Enhancing the environmental sustainability of food systems
requires
an understanding of both production- and consumption-based impacts.
As food supply chains become increasingly complex and connected, they
also present a unique context in which to understand the environmental
impacts of consumption. This is critical for understanding the disconnect
between production- and consumption-based impacts of food systems
and ultimately designing, evaluating, and implementing interventions
for improving security, resilience, and sustainability of food systems.
Using publicly available datasets and an optimization-based framework,
we present a county-to-county level network model of beef supply chains
in the United States. The model is used to connect and attribute the
consumption-based impacts of beef consumption to production in distant
locations, specifically focusing on water-based impacts. We specifically
focus on the beef system because of its importance in the diet of
U.S. consumers and in environmental sustainability discourse. The
findings from this work show the spatial disconnect between the consumption
and production counties with approximately 22 billion m3 of blue virtual water being transferred for the year 2017, mainly
from the northern and southern plains toward the coasts. These results
highlight the importance of understanding environmental impacts from
both production and consumption perspectives.
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