The transition to healthy diets with a low environmental impact is crucial to achieving
sustainable food systems and reducing health problems. In this context, dietary guidelines for schools can encourage eating behaviours among pupils to
reduce their environmental footprint.
Research by the Universitat Oberta de Catalunya (
UOC), the Barcelona Institute for Global Health (ISGlobal) – a "la Caixa" Foundation partnership – , the Public Health Agency of Catalonia (ASPCAT), the UNESCO Chair in Life Cycle and Climate Change ESCI-UPF and the Barcelona School of Management (BSM-UPF) of Pompeu Fabra University (UPF) has analysed the
dietary guidelines for schools published by ASPCAT since 2005 (with updates in
2012,
2017 and
2020), which are used by schools to design
healthy menus.
"This is one of the first articles to focus on school menus, viewing the canteen as a place of learning where children adopt eating habits that can
last a lifetime," explained Júlia Benito-Cobeña, one of the authors of the study, whose final project for the UOC's
online Master's Degree in Healthy and Sustainable Food is the basis of this research. She said: "The ASPCAT updated its guidelines in 2020 taking sustainability criteria into account. This study verifies that the
environmental impact has indeed decreased, and we have contributed information to design new menus that further reduce the impact of school meals." The research team was jointly led by Ujué Fresán, researcher at ISGlobal and course instructor at the UOC, and Laura Batlle-Bayer, from ESCI-UPF.
Available in open access in Science of the Total Environment, the study analyses the four versions of the guidelines, with results that show progressive changes in the environmental impact of school menus for children aged 7 to 12. The authors compared the environmental impact using
16 environmental indicators, including acidification, water scarcity, human toxicity, use of mineral resources and metals, and use of fossil resources, as well as an indicator of their composite
environmental footprint.
Using the 2005 guidelines as a baseline, the updates introduced in 2012, 2017 and 2020
reduced the environmental footprint by 9%, 22% and 40%, respectively. All the individual indicators also showed significantly lower environmental impacts in 2020 compared to 2005, with reductions ranging from 5% to 52%.
Foods with the largest footprint
Also involved in the study was
Anna Bach, member of
the UOC's Faculty of Health Sciences, co-coordinator of the Nutrition, Food, Health and Sustainability (
NUTRALiSS) research group, part of the
eHealth Centre. With her support, the team analysed which food groups have the greatest impact on each environmental indicator and proposes changes that maintain both the
macronutrient distribution and the nutritional quality of the menus intact.
The second courses, mainly
meat and fish, were shown to contribute most to the environmental impacts. Including more plant-based proteins and less meat and fish, combined with a more diversified
cereal intake, reduces the environmental impacts of meal plans by about 50%.
"Fruit and rice are the main contributors to water consumption, but
fruit plays an essential role in healthy eating, which is why it's advisable to eat it in four out of every five meals. Reducing the consumption of fruit would have a negative effect on health," she explained. The study shows that
rice can be replaced by other cereals that are more adaptable to climate change, which would also reduce the environmental impact.
Attractive alternatives
As for people's reluctance to accept the changes proposed, especially among families, the study cites the
false belief that plant-based menus are bland and nutritionally deficient.
"There are also barriers to acceptance among children: if they're not
cooked and presented attractively, children are less likely to want to eat certain foods, such as vegetables and legumes. To overcome these difficulties, we will have to work together with families, the school's staff and the kitchen," said the author. "It would also be necessary to study the extent to which these guidelines are implemented in schools," she added.
Although the study has focused on Catalan guidelines, its results could be extrapolated to the
recommendations for the whole of Spain set out in the
Royal Decree on the promotion of healthy and sustainable eating in schools, which was published last April by the Ministry of Social Rights, Consumer Affairs and the 2030 Agenda.
This research is part of the UOC's digital health and planetary well-being research mission. It also supports the following Sustainable Development Goals: SDG 2, zero hunger; SDG 3, good health and well-being; and SDG 12, responsible production and consumption.
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