2026
Pérez-Torres, L.; Yépez, E. A.; Lindig-Cisneros, R.; Moreno-Calles, A. I.; de la Barrera, E.
A Foodprint framework for assessing food sustainability Journal Article
In: Environmental and Sustainability Indicators, vol. 30, no. 101186, 2026, ISSN: 2665-9727.
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: anthropocene, diets, environmental impact, environmental indicators, food security, lifecycle, one health, planetary boundaries
@article{Pérez-Torres2026,
title = {A Foodprint framework for assessing food sustainability},
author = {L. Pérez-Torres and E. A. Yépez and R. Lindig-Cisneros and A. I. Moreno-Calles and E. de la Barrera },
url = {https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2665972726000723},
doi = {10.1016/j.indic.2026.101186},
issn = {2665-9727},
year = {2026},
date = {2026-02-16},
urldate = {2026-02-16},
journal = {Environmental and Sustainability Indicators},
volume = {30},
number = {101186},
abstract = {The intensification of agricultural practices to meet rising food demand is a major driver of environmental degradation. Current dietary patterns exacerbate these pressures, favoring foods that are economically accessible but environmentally detrimental and nutritionally poor. This work proposes a Foodprint framework to assess diet sustainability by integrating environmental, social, and economic indicators. The framework´s development is illustrated through its application to Western, Mediterranean, Atlantic, and Mexican diets, which were compared with the Planetary Health diet. An integrative Foodprint Index was calculated for each diet, revealing that the Western diet had the highest Foodprint, while the Mexican diet had the lowest. The Foodprint framework offers a practical tool for guiding sustainable food policies and dietary transitions.},
keywords = {anthropocene, diets, environmental impact, environmental indicators, food security, lifecycle, one health, planetary boundaries},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
The intensification of agricultural practices to meet rising food demand is a major driver of environmental degradation. Current dietary patterns exacerbate these pressures, favoring foods that are economically accessible but environmentally detrimental and nutritionally poor. This work proposes a Foodprint framework to assess diet sustainability by integrating environmental, social, and economic indicators. The framework´s development is illustrated through its application to Western, Mediterranean, Atlantic, and Mexican diets, which were compared with the Planetary Health diet. An integrative Foodprint Index was calculated for each diet, revealing that the Western diet had the highest Foodprint, while the Mexican diet had the lowest. The Foodprint framework offers a practical tool for guiding sustainable food policies and dietary transitions.

