Imagine a world where everyone has access to affordable and nutritious food and where the planet is thriving and regenerating to sustain generations to come. That’s the dream. The reality is that for many people in certain areas of the world, access to food can be a challenge.
According to the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, world food production will need to increase by an estimated 70 percent to feed 10 billion people alive by 2050. To provide them with a nutritious diet, global food systems and eating habits need to change.
To achieve sustainability within food systems, we need to meet the nutritional demands of everyone now while also reducing the environmental impact for future generations. So, how can we develop a global food system that nourishes – not just feeds – everyone while being environmentally sustainable?
Sustainable Nutrition: A Path to Restoring Our Earth
The convergence of nutrition and sustainability is essential to a better future, and as conscious consumers, we need to ensure that our diets are not only sustainable for our health but also for our planet. We need to cultivate food that is good for our health in ways that are restorative to our Earth.
Sustainable nutrition offers a forward-thinking framework whereby the food that we eat is diverse, nutrient-dense, and healthy while grown sustainably and without negative impacts on the health of the planet. It is guided by a set of characteristics, including:
- Eating a diet which is more plant-based with a higher nutrient density.
- Choosing sustainably-sourced meats and fish when possible.
- Reducing the consumption of foods high in sugar and saturated fats.
- Reducing or eliminating food waste
- Adopting a regenerative approach to agriculture.
The current global diet is unsustainable given the gaps in wealth and opportunity. We live in a world where calorie-rich foods are cheap and more accessible, but they lack the nutrients critical to growth, development, and overall health. According to the 2021 SOFI Report, the high cost of healthy diets, coupled with persistent high levels of income inequality, put healthy diets out of reach for around 3 billion people.
High-quality proteins, especially plant-based proteins such as soy, quinoa, rice and pea can help to replace the food with little or no nutrition value eaten in poorer areas to overcome the triple burden of malnutrition: undernutrition, micronutrient deficiency, and obesity.
Plant-Based Proteins: A Sound Alternative
So, what does a sustainable diet look like?
Cutting back on eating meat and dairy products is said to be an effective method to decrease the environmental impact on the planet, according to a comprehensive analysis of the damage meat farming does to the planet.
Some foods are more harmful to the environment than others. For example, 100 grams of beef protein can result in the release of the equivalent of 105 kilograms of CO2. In contrast, 100 grams of peas, emits the equivalent of only about 0.2 kg of CO2.
According to U.S. Food and Agriculture Organization, raising livestock for meat, eggs, and milk generates 14.5 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions, the second-highest source of emissions and greater than all transportation combined.
Furthermore, the American Society of Clinical Nutrition states that worldwide shortages of cropland, fresh water, and energy resources already require most people to live on a plant-based diet.
Consuming plant-based protein is already widespread. More people now understand that plant-based diets are not devoid of protein – in fact, plant-based proteins, as opposed to animal protein, are naturally cholesterol-free and are relatively low in saturated fats.
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Current generations are more aware of the impact of environmental sustainability, which leads to greater awareness of soyfoods. From a sustainability standpoint, plant-based proteins – and especially soy – are the smart way to go.
Key Sustainability Benefits of Soy
The environmental advantages of soy-based protein are clear. According to the Life Cycle Screening of Animal and Vegetable derived Protein Sources study by DuPont:
1. Less water usage
Clean water is a scarce resource and the demand has already exceeded availability in many regions with agriculture. Isolated soy protein (ISP) uses much less blue water (38 liters per kg of protein produced) than pork or beef (more than 1,600 liters of water per kg).
2. Efficient land usage
ISP requires 8 m2Â of land per kg of protein compared to 1,311 m2Â of land for beef.
3. Small carbon footprint
ISP production creates seven to 70 times fewer greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide and methane than beef (2.4 kg compared to 178 kg) and other animal-based proteins.
4. Sustainable sourcing
Herbalife Nutrition is proud to be a major consumer of soy protein. Our soy is sourced from qualified farmers and suppliers in America’s heartland. Our partners are held to our industry-leading standards of quality and integrity. We are proud to partner with farmers like Rob to ensure that the finest ingredients go into our products:
Rising to the Challenge
As a global nutrition company that has been leading the nutrition industry for 40 years to deliver quality, science-backed nutrition products that form part of balanced, healthy diets, we are aware of the role we can play when it comes to sustainability. At the heart of the development of our nutrition products is a commitment to harnessing plant power throughout, whether that’s through our shakes, tea, aloe, or Enrichual-line of products.
Nourishing a thriving planet is also one of the three key pillars of our Global Responsibility strategy. Climate change is the most universally pressing challenge in our world today. From this perspective, our focus on improving individual health extends to improving the health of our planet:
- Our commitment to protect and safeguard our planet sits at the heart of our sourcing and manufacturing efforts. This includes making sure we do what’s needed to protect the environment by minimizing our impact, nurturing biodiversity, and collaborating with other organizations on scalable climate action.
- We are committed to working across our operations and supply chain to reduce and, ultimately, eliminate negative environmental impacts.
- We also are committed to contributing positive environmental impacts in areas such as plant-based proteins and ingredients, forest restoration, and circular economy.
- Sustainable product packaging is one of our top priorities. In this area, we are focused on reducing the single-use plastics throughout our global distribution network and incorporating more sustainable content, such as post-consumer resin, into our packaging.
To drive our progress toward nourishing people and planet, we’ve set an ambitious goal to make 50 million impacts by our 50th anniversary in 2030. We call it our 50 by 50 Campaign. From providing meals through our Nutrition for Zero Hunger initiative to mentoring young entrepreneurs to reducing thousands of pounds of plastic in our packaging, we’re passionate about being agents of change.
From research and development to product innovation to permanent improvements on our manufacturing and supply chain, we ensure we are meeting and exceeding changing customer needs while remaining committed to sustainability.