Climate-friendly eating is already happening, one farm at a time

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Ecologist Mark Easter’s new book, The Blue Plate, shows how small shifts in farming and food consumption can help curb climate change by reducing agriculture’s carbon footprint.

Ayurella Horn-Muller reports for Grist.


In short:

  • Easter breaks down the environmental impact of common U.S. foods, from bread to meat, showing how emissions are tied to every step of the food chain.
  • The book highlights small-scale agricultural innovations across the U.S. that reduce emissions, arguing these changes can be scaled up.
  • Easter draws on personal history, linking today’s climate challenges to practices like those from his great-grandmother’s time during the Dust Bowl.

Key quote:

“We’re basically trying to tally the flow of carbon and nitrogen back and forth between the Earth and the atmosphere... Do we have too much flowing in the wrong directions?”

— Mark Easter, ecologist and author.

Why this matters:

The way we produce and consume food plays a key role in climate change. By adopting sustainable farming methods, even small shifts can help restore soil health and reduce greenhouse gas emissions, helping to combat global warming.

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