The Hidden Forces Behind Your Food Choices | Sarah Lake | TED

50,560 views ・ 2024-10-08

TED


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00:08
When I was a kid,
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we'd go visit my grandparents.
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And my Grandma Toots
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was a classic 1950s American housewife.
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She, though, was a terrible cook.
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(Laughter)
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She cooked everything in the microwave, even meat.
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And she had meat at every meal,
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even in her cottage cheese.
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One time my brother brought his girlfriend to visit,
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and she was a vegetarian.
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And so my brother reminded Grandma Toots of this.
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And she said, “Oh, OK, what does she want for dinner then?
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Chicken or fish?"
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(Laughter)
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I mean, Grandma Toots could not imagine that you would have a meal
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that didn't revolve around meat.
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And I can see why.
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I mean, she grew up in a time
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where she was inundated by government promotions
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that meat was key to supporting your country
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and company ads that talked about it being essential
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for being strong and manly.
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And it was cheap, too.
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It was subsidized by the government
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and partially explained as a way of bulking up malnourished men
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so that they could fight in World War II.
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But what my grandma witnessed in the first half of her life
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was unprecedented.
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She saw the fastest and widest shift in diets
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that had ever occurred.
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Within just a few decades,
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she saw the norm go from eating meat as a rare treat,
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to having it three times a day,
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to having meat named after our meals.
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So we had breakfast meats, we had lunch meats
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and, well, beef, it's what's for dinner.
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And that didn't happen
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because people just suddenly realized they really liked the taste of meat.
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What we eat is less about what we choose
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and more about what's offered to us.
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And companies and governments today still make it really hard for us
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to choose anything other than meat.
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I mean, it's offered everywhere.
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It's often the only choice,
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and it's cheaper than other options.
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So much so,
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if you took away all government support and subsidies for meat,
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a pound of ground beef would cost 30 dollars.
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So now we eat more meat than ever before,
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and it's continuing to grow.
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And we got to this point
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thanks to the extensive and far-reaching efforts
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of governments and companies to push our diets towards meat.
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What we need now is the same fundamental shift in what we eat,
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but in the opposite direction, back towards plants.
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I'm here today as a food and climate expert
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because diet shifts are critical for the planet.
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The only way that we can reach climate targets
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and feed 10 billion people
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is by reducing the production and consumption of industrial meat.
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We need other solutions.
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We need regenerative agriculture.
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And we need to address food loss and waste.
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But those alone are insufficient to reach climate goals.
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And diet shifts are also essential for food security and health.
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We need to grow more food on less land by 2050,
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and to do that,
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we need to shift from land-intensive animal protein
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to land-efficient vegetable protein.
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And that also helps with our health.
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Grandma Toots continued to put meat in pretty much every meal,
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and by the time I was about 11,
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that diet caught up with my dad, her son,
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and he had a massive heart attack.
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I don't remember a lot about it,
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but I remember sitting in this hospital
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waiting for him to get out of six-way bypass surgery,
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using this very high-tech surgery plan of 1996.
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And my mom took me and my siblings
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to get dinner in the hospital while we waited.
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And she took us to the only restaurant that was available:
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a McDonald's.
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So we sat there eating greasy cheeseburgers
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while my dad was on the floor above,
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having open-heart surgery due to years of eating unhealthy food.
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And we ate there because it was really all that was available.
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After my dad's surgery,
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our household went largely plant-based thanks to my mom.
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And my dad, he’s still alive.
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So I know firsthand how plant-rich diets can be life-saving.
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And now we know that overconsumption of meat
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is a leading cause of preventable disease, including heart disease,
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but also obesity and diabetes.
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We also know that meat is a leading cause of climate change.
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Meat alone can account for as much as 20 percent of global emissions.
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We also know that we're misusing nearly half of our farmland
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to grow feed for animals, rather than food for humans.
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But no one really wants to talk about this proverbial cow in the room.
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The fundamental need to shift our food system away from industrial meat.
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And maybe it's because we know people really care about what they eat.
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Or maybe it's because we know we're not going to get there
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by pleading with people to eat differently,
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especially when most consumers have to go out of their way
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and pay more for alternative products.
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What we need is for companies and governments
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to offer and incentivize plant-rich diets
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the same way they did for meat decades ago.
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I need to walk into a McDonald's
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and see a menu full of plant-rich options
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and have them be just as cheap or cheaper than the Big Mac.
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And we need our schools and hospitals to offer plant-based foods as the default,
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where you can get meat
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but you have to ask for it as the exception.
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And we need just as much money to flow into the plant-based industry
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as currently makes meat wildly and artificially cheap.
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Whether that's making better black bean burgers
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or novel alternative proteins.
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We know that this can work because it has before.
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And we know it's working again in the places where we've dared to try it.
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Just last month, I was in Germany,
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and I walked into a Burger King and bam!
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I was bombarded with ads for their plant-based Whopper.
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It was all over the store,
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and the plant-based Whopper was center of the menu,
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and it was the same price as the regular Whopper.
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Today in Burger Kings in Germany,
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one in five of all Whoppers sold are plant-based.
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One in five,
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in the country that invented the frankfurter.
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(Laughter)
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Or take Lidl, it’s one of the largest supermarkets in Europe.
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They decided to put their plant-based meat next to the conventional meat
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in the meat section and make it the same price.
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So when you went to grab a package of ground beef,
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you had a healthier, sustainable plant-based option
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right next to it that costs the same.
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Within six months of making this change,
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the sale of their plant-based products went up by 30 percent
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and shows no sign of lagging.
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Even in New York City public schools,
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the largest school district in the country.
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They now have plant-based lunches for students,
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so over a million children are eating plant-based lunches at least once a week.
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Now scaling from here, it’s not easy politically or personally.
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But we're not talking about never eating meat.
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We're talking about less meat and more plants.
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We're talking about overconsumption of meat.
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The average American right now
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eats six times the recommended amount of red meat.
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Six times.
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If we were to just halve that,
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it would have massive benefits for the climate,
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for food security and for health.
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And companies and governments have been telling us for decades what to eat.
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They have the power to help us choose differently.
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And yes, there's progress to be made.
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We need products that are plant-based to be healthier and cheaper.
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But without a doubt, eating more plants is better for the planet,
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better for animals and better for us.
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And when companies and governments
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make it easier for us to choose differently, we do.
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People want healthy and sustainable options,
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but it's simply not that easy to make that choice today.
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The momentum, it's growing.
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That McDonald's in the hospital,
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it got kicked out.
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And my dad gets to play
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and share, not-dogs and the occasional hot dog at family barbecues.
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And that's the world I envision for all of us,
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where we're able to improve public health,
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we have avoided the worst of the climate crisis,
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and we've improved global food security.
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That world is possible because we’ve shifted diets before,
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and we can do it again.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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