In a statement, the consumer protection organisation mentions having analysed the vegan, ovo-lactovegetarian, Mediterranean and planetary regimes (“developed based on scientific evidence, combining diet, health and protection of the planet”) and concluded that the first “is the most expensive, requiring more than €7,000 euros a year”, while “the planetary diet, which costs around less than €1,000, does not have the same environmental benefits”.
“All the values presented are based on a balanced meal plan for four people (two adults, one child and one teenager)”.
In terms of reducing the environmental footprint, the best advice is to follow a vegan diet, which does not include the consumption of animal protein. But even in this case, DECO points out that “exchanging the almond drink for an oat drink reduces water consumption by 20%.
“In one week, more than 1,500 litres of water and two kilos of CO2 equivalent are saved. That is, it cuts the warming potential by 10%.”
For those who consider it too difficult to follow a vegan diet, the organisation states that “a diet tending to be more vegetable, seasoned with enough animal protein, also has environmental benefits, when compared to Mediterranean and planetary diets”.
Lacto-ovo vegetarians can replace cow's milk with a soy drink, reducing “5% CO2 emissions, 6% water consumption and 1% land use”.
And even those who follow the Mediterranean diet manage to reduce their global warming potential and water consumption by 5% if they switch from beef (which requires more resources) to chicken.
Cheapest diet
In terms of cost, the cheapest is the planetary diet, based on vegetables, whole grains, legumes and oilseeds and in which dairy products and red meat are reduced to extras.
The weekly basket for this diet totals 120 euros, the Mediterranean 127 euros, the lacto-ovo vegetarian 131 euros and the vegan 142 euros, according to the study.
Vegans spend 45% of their weekly global expenditure on dairy equivalents (given the absence of any food of animal origin) and vegetables and fungi (such as mushrooms), while 44% of ovo-lactovegetarians' expenditures are due to vegetables and fruits .
Vegetables, cereals and tubers and fruits represent 59% of the total expenditure of those who follow a Mediterranean diet, with moderate consumption of dairy products and red meat, while those who opt for a planetary diet spend 65% of the weekly amount on “vegetables, cereals and tubers, meat, fish and eggs”.
3 things:
1. I will eat whatever I like and nobody will tell me otherwise.
2. Most vegans love avocados. It takes 300 litres of water to grow 1 avocado that then is flown across the other side of the world. Same with other vegetables, grains (mostly bio-engineered GMO Frankenfoods!) and fruits. This pathetic little article is complete nonsense.
3. I will eat whatever I bleeding like, whenever I like, and how much I like!
By Hart from Lisbon on 25 Feb 2023, 12:03
I have been vegan for the last three years for ethical reasons and going to stick with it now. I am sure it has been good for my health too. I am nearly 70 and have a lot more energy and creativity than many people of my age. I also very rarely get sick. I am very glad to find that Portugal is making it easier for vegans here with vegan options available to buy.
By Steve Andrews from Other on 25 Feb 2023, 23:47
I am vegan and yes, I love avocado. I eat my own avocados, which I water from the rain water callected in winter months. I agree with you, Hard, the avocado agriculture in Algarve is bad and not sustainable. That's why I do not support it by buying them.
By Lenka Soukup from Algarve on 28 Feb 2023, 09:13
Oh dear. Poor “Hart”. Clichéd, tired, splenetic self-entitlement from someone who is scared of change and cares nothing for humanity, the planet or animals. But let’s look at “Hart’s” three “points”.
1. “I do what I want.” I wonder how far this infantile tantrum will get “Hart” when he/she is pulled over for speeding?
2. “What about, what about, what about” ad nauseum.
3. Is the same as 1. Perhaps “Hart’s” meat-addled brain is no longer capable of basic counting. No doubt all the fury and self-pity combined with fat, growth hormones, antibiotics, faecal matter &c. that “Hart” has ingested over the years have taken their toll.
Don’t be like “Hart”. Let’s make the world a better place. If not for animals, your own health and the planet then for your children.
By Paolo from Algarve on 28 Feb 2023, 17:23
Paolo, and on that note, just in your honour, I will enjoy a particularly large and juicy steak today, and so will my family, including my meat-loving children. It will be accompanied by an abundance of deliciously scrumptious, home made guacamole, and other imported vegetables. I shall call it 'The Paolo' and will savour every bite, while you continue talking to yourself, self-indulgently, patting yourself on your own back, over impressed with your own-ness, like the narcissistic and basic stereotype that unfortunately this broken, television-worshipping, braindead and lockstep-zombified society, that is obediently just following orders, has been producing. Bom apetite!
By Hart from Lisbon on 01 Mar 2023, 07:54
Dear “Hart”: QED.
By Paolo from Algarve on 03 Mar 2023, 15:44