I've bought nearly all my food for a few years from my CSAs, farmers markets, and food co-op. Nothing from any of the companies listed in the article. Much of the food I know the farmers and vendors.
As a side effect, the last time I emptied my garbage was Christmas 2019. I buy almost nothing packaged. I calculated my annual food expenses and it's a bit under the national average, but that includes feeding at least 50 other meals since CSAs provide so much food.
For people who don't have access, I've led workshops to people in food deserts, but the most effective way to improve access for others is to support CSAs, farmers markets, and food co-ops yourself.
If your area lacks them, it takes effort, but my family helped form a food co-op when I was young and it has become a cornerstone of the community. Every community benefits from healthy, delicious food.
Just be aware you will be (indirectly) emitting more CO2, and using more pesticides and fertilizer by buying from Farmers Markets. So you have to decide what's more important to you. (Small farms are less efficient, less efficient means uses more energy and other inputs.)
There is a middle ground between the "processed foods from these mega corporations" (which I agree you should not buy) and farmers markets though: Just buy regular produce from a grocery store, and cook normal food.
I actually think what you eat is the dominating factor in food CO2 production: https://ourworldindata.org/uploads/2020/02/Environmental-imp... Transport and processing are fairly minor components overall for all foods. The claim about pesticides and fertilizers I know nothing about though.
You should buy organic at the farmers' market AND the supermarket, but that's a different topic.
It's definitely not clear to me that farmers' markets are worse for the environment - in many cases, it's the same farmer looking for a direct-to-consumer outlet for some of their product.
Small local farms also don't have to ship the food across the country or the ocean to get it to you. That drastically reduces the carbon footprint of such consumption.
It actually does not. Shipping food emits very very little CO2 compared to growing it.
So the most optimum thing (in terms of CO2) is to plant food where it grows best and then ship it.
As an extreme example compare a greenhouse with regular outdoor planting. Or compare growing food where you need a lot of pesticides or fertilizer vs where you do not.
In case it wasn't clear: It's better to grow food without a greenhouse, then ship it vs. spending energy on a greenhouse, and saving energy on shipping.
The reason is simply that shipping uses very very little energy, it's the rest of the production that uses a massive amount of energy.
Local farms generally consume more carbon to get your goods to you. That's because the ratio of envelope : contents for each subsequent chain in transportation goes up exponentially. eg: It takes ~0.1kg of cargo ship to transport 1kg of food, ~1kg of container truck, ~5kgs of a pickup truck from a local farm and ~100-1000kgs of your personal car, depending on how much you buy per trip.
So buying food from a local farm delivered to you via pickup truck or having a farmer's market that's just a little bit further away from you than a grocery store or buying just a little bit less at the farmers market than you would at a grocery store can negate the entire difference of having foods shipped to you from all across the world.
A truck for locally produced food is not usually full nor efficiently packed.
Rather the farmer will grab a little of this, and a little of that. Whatever he can sell the day. This uses far more energy.
And don't forget the energy needed to harvest the food - large growers do it in bulk, small farmers will need to fire up the tractor for short runs.
A cargo ship uses FAR FAR FAR less energy than you might imagine. Even shipping something by rail across the US uses less energy than driving to the next city.
The combined revenue of these 10 is ~$393 Billion in 2015. The US spent $1.7 Trillion on food & beverages in 2018[0]. That's 23% of just the US market, and these are international brands, yes? Whoever said click bait was, well... we're talking about BI after all.
Roughly half of that $1.7 trillion is categorized as "food away from home," meaning it includes the cut restaurants and such get from selling you those same brands. Further, it's unclear if that $1.7 trillion includes alcohol, but those ten companies do not.
Yes and there are other major companies that are not on this list. Kraft Heinz is a $25b company much more ubiquitous than someone like Danone. Why take Danone over them? Clickbait indeed.
"All" the foods you buy? This is a seriously clickbaity headline and not even what the Oxfam source material claims. (It would be slightly more correct if it said, "All the junk food you buy in the grocery store")
Thanks, "a lot of the food" may be true for many people, "all the food" seems unlikely to be true for anyone. I looked through the image and the only brand I might have purchased a few times in the past five years is Muir Glen. Maybe a half dozen I might have purchased a few times in the past decade. It really isn't difficult to avoid them.
- You end up eating a much wider variety of food, depending on what is in season.
- You end up eating delicious foods that may not travel well, such as amazing heirloom strawberry and tomato varieties during the summer.
- You cut out the middleman, and support local businesses instead of multinational food conglomerates.
- You will probably end up eating less meat, but will enjoy the meat you do eat more.
- You'll wind up meeting the same people every week at the market, turning grocery shopping into a social event.
In short, farmers' markets are good for the environment, your health, the economy, and the community. Use them!