http://www.news.cornell.edu/stories/Aug08/Energy.Food.html
Aug. 11, 2008
Eating less, eating local and eating better could slash U.S. energy  
use, CU study finds
By Susan Lang <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

How much energy we use to produce food could be cut in half if  
Americans ate less and ate local foods, wolfed down less meat, dairy  
and junk food, and used more traditional farming methods, says a new  
Cornell study.

"We could reduce the fossil energy used in the U.S. food system by  
about 50 percent with relatively simple changes in how we produce,  
process, package, transport and consume our food," said David  
Pimentel, professor emeritus of ecology and agriculture in the College  
of Agriculture and Life Sciences at Cornell.

Pimentel's analysis, co-authored with five former Cornell  
undergraduates who were in Pimentel's Environmental Policy course in  
2006, is published in the academic journal Human Ecology.

Pimentel says that about 19 percent of the total fossil fuel used in  
this country goes into the food system -- about the same amount we use  
to fuel cars. His analysis details how changes in the food system  
could reduce energy.

For example, the researchers recommend:

   * Eat less and cut down on junk food: To produce the typical
     American diet requires the equivalent of about 500 gallons of oil
     per year per person, says the study. Americans, on average,
     consume about 50 percent more calories than recommended by the
     federal government for optimal health and get one-third of their
     calories from junk food. Eating less and cutting down on junk food
     would use significantly less energy, considering all the
     processing, packaging and transportation costs saved.
   * Eat less meat and dairy: We use 45 million tons of plant protein
     to produce 7.5 million tons of animal protein per year, according
     to Pimentel. Switching to a vegetarian diet, he says, would
     require one-third less fossil fuel than producing the current
     animal-based American diet.
   * Eat more locally grown food: Food travels an average of 1,500
     miles before it is eaten. "This requires 1.4 times the energy than
     the energy in the food," Pimentel said. A head of iceberg lettuce,
     for example, which is 95 percent water, provides 110 calories and
     few nutrients. Irrigating the lettuce in California takes 750
     calories of fossil energy and shipping it to New York another
     4,000 calories of energy per head, according to the analysis.
     Locally grown cabbage, on the other hand, requires only 400
     calories to produce and offers far more nutrients, not to mention
     it can be stored all winter long.
   * Use more traditional farming methods: Pimentel's team also shows
     how using methods to reduce soil erosion, irrigation and pesticide
     use, through such things as crop rotation, manure and cover crops,
     could cut the total energy now used in crop production.

The study's co-authors are Sean Williamson, Courtney Alexander, Omar  
Gonzalez-Pagan, Caitlin Kontak and Steven Mulkey, all Cornell Class of  
2007.



----------------------------------------------------
Gay Nicholson, Ph.D.

607-533-7312 (home office)
607-279-6618 (cell)

1 Maple Avenue
Lansing, NY 14882
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Sustainable Tompkins
Program Coordinator
www.sustainabletompkins.org

Southern Tier Energy$mart Communities
Regional Coordinator
Cornell Cooperative Extension of Tompkins County
615 Willow Ave., Ithaca, NY 14850
[EMAIL PROTECTED]





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