Badische Presse - Eat less meat, France urges, for sake of health, climate

NYSE - LSE
RBGPF 3.42% 62.87 $
CMSC 0.11% 22.365 $
BCE -0.92% 23.82 $
GSK -0.02% 52.22 $
NGG 0.86% 82.28 $
CMSD -0.27% 22.26 $
RIO -0.14% 105.74 $
BCC -0.04% 71.56 $
AZN 0.81% 178.71 $
RELX -0.12% 32.8 $
RYCEF 2.31% 18.63 $
VOD -0.74% 14.89 $
JRI 0.23% 12.81 $
BTI 0.52% 61.38 $
BP -1.07% 41.15 $
Eat less meat, France urges, for sake of health, climate
Eat less meat, France urges, for sake of health, climate / Photo: © AFP

Eat less meat, France urges, for sake of health, climate

The French government issued a long-awaited report Wednesday urging people to limit meat consumption for their health and also to fight climate change -- and not everyone in the country of "steak-frites" is thrilled.

Text size:

The contentious decision came as part of a "National Strategy for Food, Nutrition and Climate," setting out the government's aims until 2030 on balancing a healthy diet while reducing greenhouse gas emissions.

It was supposed to be published in 2023, the culmination of a direct-democracy initiative that immediately raised the hackles of agriculture lobbies that accused the government of threatening their livelihoods.

The decisions struck a nerve in a country renowned for dishes like steak and fries and beef bourguignon -- despite evidence that meat production generates significant greenhouse gases that contribute to climate change.

It also comes a month after the US government under President Donald Trump upended decades of recommendations by touting consumption of red meat and full-fat dairy products.

Apart from the health concerns of such advice, food production overall produces one-fourth of French carbon emissions, with meat production representing two-thirds of that amount.

Hence the French government's hesitation on whether to ask people to "reduce" their meat eating, or just "limit" it.

In the end, while promoting a diet focused on fruits, vegetables and whole grains, the new guidelines call for "limited" consumption of meats overall, including cold cuts, and a "reduction" of imported meat.

"We're relieved this plan was published, we were really worried it would be dropped," said Stephanie Pierre of France Assos Sante, a patients' health association.

"But we were hoping for a much more ambitious plan," she said.

The guidelines also come just before the February 21 opening of France's annual agriculture fair, a hugely popular event in Paris where President Emmanuel Macron has often faced farmers' ire.

Farmers were already up in arms over the EU's signing of a free-trade deal with the Mercosur bloc of four South American countries, worried that a surge in beef and other agriculture imports would undercut their competitiveness.

The country's powerful FNSEA farmers' union had yet to comment on the government's new guidelines.

W.Schmid--BP