A roadmap to sustainable nutrition
By 2050, every person could access nutritious, culturally appropriate food while reducing environmental harm. The 2025 EAT-Lancet Commission on Healthy Diets From Sustainable Food Systems highlights the “planetary health diet” as a solution.
The report finds that combining this diet with sustainable farming and reduced food waste could feed 9.6 billion people fairly. Experts from over 35 countries contributed, showing that global food-related greenhouse gas emissions could drop by more than half if nations act together.
Currently, roughly 30% of emissions come from producing, processing, and transporting food, while most of the rest comes from fossil fuel use and deforestation for farmland.
What the planetary health diet includes
The diet emphasizes fruits, vegetables, whole grains, legumes, and nuts. It allows moderate meat and dairy while limiting added sugar, salt, and saturated fat. “This diet protects both human health and the planet,” said Dr. Walter Willett of Harvard University.
He recommends one daily serving of dairy and one serving of animal protein, such as fish, poultry, or eggs. Red meat, including beef and pork, should be limited to a 4-ounce serving per week. “It’s flexible, balanced, and similar to the Mediterranean diet,” Willett said.
Diet alone is not enough
Johan Rockström, co-chair of the commission and director of the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research, said dietary changes alone cannot solve the problem. “We also need to reduce food waste and adopt sustainable land, water, and ecosystem management,” he explained. “Healthy food must be accessible and affordable for all.”
Facing industry resistance and misinformation
The 2019 EAT-Lancet report estimated that global adoption of the planetary health diet could prevent 11.6 million premature deaths annually. The 2025 update raises the estimate to 15 million. In the U.S., about 31% of premature adult deaths could be avoided.
Transforming the food system could save $5 trillion annually by reducing health costs, restoring ecosystems, and slowing climate change. The required investment — $200 to $500 billion — is far smaller than the potential benefits.
Opposition remains, particularly from meat and dairy industries. Social media campaigns like #YestoMeat spread misinformation in 2019, and similar tactics have resurfaced. “Some groups promote meat-heavy diets while downplaying livestock’s climate impact,” Willett said. “Our report relies on independent, global scientific evidence.”
The consequences of inaction
If current trends continue, agricultural emissions could rise 33% by 2050. Nearly 70% of ecosystems have already lost more than half of their natural areas, mostly to farming.
The planetary health diet could cut emissions by 60% compared with 2020 levels. Cattle numbers would drop by 26%, freeing 11% of grazing land. “This could prevent further deforestation in the Amazon,” Willett said.
Aquatic food production could rise by 46%, vegetables by 42%, fruits by 61%, nuts by 172%, and legumes by 187%. Global food prices could drop about 3%.
Creating a fair and sustainable food system
Christina Hicks of Lancaster University said the wealthiest 30% of people cause over 70% of food-related environmental damage. Fewer than 1% currently meet their food needs without harming nature.
The commission recommends shifting subsidies from meat and dairy to sustainable crops like fruits, vegetables, and legumes. Governments could also tax foods high in sugar, salt, or saturated fats while increasing purchasing power to make healthy diets affordable.
Willett emphasized that many traditional plant-based diets already follow planetary health principles. “We are not prescribing a single global diet,” he said. “This approach respects cultural diversity and allows every region to eat healthily while protecting the planet.”
