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Food & Diet

Report: How behavioural science can help encourage sustainable diets

11 September 2023

A report commissioned by the Climate Change Committee, outlines a broad range of factors that impact people’s food choices. 

It makes several recommendations for how the UK Government could encourage people to change their diets in line with net zero goals, including:

  • ‘Changing the food environment’ – This may involve taxing high-carbon foods, labelling, subsidising meat-free options, and increasing the availability of plant-based foods. 
  • ‘Targeting psychological factors’ – such as using messages to resonate with people’s identities and their attitudes. Highlight the non-environmental benefits of plant-based food; encourage people to set goals may also be helpful. 
  • Making plant-based foods more appealing and available: by changing the types of language used to describe them, and appealing to peoples’ emotions.
  • Other measures – such as restricting the advertising of environmentally-damaging foods and highlighting the success stories, when people are making sustainable food choices – are also suggested.

The report builds on the Behavioural Insights Team’s 12 behavioural science approaches to encouraging greener diets.

Reference article:

  • Source: Climate Change Committee
  • Authors: CCC, CAST
  • Date: 11th September 2023

The latest from the Food & Diet timeline:

Policy Insight 28th February 2025

Diets shifts in the years ahead: What level of change will be needed and accepted?

According to Climate Change Committee’s (CCC) latest carbon budget, a range of low-carbon choices will form part of a “balanced pathway” towards net zero – with food and diet changes making “smaller, but important contributions” to this transition.  Household low-carbon choices contribute to one-third of emissions reduction in 2040, while a shift in average meat and dairy consumption are anticipated to make up 6% of these household emissions reductions. The CCC note that:

“By 2040, 25% of meat (30% of red meat) and 20% of dairy is replaced with lower-carbon foods, compared to 2019 consumption levels”

Drawing on evidence from a Citizens’ Panel, which was convened as part of the report, the CCC found that:   

  • The public generally accepted the need for changes in diet. However, what was considered possible and acceptable varied a lot by person.
  • People expressed surprise about the emissions impact of different foods, and there was consensus that government should proactively providing more information to the public to support a shift towards lower-carbon foods.
  • People expressed a clear preference for a shift towards healthier, home-cooked options and saw education around plant-based meal preparation as another way to support this shift.
  • Panelists agreed the price of plant-based alternatives needs to be reduced to make these more attractive options.
  • There were concerns about people who may be less willing or able to shift to lower-carbon foods, including concerns about the affordability of alternatives for low-income families.
  • And there was concern about negative impacts on UK farmers – people wanted to ensure policies existed to ensure farmers are supported.

Interestingly, much of the news coverage of the Carbon Budget focused on diet shifts, despite a greater emphasis on other measures. (Electrification and low-carbon electricity supply make up the largest share of emissions reductions in the CCC’s pathway – 60% by 2040).

  • Source: Climate Change Committee
  • Author: CCC
  • Date: 26th February 2025
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