Global adoption of veganism 'could save 8 million lives'

Global adoption of a vegan diet would save more than eight million lives by 2050 and reduce greenhouse emissions by two thirds, according to new research from Oxford University.

A team from the Oxford Martin School, who outlined their findings in a study published in the Proceedings of National Academy Sciences, also claimed that cutting down on meat could lead to global savings of £1.5 trillion in climate-related damages.

The team modelled four "dietary scenarios" -- one based on current consumption habits, one based on guidelines for the "correct" amount of fruit and vegetables, a vegetarian scenario and a vegan scenario. They found that diets with heavily reduced meat consumption had the biggest impact.

According to the researchers, global adoption of meat-free or meat-reduced diets could:

  • Avoid 5.1 million deaths by 2050, a number that goes up to 7.3 million for a vegetarian diet and 8.1 million for a vegan diet
  • Reduce greenhouse gases by two thirds
  • Cut food related emissions by 29 percent -- 63 percent for a vegetarian diet and 70 percent for a vegan diet
  • Help save around £500 million in healthcare, unpaid informal care and lost working days.

Lead researcher Marco Springmann said that what we eat "greatly influences our personal health and the global environment". He suggested that diets containing a poor ratio of vegetables to meat were responsible for "the greatest health burden globally" "At the same time the food system is also responsible for more than a quarter of all greenhouse gas emissions, and therefore a major driver of climate change," he said.

While putting a "dollar value on good health and the environment is a sensitive issue", Springmann suggested that the results indicated how "dietary changes could have large benefits to society". "The value of those benefits makes a strong case for increased public and private spending on programmes aimed to achieve healthier and more environmentally sustainable diets," he said.

Other studies have had similar findings. In 2012, researchers from the University of Exeter found that cutting global meat consumption in half could "significantly lower carbon dioxide levels".

This article was originally published by WIRED UK