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File:Jayanthi_Natarajan_addressing_at_the_World_Environment_Day_function_on_the_theme_“Think,_Eat,_Save_Reduce_Your_Foodprint”_,_in_New_Delhi_on_June_05,_2013.jpg|Jayanthi Natarajan addressing at the World Environment Day function on the theme “Think, Eat, Save Reduce Your Foodprint”, in New Delhi on June 05, 2013. | |||
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Latest revision as of 02:03, 17 February 2025
A foodprint refers to the environmental pressures created by the food demands of individuals, organizations, and geopolitical entities. Like other forms of ecological footprinting, a foodprint can include multiple parameters to quantify the overall environmental impact of food, including carbon footprinting, water footprinting, and foodshed mapping. Some foodprinting efforts also attempt to capture the social and ethical costs of food production by accounting for dimensions such as farm worker justice or prices received by farmers for goods as a share of food dollars. Environmental advocacy organizations like the Earth Day Network and the Natural Resources Defense Council have publicized the foodprint concept as a way of engaging consumers on the environmental impacts of dietary choices. [[Category:Uncategorized
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Jayanthi Natarajan addressing at the World Environment Day function on the theme “Think, Eat, Save Reduce Your Foodprint”, in New Delhi on June 05, 2013.
