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Co-benefits of a flexitarian diet for air quality and human health in Europe

Mihály Himics, Elias Giannakis, Jonilda Kushta, Jordan Hristov, Amarendra Sahoo, Ignácio Pérez Domínguez

2021Ecological Economics42 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Agriculture is a major source of air pollution in Europe, with adverse impacts on human health. Having recognized the serious health outcomes, and in direct response to public demand for a cleaner environment, European public policies are aiming to reduce air pollution. This study proposes a shift to more plant-based human diets to help achieve bold reduction targets for air pollution from agriculture. To assess the potential reduction in agricultural air pollution, we combine a large-scale partial equilibrium model for agriculture (CAPRI) with an atmospheric chemistry model (WRF-Chem). The health impacts from improved air quality are summarized as premature mortality rates, which are estimated from simulated changes in annual mean PM2.5 concentrations. We find that a shift to plant-based (flexitarian) diets would reduce ammonia emissions by 33% in the European Union (EU), generating significant co-benefits for air quality and human health. The economic benefits from improved human health would also largely mitigate the economic losses in the agricultural sector (39% in the EU and 49% in Europe as a whole). Our results suggest that, by shifting to plant-based human diets, European agriculture could significantly contribute to the targets in the EU Zero Pollution Action Plan.

Topics & Concepts

AgricultureAir quality indexEuropean unionAir pollutionAction planHuman healthNatural resource economicsPublic healthPollutionEnvironmental scienceEnvironmental protectionAgricultural economicsBusinessEnvironmental healthEnvironmental planningGeographyEconomicsEcologyBiologyEconomic policyMeteorologyMedicineArchaeologyNursingAir Quality and Health ImpactsClimate Change and Health ImpactsAgriculture Sustainability and Environmental Impact