4.8 Article

Aquatic foods to nourish nations

Journal

NATURE
Volume 598, Issue 7880, Pages 315-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-021-03917-1

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Builders Initiative
  2. MAVA Foundation
  3. Oak Foundation
  4. Walton Family Foundation
  5. National Science Foundation [CNH 1826668]
  6. John and Katie Hansen Family Foundation
  7. National Institutes of Health Departmental Training Grant in Academic Nutrition [2T32DK007703-26]

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This study predicts the future impact of aquatic foods on human nutrition, presenting two scenarios and estimating the health effects and potential benefits of high production scenarios, providing important evidence for policymakers and development stakeholders.
Despite contributing to healthy diets for billions of people, aquatic foods are often undervalued as a nutritional solution because their diversity is often reduced to the protein and energy value of a single food type ('seafood' or 'fish')(1-4). Here we create a cohesive model that unites terrestrial foods with nearly 3,000 taxa of aquatic foods to understand the future impact of aquatic foods on human nutrition. We project two plausible futures to 2030: a baseline scenario with moderate growth in aquatic animal-source food (AASF) production, and a high-production scenario with a 15-million-tonne increased supply of AASFs over the business-as-usual scenario in 2030, driven largely by investment and innovation in aquaculture production. By comparing changes in AASF consumption between the scenarios, we elucidate geographic and demographic vulnerabilities and estimate health impacts from diet-related causes. Globally, we find that a high-production scenario will decrease AASF prices by 26% and increase their consumption, thereby reducing the consumption of red and processed meats that can lead to diet-related non-communicable diseases(5,6) while also preventing approximately 166 million cases of inadequate micronutrient intake. This finding provides a broad evidentiary basis for policy makers and development stakeholders to capitalize on the potential of aquatic foods to reduce food and nutrition insecurity and tackle malnutrition in all its forms.

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