environment, it is causing serious health problems,” said Ellen MacArthur, founder of the foundation and former record-breaking sailor. “People around the world need food that is nutritious, and that is also grown, produced and delivered in a way that benefits their health, the environment and the economy.”

According to the report, overuse and misuse of antibiotics in fish and livestock farming contributes to the spread of resistant pathogens and antibiotics to humans via waterways and the environment. Antibiotic resistance – which could make it impossible to treat common infections – may cost society as much as $125 trillion by 2050, says the report, with food and agriculture responsible for up to 22 percent of those costs.

Agriculture is estimated to be responsible for as much as 20 percent of air pollution deaths around the world, mainly due to the overuse of fertilizers and manure, according to the report. Farmworker exposure to pesticides costs $900 billion globally, with long-term exposure to low levels of pesticides linked to cancer, asthma and depression.

The other major killer is poor wastewater management or irrigation, which is to blame for spreading diseases and contaminating drinking water.

The answer, according to the report, is rethinking our food systems by slashing food waste and using production methods that don’t damage the environment or health. It suggests organic farming methods, for example, which do not allow the use of chemical fertilizers and pesticides, as well as restricting the use of antibiotics on livestock.

Problems in the current food system are not helped by the “lack of traceability about where our food has come from, how it has been produced and what happens to the waste,” said the report’s lead author, Clementine Schouteden.

Cities, where 80 percent of all food is predicted to be consumed by 2050, can be a major driver of change by reconnecting people with how food is produced, for example through farmers markets, the report says. These increased in the U.S. nearly fivefold from 1994 to 2017, with 8,600 farmers markets selling local products.

Cities should also do more to promote farming within their boundaries and in surrounding areas, says the report. Urban agriculture can make food production more visible and transparent to its main customers, the report says, and urban farming techniques such as hydroponics (where the plants are grown in water filled with nutrients) and aeroponics (where the roots hang loose and a sprayed with a nutrient-rich water) can help cut resource waste.

Ferme Abattoir, a rooftop urban aquaponics facility built on top of a food market in Brussels, for example, combines aquaculture with hydroponic vegetable growing, recycling nutrients between both, and producing more than 38 tons of fish (bass) per year.

We need a “vision of a future where the way we produce and consume food contributes to environmental and health benefits, instead of damaging human health and the environment,” said Dr. Gunhild Stordalen, a physician who is founder and executive chair of global food nonprofit EAT, in response to the report. There is no quick fix, she said, but added: “We do have the knowledge and tools to act.”

CORRECTION: A previous version of this story misstated the name of Ferme Abbatoir as Femme Abbatoir.

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