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Diet Quality and Water Scarcity: Evidence from a Large Australian Population Health Survey

Version 3 2024-06-19, 18:12
Version 2 2024-06-05, 09:54
Version 1 2023-05-21, 23:35
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-19, 18:12 authored by Bradley G Ridoutt, Danielle Baird, Kimberley Anastasiou, Gilly A Hendrie
There is widespread interest in dietary strategies that lower environmental impacts. However, various forms of malnutrition are also widely prevalent. In a first study of its kind, we quantify the water-scarcity footprint and diet quality score of a large (>9000) population of self-selected adult daily diets. Here, we show that excessive consumption of discretionary foods—i.e., energy-dense and nutrient-poor foods high in saturated fat, added sugars and salt, and alcohol—contributes up to 36% of the water-scarcity impacts and is the primary factor differentiating healthier diets with lower water-scarcity footprint from poorer quality diets with higher water-scarcity footprint. For core food groups (fruits, vegetables, etc.), large differences in water-scarcity footprint existed between individual foods, making difficult the amendment of dietary guidelines for water-scarcity impact reduction. Very large reductions in dietary water-scarcity footprint are possible, but likely best achieved though technological change, product reformulation and procurement strategies in the agricultural and food industries.

History

Journal

Nutrients

Volume

11

Article number

1846

Pagination

1-15

Location

Basel, Switzerland

ISSN

2072-6643

eISSN

2072-6643

Language

English

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

8

Publisher

MDPI