Skip main navigation

Dietary guidelines for health and sustainability

Dr Natalia Lawrence discusses the concept of a 'healthy plate'.
© University of Exeter

As we just heard in the video, people in developed countries, and those undergoing a ‘nutrition transition’ in developing countries, are eating too much red meat, saturated fat, processed foods and not enough natural foods high in nutrients and fibre. These ‘western diets’ are not just bad for our health; they are also disastrous for the planet.

A recent analysis of food intake data from 150 countries concluded that, in high-income countries, a quarter of GHG emissions are related to producing the food we eat. More than half of these emissions are caused by meat and dairy farming, with beef and lamb being the worst offenders. If people switched to healthy and more plant-based diets we could halve the greenhouse gas emissions of the food system.

Of course, food production has many other environmental impacts, on water and soil resources and biodiversity, for example. When these are taken into account, the take-home message is clear. In the words of food author and activist Michael Pollan: “Eat food, not too much, mostly plants.”

Many countries have government-issued guidelines for healthy eating. In the UK we have the Eatwell Guide, shown below. Such guidelines indicate what proportion of the diet should come from different food groups.

An infographic showing how a healthy plate of food would be made up of different food types Fruit and vegetables and starchy carbohydrates are recommended to be 3/4 of the plate, while proteins are dairy make up almost the remainder, with a small allowance for oil and spreads Enlarge image

But is this healthy diet also sustainable? If the British followed this Guide instead of the average diet they would reduce their environmental impact (GHG emissions, water and land use) by a third.

However we could do even better. Recently, experts integrated health and sustainable dietary advice into one optimal diet that meets both goals. The EAT-Lancet Commission had 37 experts work for 3 years analysing the best available data from around to the world, resulting in the “planetary health diet”. Here are the recommended percentages and portions equivalent to what you’d eat in a day. These may look a bit impractical but the idea is to convert them to weekly proportions (e.g. one egg a week) in your actual diet.

An infographic showing a healthy plate broken down into the food types as recommended by the planetary health diet. 50% is fruit and vegetables, 17% carbohydrate, 12% plant sourced protein, 9.5% unsaturated fats, 4% dairy, 3.5% animal sourced protein, 3% sugar, and 1% starchy vegetables Enlarge image

And here is the same dietary advice shown as actual amounts with the recommended weights (in grammes) equivalent to what you’d eat in a day:

An image of food on plates, showing suggested quantities of each food type. A plate of mixed vegetables -300g; a bowl of dairy products 250 g cheese or 250 ml milk Carbohydrates, represented by rice bread grains and potato suggesting 232 g-whole grains and 50 g-starchy veg; a plate of protein - eggs 13g, fish, 28g, chicken 29g, red meat 14g; an orange and a plum - fruit 200g; 31g of sugar and 75 g of legumes, for example beans. Enlarge image

If everybody switched to this diet, global GHG emissions would be reduced by 60% (50-80% depending on country) and premature deaths by 19%. How would you cope with this diet? Why don’t you try it and find out?

First let’s watch a video about different strategies that can help people to change their diets. Then we will ask you to make active changes to your diet for a day, and share your experiences.

© University of Exeter
This article is from the free online

Future Food: Sustainable Food Systems for the 21st Century

Created by
FutureLearn - Learning For Life

Reach your personal and professional goals

Unlock access to hundreds of expert online courses and degrees from top universities and educators to gain accredited qualifications and professional CV-building certificates.

Join over 18 million learners to launch, switch or build upon your career, all at your own pace, across a wide range of topic areas.

Start Learning now