TY - JOUR
T1 - Navigating the sustainability challenges of food systems
T2 - A review of life cycle-based environmental footprints and future directions
AU - Wang, Yizhe
AU - Wu, Linxiu
AU - Zhao, Jingwen
AU - Yu, Yajuan
AU - Huang, Kai
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2025/9
Y1 - 2025/9
N2 - Ensuring food security while mitigating environmental degradation remains a critical challenge for global sustainability. Food systems, encompassing production, transportation, consumption, and waste, exert significant environmental pressures, such as greenhouse gas emissions, excessive water and land use, and nutrient losses. This study systematically reviews the environmental footprints of food systems from a life cycle perspective, analyzing research trends, and hot issues. The results reveal a sharp increase in publications on carbon and water footprints, while nitrogen, phosphorus, biodiversity, and chemical footprints remain comparatively underexplored. Keyword co-occurrence analysis further illustrates this imbalance by identifying six key research hotspots, with “carbon footprint” and “water footprint” most frequently studied. The findings underscore the strong interconnection between agriculture, dietary choices, and environmental impacts, emphasizing the pivotal role of sustainable diets and green agricultural practices in advancing food system sustainability. Future research should prioritize expanding the footprint diversity and increasing the representation of studies in less developed regions to support a more comprehensive understanding of sustainability challenges. The safe operating space of the food system also needs to be redefined to better align with achieving food security within planetary boundaries. In addition, future research should establish a food-environment-society-economic nexus framework to integrate food systems with the SDGs and capture the complex interlinkages and trade-offs between different systems. This review provides new insights into future research and policy directions for sustainable food system transformation.
AB - Ensuring food security while mitigating environmental degradation remains a critical challenge for global sustainability. Food systems, encompassing production, transportation, consumption, and waste, exert significant environmental pressures, such as greenhouse gas emissions, excessive water and land use, and nutrient losses. This study systematically reviews the environmental footprints of food systems from a life cycle perspective, analyzing research trends, and hot issues. The results reveal a sharp increase in publications on carbon and water footprints, while nitrogen, phosphorus, biodiversity, and chemical footprints remain comparatively underexplored. Keyword co-occurrence analysis further illustrates this imbalance by identifying six key research hotspots, with “carbon footprint” and “water footprint” most frequently studied. The findings underscore the strong interconnection between agriculture, dietary choices, and environmental impacts, emphasizing the pivotal role of sustainable diets and green agricultural practices in advancing food system sustainability. Future research should prioritize expanding the footprint diversity and increasing the representation of studies in less developed regions to support a more comprehensive understanding of sustainability challenges. The safe operating space of the food system also needs to be redefined to better align with achieving food security within planetary boundaries. In addition, future research should establish a food-environment-society-economic nexus framework to integrate food systems with the SDGs and capture the complex interlinkages and trade-offs between different systems. This review provides new insights into future research and policy directions for sustainable food system transformation.
KW - Environmental footprints
KW - Food system
KW - Life cycle thinking
KW - Safe operating space
KW - Sustainable development goals
UR - http://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105011962476
U2 - 10.1016/j.jenvman.2025.126794
DO - 10.1016/j.jenvman.2025.126794
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:105011962476
SN - 0301-4797
VL - 392
JO - Journal of Environmental Management
JF - Journal of Environmental Management
M1 - 126794
ER -