Nutritional Quality and Environmental Sustainability of Dietary Protein Patterns in Europe

Background: A dietary shift from animal-based protein foods towards plant and/or alternative protein foods (i.e., protein transition) has gained increasing interest in Europe as a solution to reduce environmental impacts and improve human health. However, to shape this protein transition, it is firs...

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Main Authors: Merel C. Daas, Pieter van ‘t Veer, Elisabeth H. M. Temme, Anneleen Kuijsten, Mirjana Gurinović, Sander Biesbroek
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2024-02-01
Series:Proceedings
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Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2504-3900/91/1/302
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author Merel C. Daas
Pieter van ‘t Veer
Elisabeth H. M. Temme
Anneleen Kuijsten
Mirjana Gurinović
Sander Biesbroek
author_facet Merel C. Daas
Pieter van ‘t Veer
Elisabeth H. M. Temme
Anneleen Kuijsten
Mirjana Gurinović
Sander Biesbroek
author_sort Merel C. Daas
collection DOAJ
description Background: A dietary shift from animal-based protein foods towards plant and/or alternative protein foods (i.e., protein transition) has gained increasing interest in Europe as a solution to reduce environmental impacts and improve human health. However, to shape this protein transition, it is first needed to gain more insights into current protein-rich food consumption habits across European countries and related nutritional and environmental impacts. Objectives: This research aimed to (1) identify distinctive dietary protein patterns in Europe and (2) assess their associations with nutritional quality and environmental sustainability. Methods: Individual-level food consumption data collected from multiple 24 h dietary recalls or food records were obtained from nationally representative dietary surveys of 25 European countries (40,101 participants, 18–64 years), available from the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) Comprehensive Food Consumption Database. We applied statistical clustering to classify individuals according to consumption of 24 protein-rich food groups. The obtained patterns were evaluated for nutritional adequacy, nutritional quality, and environmental impacts using the Dutch Food Composition (NEVO) and a European environmental sustainability indicator (SHARP-ID) databases. Results: Six dietary protein patterns were identified: “Common” (42%), “Junk” (20%), “Traditional” (15%), “Health-conscious” (12%), “Dairy-rich” (10%), and “Plant-forward” (2%). Protein intake ranged from 0.89 g/kg body weight in the “Common” pattern to 1.27 g/kg body weight in the “Traditional” pattern. The “Plant-forward” and “Health-conscious” patterns achieved the highest nutritional quality, whereas that of the “Common” pattern was lowest. Greenhouse gas emissions and land use were comparable between patterns, except for the “Plant-forward” and “Traditional” patterns where impacts were, respectively, lower and higher. Discussion: Dietary protein patterns are linked to unique nutritional profiles and vary to some extent in environmental impacts, indicating that distinct approaches are needed for closing nutritional gaps and overcoming environmental challenges. This also stresses the need for considering cultural differences in eating habits for successfully shifting towards plant- and/or alternative protein foods.
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spelling doaj-art-cbb284601cad4b7ab99bc5f15b8e105b2025-08-20T02:43:06ZengMDPI AGProceedings2504-39002024-02-0191130210.3390/proceedings2023091302Nutritional Quality and Environmental Sustainability of Dietary Protein Patterns in EuropeMerel C. Daas0Pieter van ‘t Veer1Elisabeth H. M. Temme2Anneleen Kuijsten3Mirjana Gurinović4Sander Biesbroek5Division of Human Nutrition and Health, Wageningen University & Research, 6700 AA Wageningen, The NetherlandsDivision of Human Nutrition and Health, Wageningen University & Research, 6700 AA Wageningen, The NetherlandsDivision of Human Nutrition and Health, Wageningen University & Research, 6700 AA Wageningen, The NetherlandsDivision of Human Nutrition and Health, Wageningen University & Research, 6700 AA Wageningen, The NetherlandsCentre of Research Excellence in Nutrition and Metabolism, Institute for Medical Research, National Institute of Republic of Serbia, University of Belgrade, 11000 Belgrade, SerbiaDivision of Human Nutrition and Health, Wageningen University & Research, 6700 AA Wageningen, The NetherlandsBackground: A dietary shift from animal-based protein foods towards plant and/or alternative protein foods (i.e., protein transition) has gained increasing interest in Europe as a solution to reduce environmental impacts and improve human health. However, to shape this protein transition, it is first needed to gain more insights into current protein-rich food consumption habits across European countries and related nutritional and environmental impacts. Objectives: This research aimed to (1) identify distinctive dietary protein patterns in Europe and (2) assess their associations with nutritional quality and environmental sustainability. Methods: Individual-level food consumption data collected from multiple 24 h dietary recalls or food records were obtained from nationally representative dietary surveys of 25 European countries (40,101 participants, 18–64 years), available from the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) Comprehensive Food Consumption Database. We applied statistical clustering to classify individuals according to consumption of 24 protein-rich food groups. The obtained patterns were evaluated for nutritional adequacy, nutritional quality, and environmental impacts using the Dutch Food Composition (NEVO) and a European environmental sustainability indicator (SHARP-ID) databases. Results: Six dietary protein patterns were identified: “Common” (42%), “Junk” (20%), “Traditional” (15%), “Health-conscious” (12%), “Dairy-rich” (10%), and “Plant-forward” (2%). Protein intake ranged from 0.89 g/kg body weight in the “Common” pattern to 1.27 g/kg body weight in the “Traditional” pattern. The “Plant-forward” and “Health-conscious” patterns achieved the highest nutritional quality, whereas that of the “Common” pattern was lowest. Greenhouse gas emissions and land use were comparable between patterns, except for the “Plant-forward” and “Traditional” patterns where impacts were, respectively, lower and higher. Discussion: Dietary protein patterns are linked to unique nutritional profiles and vary to some extent in environmental impacts, indicating that distinct approaches are needed for closing nutritional gaps and overcoming environmental challenges. This also stresses the need for considering cultural differences in eating habits for successfully shifting towards plant- and/or alternative protein foods.https://www.mdpi.com/2504-3900/91/1/302protein transitionprotein sourcesdietary protein patternnutritional qualityenvironmental impact
spellingShingle Merel C. Daas
Pieter van ‘t Veer
Elisabeth H. M. Temme
Anneleen Kuijsten
Mirjana Gurinović
Sander Biesbroek
Nutritional Quality and Environmental Sustainability of Dietary Protein Patterns in Europe
Proceedings
protein transition
protein sources
dietary protein pattern
nutritional quality
environmental impact
title Nutritional Quality and Environmental Sustainability of Dietary Protein Patterns in Europe
title_full Nutritional Quality and Environmental Sustainability of Dietary Protein Patterns in Europe
title_fullStr Nutritional Quality and Environmental Sustainability of Dietary Protein Patterns in Europe
title_full_unstemmed Nutritional Quality and Environmental Sustainability of Dietary Protein Patterns in Europe
title_short Nutritional Quality and Environmental Sustainability of Dietary Protein Patterns in Europe
title_sort nutritional quality and environmental sustainability of dietary protein patterns in europe
topic protein transition
protein sources
dietary protein pattern
nutritional quality
environmental impact
url https://www.mdpi.com/2504-3900/91/1/302
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