Adding the likes of peas, lentils, beans, and chickpeas to your diet, and farming more of them, could result in more nutritious and effective food production with large environmental benefits, scientists have found. Researchers calculated a “nutritional density” unit for different types of crops. They found that swapping cereals for leguminous plants in European crop rotations provided more nutrient-rich produce for both animal and human consumption. Thanks to the way that legumes grow, it also reduced synthetic fertiliser use and pollution. The research is among the first to provide a long-term, holistic look at the issue, and the results may help achieve some of the goals in the EU’s Farm to Fork plan , part of the bloc’s European Green Deal , which aims to reduce synthetic fertiliser use by 20% and greenhouse emissions by 50% before 2030. “Healthy diet transitions can increase environmental sustainability,” said Dr David Styles , a lecturer in environmental engineering at the University of Limerick and the lead researcher on the study, published in the scientific journal Frontiers in Sustainable Food Systems. Legumes are one of the most nutrient-rich crops on the market – they are abundant in protein, fibre, iron and potassium – […]
Legumes research gets flexitarian pulses racing with farming guidance
