Ultra-Processed Foods and Food System Sustainability: What Are the Links?
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Which Are the Ingredients/Additives Characteristic of Ultra-Processing, and What Is Their Origin?
3. Ultra-Processing, Environment, Biodiversity and Animal Welfare
3.1. General Considerations
3.2. Food Processing and Carbon/Water Footprint
3.2.1. Discretionary Foods
3.2.2. Ultra-Processed Food-Like Products within Dietary Patterns
3.2.3. What to Do When Ultra-Processed/Discretionary Foods Are Not Available?
3.3. Ultra-Processed Foods and Intensive Agriculture and Livestock
3.3.1. Industrial Farming/Agriculture
3.3.2. Intensive Livestock
3.3.3. Loss of Farming Animal Biodiversity
3.3.4. Plastic Pollution
3.4. Energy Consumption in Food Manufacturing, Packaging and Transport
3.4.1. Energy by Food Groups and Processes
3.4.2. Packaging and Transport
3.4.3. Ultra-Processing?
3.4.4. Emerging Techniques
- -
- Their capacity to preserve foods by avoiding successive conditions of severe heating/cooling, which contribute to considerable water and heat consumption minimization; and
- -
- Electricity as the basis of the energy consumption source of such techniques, with an important contribution of renewable resources instead of the direct combustion of fossil fuels required for heat generation in conventional thermal treatments [100].
3.5. Partial Conclusions
4. Ultra-Processed Foods, and Cultural and Socio-Economic Dimensions
4.1. Ultra-Processed Foods and Culinary Traditions
4.2. Ultra-Processed Foods and Socioeconomics
4.2.1. The Socioeconomic Profiles of the High UPF Consumers
- -
- In France, a higher consumption of UPFs was independently associated with being male, being younger, having a lower income level, smoking, being overweight, being obese, and having a lower level of education [114].
- -
- The Spanish SUN cohort of young university graduates, who have a high level of education, revealed other associated factors, including sedentary activities (computer, television) and a high total fat intake together with a low protein and carbohydrate intake [115].
- -
- In the USA, the highest consumers of UPFs (NHANES cohort, 1988–1994) are more likely to be younger, male, non-Hispanic White and current smokers and are less likely to have less than a high school level of education or to have a household income of more than 350% of the poverty level [116]. Similar results in the USA were obtained in the NHANES cohort (2009–2014), showing that subjects who have an income-to-poverty ratio <3.5, 12 years of education, and low physical activity and who are current smokers present the highest UPF consumption [117].
- -
- In South Korea, energy drink intake in Korean adolescents, in isolation or in combination with junk food consumption, was shown to have detrimental effects related to stress, sleep dissatisfaction, mood, and suicidality [118]. Concerning social isolation, Bae et al. showed that adolescent female rats’ body weight gain and daily chow intake were significantly increased by this stress, suggesting that social isolation during adolescence may increase food intake, perhaps preferentially towards palatable food [119]. This result was confirmed in mice that become obese under social isolation stress [120]. Surprisingly, however, although social isolation generally increases the risk of type 2 diabetes, socially connected obese participants pose a higher risk of type 2 diabetes than socially isolated obese participants, potentially because the stigmatization of obesity leads to negative social interactions [121]. Indeed, overweight youth are more likely to experience verbal victimization, feel less supported by their peers, and are less likely to date than youth who are not overweight from mid-adolescence into early young adulthood [122].
4.2.2. Ultra-Processed Foods and Small Farmers
4.3. Partial Conclusions
5. Conclusions
5.1. A Global Synthesis from Published Data
5.2. Non-UPF Versus UPF?
6. Perspectives: What Measures to Take?
6.1. Better Consideration of the Degree of Processing in Science and Food Policy
6.2. The 3V’s RULE Proposal to Counteract Excess UPF Consumption
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
ADEME | French Environment & Energy Management Agency |
FAO | Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations |
GHGE | Green House Gas Emission |
LCA | Life Cycle Assessment |
PAHO | Pan American Health Organization |
UNICEF | United Nations Children’s Fund |
UPF | Ultra-Processed Food |
WHO | World health Organization |
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Ingredients | Number of Food Products 2 | Percentage of All Products in the Open Food Facts Database 2 |
---|---|---|
Ultra-processed carbohydrates: | ||
Glucose-fructose syrup/glucose syrup/(oligo)fructose | >52,154 | >7.6 |
Starch | >22,389 | >3.2 |
Dextrose | >21,340 | >3.1 |
Lactose | >11,232 | >1.6 |
Malt (extract) | >8292 | >1.2 |
Maltodextrins/dextrins | >7756 | >1.1 |
Invert sugar | >4349 | >0.6 |
Ultra-processed lipids: | ||
Refined plant-based oils and fats 3 | >64,811 | >9.4 |
Hydrogenated oils | >99 | >0.01 |
Ultra-processed proteins: | ||
Milk/whey/casein protein | >11,789 | >1.7 |
Gluten | >11,428 | >1.7 |
Gelatine | >3970 | >0.6 |
Soy protein | >1953 | >0.3 |
Pea protein | >1289 | >0.2 |
Protein hydrolysate/hydrolysed proteins | >307 | >0.04 |
Egg white and protein | >62 | >0.01 |
Aroma 4: | >72,348 | >10.5 |
Additives | Number of Food Products 2 | Percentage of all Products in the Open Food Facts Database 2 |
---|---|---|
Texture: | ||
E322: lecithins | >23,640 | >3.4 |
E14XX: modified starches | >16,405 | >2.4 |
E415: xanthan gum | >12,015 | >1.7 |
E471: mono and diglycerides of fatty acids | >11,828 | >1.7 |
E440: pectin | >10,172 | >1.5 |
E450: diphosphates, pyrophosphates | >10,644 | >1.5 |
E412: guar gum | >9177 | >1.3 |
E407: carraghenans | >8616 | >1.2 |
E420: sorbitol | >4285 | >0.6 |
E406: agar-agar | >842 | >0.1 |
E1200: polydextrose | >375 | >0.1 |
E421: mannitol | >235 | >0.03 |
Colour: | ||
E160c: paprika extract, capsanthin, capsorubin | >5101 | >0.7 |
E160a: carotenes | >4347 | >0.6 |
E120: cochineal, carmines, carminic acid | >3560 | >0.5 |
E150a: plain caramel | >3097 | >0.5 |
E133: Brilliant blue FCF | >1450 | >0.2 |
Flavour/taste: | ||
E621: monosodium glutamate | >3710 | >0.5 |
E955: sucralose | >2436 | >0.4 |
E950: acesulfame potassium | >2329 | >0.3 |
E951: aspartame | >1249 | >0.2 |
E960: steviol glycosides | >880 | >0.1 |
E953: isomalt | >443 | >0.06 |
E967: xylitol | >394 | >0.06 |
E954: saccharine | >238 | >0.03 |
kg CO2/kg of Active Ingredient | kg CH4/kg of Active Ingredient | kg N2O/kg of Active Ingredient | |
---|---|---|---|
Pesticides: | |||
Herbicides | 8.33217 | 0.02548 | 0.00022 |
Fungicides | 5.537 | 0.01855 | 0.00015 |
Insecticides | 23.7 | 0.0543 | 0.00063 |
Growth regulators | 7.86 | 0.0241 | 0.00021 |
Fertilizers 2: | kg CO2/unit | kg CO2/unit | kg CO2/unit |
Manure in heap (ton) | 2940.000 | 0.0647 | 9.120 |
Liquid manure (m3) | 2920.000 | 0.0988 | 6.960 |
kg CO2eq./kg of nutrient | |||
Nitrogen fertilizer | 5.34 | ||
Phosphate fertilizer | 0.57 | ||
Potassium fertilizer | 0.45 |
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Fardet, A.; Rock, E. Ultra-Processed Foods and Food System Sustainability: What Are the Links? Sustainability 2020, 12, 6280. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12156280
Fardet A, Rock E. Ultra-Processed Foods and Food System Sustainability: What Are the Links? Sustainability. 2020; 12(15):6280. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12156280
Chicago/Turabian StyleFardet, Anthony, and Edmond Rock. 2020. "Ultra-Processed Foods and Food System Sustainability: What Are the Links?" Sustainability 12, no. 15: 6280. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12156280
APA StyleFardet, A., & Rock, E. (2020). Ultra-Processed Foods and Food System Sustainability: What Are the Links? Sustainability, 12(15), 6280. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12156280