Appetite for Change: Food system options for nitrogen, environment & health. 2nd European Nitrogen Assessment Special Report on Nitrogen & Food

TitleAppetite for Change: Food system options for nitrogen, environment & health. 2nd European Nitrogen Assessment Special Report on Nitrogen & Food
Publication TypeReport
Year of Publication2023
AuthorsLeip A, Wollgast J, Kugelberg S, Leite JC, Maas RJM, Mason KE, Sutton MA
Date Published12/2023
InstitutionUK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology
CityEdinburgh
ISBN Number978-1-906698-83-6
Report NumberINMS report 2023/01
Abstract

This report assesses the main ingredients needed to navigate the transition towards agreed 
nitrogen sustainability targets.

Global nitrogen losses pose a serious threat to environmental sustainability and compromise
 the ability of the agricultural sector to feed a growing population. The first ENA Special
 Report ‘Nitrogen on the Table’ showed how encouraging more plant-based diets can
promote human health and reduce nitrogen emissions. Building on these foundations, the 
present report  ‘Appetite for Change’ explores pathways towards sustainable nitrogen and
 food choices.

This report, prepared by the Expert Panel on Nitrogen and Food of the UNECE Task Force
 on Reactive Nitrogen, presents the main ingredients and a suggested recipe to navigate
 the necessary sustainability transition towards agreed nitrogen targets. It shows that a
 combination of diet change towards plant-based diets and technical measures across the
 food chain can halve nitrogen waste. It thus sets out a path to reaching targets set in the
 Colombo Declaration, the EU Farm to Fork Strategy and the Kunming-Montreal Global
 Biodiversity Framework. Importantly, diet change can reduce pressure on land resources
 and mineral fertilizers, reduce energy dependency and increase resilience to food and
 energy crises.

‘Appetite for Change’ emphasizes how the nitrogen cycle, food system, environment and
 health are inextricably interlinked. It goes on to identify ambitious and systemic actions
 to transform the food system. There are great opportunities for reducing nitrogen losses
 from food production and consumption with co-benefits for nutrition and public health. To
 be sustainable in the longer term, nitrogen management needs to be based on a systems
 approach and requires responsive governance action across inter-connected policy sectors,
 engaging a wide set of food system actors.

Click the links below to access the report:

Full report

Executive Summary

DOI10.5281/zenodo.10406450