Changes in meat consumption patterns could induce significant adjustments in agricultural markets. In this paper alternative scenarios envisaging lower meat consumption over the coming decade in high income countries and some selected emerging economies have been tested, with or without compensation by other sources of proteins. From a European perspective, results show a livestock farming sector having to deal with contradictory market signals. On the one side, the reduction in feedstuffs prices is an incentive to produce more, with lower output prices affecting positively the trade balance with developing countries, where demand keeps increasing. However, on the other side, the lower domestic demand for meat would affect profitability of ...
Western diets are characterised by a high intake of meat, dairy products and eggs, causing an intake...
In the scientific literature, the debate on health and environmental benefits of a reduction in the ...
This article is part of the R&D project "News puzzlement: Precarizased quality, over-(dis)informatio...
Changes in meat consumption patterns could induce significant adjustments in agricultural markets. I...
As a complement to the analysis of the baseline scenario used for the European Commission agricultur...
Livestock is known to contribute significantly to climate change and to negatively impact global nit...
* This report reviews the trajectories of meat consumption shifting from the periphery to the center...
oai:ojs.ojs.macsur.eu:article/99In a cross country analysis using national data for both OECD and de...
AbstractMeat production is projected to double by 2020 due to increased, per capita global consumpti...
Meat consumption patterns worldwide have dramatically changed over the past 50 years, putting pressu...
In recent decades there has been a sustained and substantial shift in human diets across the globe t...
This paper aims to highlight the position of meat reduction in what EU consumers think "eating a hea...
There is a hypothesis in the anthropological literature (e.g. Milton, 2003) that our complex human b...
Meat and milk consumption in developing countries has grown three times as fast as in developed coun...
Key points 1. Meat and milk consumption in developing countries has grown three times as fast as in ...
Western diets are characterised by a high intake of meat, dairy products and eggs, causing an intake...
In the scientific literature, the debate on health and environmental benefits of a reduction in the ...
This article is part of the R&D project "News puzzlement: Precarizased quality, over-(dis)informatio...
Changes in meat consumption patterns could induce significant adjustments in agricultural markets. I...
As a complement to the analysis of the baseline scenario used for the European Commission agricultur...
Livestock is known to contribute significantly to climate change and to negatively impact global nit...
* This report reviews the trajectories of meat consumption shifting from the periphery to the center...
oai:ojs.ojs.macsur.eu:article/99In a cross country analysis using national data for both OECD and de...
AbstractMeat production is projected to double by 2020 due to increased, per capita global consumpti...
Meat consumption patterns worldwide have dramatically changed over the past 50 years, putting pressu...
In recent decades there has been a sustained and substantial shift in human diets across the globe t...
This paper aims to highlight the position of meat reduction in what EU consumers think "eating a hea...
There is a hypothesis in the anthropological literature (e.g. Milton, 2003) that our complex human b...
Meat and milk consumption in developing countries has grown three times as fast as in developed coun...
Key points 1. Meat and milk consumption in developing countries has grown three times as fast as in ...
Western diets are characterised by a high intake of meat, dairy products and eggs, causing an intake...
In the scientific literature, the debate on health and environmental benefits of a reduction in the ...
This article is part of the R&D project "News puzzlement: Precarizased quality, over-(dis)informatio...