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Food diversity and accessibility enabled urban environments for sustainable food consumption: a case study of Brisbane, Australia

Food Science and Technology

Food diversity and accessibility enabled urban environments for sustainable food consumption: a case study of Brisbane, Australia

L. Summerhayes, D. Baker, et al.

This research conducted by Lijun Summerhayes, Douglas Baker, and Karen Vella delves into sustainable food consumption in Brisbane, revealing a perplexing 'double-helix' phenomenon of unhealthy overconsumption alongside healthy underconsumption. The study highlights crucial factors like affordability and access and suggests that enhancing urban food environments could align our practices with global sustainability goals.

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Playback language: English
Abstract
This paper investigates sustainable food consumption in Brisbane, Australia, using 500 online surveys. It finds a "double-helix" of overconsumption of unhealthy food and underconsumption of healthy food, influenced by affordability, access, retail options, and carbon footprint. The study suggests that creating diverse and accessible urban food environments can improve sustainable consumption, aligning with UN SDGs 12 and 13.
Publisher
Humanities & Social Sciences Communications
Published On
Sep 16, 2024
Authors
Lijun Summerhayes, Douglas Baker, Karen Vella
Tags
sustainable food consumption
Brisbane
overconsumption
underconsumption
urban food environments
affordability
UN SDGs
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