TOP

Why Rome Burning In The Summer Heat Means Fiddling With Food Has To Stop

Like on Social:
Tweet
Share
Philip in Rome | Credit: Compassion in World Farming

[DISPLAY_ULTIMATE_SOCIAL_ICONS]

Boy, was it hot in Rome! In July, front-page news was the weather: ‘Rome hits record high in European heatwave’, was one such headline. In sharp contrast to the exceptionally wet July in Britain where Scotland’s rain was 50 per cent heavier than average, records for the hottest day in Rome were tumbling. Italian cities were on red alert. Emergency heatwave teams rushed to help victims of the heat. Factory workers and labourers were calling to be furloughed. Glorious Mediterranean weather was turning into a summer from hell. 

Turning up the heat

Against this backdrop, I found myself sweltering in Rome at the flag-lined headquarters of the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO). Two years ago, I was ambassadorial ‘Champion’ for the previous UN food summit, so was keen to be part of this latest gathering of world leaders

Extreme heat helped bring home the stark reality that food is the biggest single contributor to global warming. 

UN Secretary-General, António Guterres, used his opening speech to further make the point: “Unsustainable food production, packaging and consumption are feeding the climate crisis, generating one-third of all greenhouse gas emissions, using 70 per cent of the world’s freshwater, and driving biodiversity loss on an epic scale.” 

We need food systems that can help end the senseless war on our planet.

Food systems transformation is fundamental to reducing carbon emissions and limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius,” he said.

On that day in Rome, it seemed like the world was listening, but will they now act?

Credit: Compassion in World Farming

Italian food crisis

An unexpected victim of climate change could be the iconic Mediterranean diet itself. Typified by spaghetti, couscous, and pizza, wildfires, drought, and flooding are “threatening the foods that make up the basket of ingredients for the Mediterranean diet,” warned Roberto Occhiuto, president of the southern Italian region of Calabria. 

Tunisian Governor of Medinine, Ben Zayad, echoed the sentiment, saying, “We are facing challenges, particularly in the Mediterranean… and we have to respond in order to protect our food systems”. A real sense of immediacy was in the air. 

Italian Prime Minister, Giorgia Meloni, too championed the Mediterranean diet which she described as inexpensive and based on seasonal ingredients “respecting [of] the territory and its biodiversity.” 

True for some ingredients maybe, but in the ‘land without animals’ as I refer to Italy’s agricultural heartland, damaging industrial animal agriculture – anything but respectful to the land and its biodiversity – is rife. 

Setting the agenda

As temperatures rise, so too do the stakes.  

Later this year, world leaders will be meeting again, this time in Dubai, for the next round of climate talks. The hope is that Rome reaching boiling point will have helped put food firmly on the climate agenda.  

Worth noting then that new research from Oxford University, shows reducing meat consumption can play a key role in curbing greenhouse gas emissions. Consumers in Scotland, England and Wales cutting down on the amount of meat they eat could be equivalent to taking 8 million cars off the road. Now that seems a point worth driving at. 

Note: This is a version of an article published in The Scotsman on Friday 11th August, 2023

Main Image: Eggs laying hens in barren battery cages | Credit: Compassion in World Farming

Like on Social:
Tweet
Share