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Seasonal and unprocessed vegetables and fruit


Both peak oil and climate change require us to reduce our reliance on fossil fuels. Reducing meat consumption and reducing food waste are probably the biggest steps we can take, but how we buy fruit and vegetables is also a significant factor.

There has been much debate recently, in the press and public policy circles, as to whether "local is better" in terms of greenhouse gas emissions. It has been demonstrated that it may be better in greenhouse gas terms to grow tomatoes outdoors in Spain, and truck them up to the UK, than to grow them in the UK in a heated greenhouse.

However, if we really want to reduce our oil dependency and greenhouse gas emissions, neither of these options is a good one. Ideally, we would choose to eat tomatoes during the few summer months when they can be grown in the UK without heat - and eat something else in the other months.

In fact, if we choose to eat UK produce out of season, we will always need to choose between the lesser of three evils: energy-intensive production methods, long-term storage, or importing. Each of these has its costs in terms of energy use and climate change:

Eating seasonal, fresh produce can be an adventure rather than a drudge. This is particularly true where the produce is home-grown. Box schemes and other types of community-supported agriculture provide another effortless way to keep in synch with the seasons, and it can be exciting to open the weekly box to see what the week has brought. Many good box schemes do supplement their local seasonal produce with carefully-selected imported (but not airfreighted) produce, in order to ensure that there is always a good range of interesting produce in the box. Nevertheless, a diet based on a local organic veg box will have a carbon (and fossil fuel) footprint that is a small fraction of that of the typical supermarket shopper who uses a mixture of frozen, canned and airfreighted produce.