Obesity Contributes Extra 700 Megatons of Carbon Dioxide Emissions per Year

Obesity Greater Greenhouse Gas Emissions

Compared to those with a normal weight, obesity is linked to about 20% higher greenhouse gas emissions.

A new analysis suggests that the increasing average body size of people on Earth, in addition to the growing world population may further challenge attempts to reduce man-made carbon dioxide emissions, according to a paper published online in Obesity, the flagship journal of The Obesity Society.

All oxygen-dependent organisms on the planet produce carbon dioxide as a result of metabolic processes necessary to sustain life. Total carbon dioxide production from any species is linked to the average metabolic rate, the average body size, and the total number of individuals of the species.

People with obesity have greater carbon dioxide production from oxidative metabolism than individuals with normal weight. Also, maintenance of greater body weights requires more food and drinks to be produced and transported to the consumers. Similarly, transportation of heavier people is associated with increased consumption of fossil fuels. This results in additional carbon dioxide emissions related to food production and transportation processes. Globally, obesity was estimated to contribute to an extra 700 megatons of carbon dioxide emissions per year or about 1.6 percent of all man-made emissions.

The authors emphasize that it is critically important that this new information does not lead to more weight stigmatization. People with obesity already suffer from negative attitudes and discrimination, and numerous studies have documented several prevalent stereotypes.

“This study makes it clear that we pay a steep price for making it difficult to access care for obesity. Not only does obesity affect the health of the individuals who have it, untreated obesity might also contribute to environmental issues,” said Ted Kyle, RPh, MBA, founder of ConscienHealth, who was not involved in the research.

Physical activity is also associated with much more carbon dioxide being produced compared with rest, but no one will ever think of stigmatizing people who exercise for having a negative effect on the environment, according to Boyd Swinburn, MB ChB, FRACP, MD, FNZCPHM, in the School of Population Health at the University of Auckland in New Zealand. Swinburn wrote a commentary on the paper.

“Our analysis suggests that, in addition to beneficial effects on morbidity, mortality, and healthcare costs, managing obesity can favorably affect the environment as well,” said Faidon Magkos, of the Department of Nutrition, Exercise and Sports at the University of Copenhagen in Denmark. “This has important implications for all those involved in the management of obesity.” Magkos is the corresponding author of the paper.

To assess the impact of obesity on the environment, researchers used the standard definitions of obesity (body mass index of greater than or equal to 30 kg/m2) and normal weight (body mass index of less than 25). Calculations were made of the extra emission of greenhouse gases (carbon dioxide, methane, and nitrous oxide) from the increased oxidative metabolism, the increased food production and consumption and the increased fuel used to transport the greater bodyweight of people with obesity.

Compared with an individual with normal weight, researchers found an individual with obesity produces an extra 81 kg/y of carbon dioxide emissions from higher metabolism, an extra 593 kg/y of carbon dioxide emissions from greater food and drink consumption and an extra 476 kg/y of carbon dioxide emissions from car and air transportation. Overall, obesity is associated with approximately 20 percent greater greenhouse gas emissions when compared to people with normal weight.

“Harmonizing data from epidemiology (prevalence rates of obesity), physiology (total energy intake and expenditure) and environmental science (carbon dioxide emissions from different sources) is not a straightforward task, and we emphasize that our estimates are not intended to be precise, but rather be reasonable enough,” said Magkos.

In the commentary accompanying the paper, Swinburn said the estimates add valuable information to the growing literature examining the nexus between obesity and climate change. He added, “while the contribution of obesity to greenhouse gas emissions is small, acting on the underlying drivers of them both is of paramount importance.”

The study, titled “The Environmental Foodprint of Obesity” was published online today (December 20, 2019) and will be published in the January 2020 print issue of the journal Obesity.

Reference: “The Environmental Foodprint of Obesity” by Faidon Magkos, Inge Tetens, Susanne Gjedsted Bügel, Claus Felby, Simon Rønnow Schacht, James O. Hill, Eric Ravussin and Arne Astrup, 20 December 2019, Obesity.
DOI: 10.1002/oby.22657

Other authors of the study include Inge Tetens, Simon Ronnow Schacht, Susanne Gjedsted Bügel and Arne Astrup of the Department of Nutrition, Exercise and Sports at the University of Copenhagen in Denmark. Claus Felby of the Department of Geosciences and Natural Resource Management at the University of Copenhagen also co-authored the paper. Other authors include James Hill of the University of Alabama at Birmingham and Eric Ravussin of Louisiana State University’s Pennington Biomedical Research Center in Baton Rouge, La.

1 Comment on "Obesity Contributes Extra 700 Megatons of Carbon Dioxide Emissions per Year"

  1. “The authors emphasize that it is critically important that this new information does not lead to more weight stigmatization.”

    It seems that being afflicted with political correctness has impaired the critical thinking of the authors. They go to considerable length to point out all the personal and social problems resulting from being over-weight. Would people have as much motivation to correct the problem if everyone approved of obesity? I think not! Yet, they are basically saying one should not judge or criticize others for shortening their life, spending more money on food and medicine, decreasing the quality of their life-style, and presumably contributing to “climate change” in greater proportion than people of ‘normal’ weight.

    Now, in free societies, people should have a right to do as they please. However, there is a principle that one’s rights only extend as far as impinging on the rights of others. If you die prematurely, you cause suffering to friends and family members. If you have excessive medical costs, that money cannot be spent on the welfare of your spouse and children. Lastly, there are all kinds of horror stories about how global warming is going to have negative impacts on billions of people. It seems to me that society has every right to criticize those whose actions negatively impact others, just as we complain about a thief or reckless driver.

    I do hope that the quality of medical research conducted by these authors is higher than the demonstrated logic related to the consequences of their research findings.

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