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Obesity and climate change: co-crises with common solutions

Title: Obesity and climate change: co-crises with common solutions
Authors: Behrens, P; Champagne, CM; Halford, JCG; Moodie, M; Proietto, J; Rutter, GA; Samaras, K; Holly, JMP
Publisher Information: Frontiers Media
Publication Year: 2026
Collection: Oxford University Research Archive (ORA)
Description: The global obesity crisis involves an unprecedented and rapid change to the human phenotype. Conferring vast levels of avoidable morbidity and mortality at enormous cost, it has proved refractory to previous policy-led action. This article reviews recent developments in our understanding of obesity and its links to the climate co-crisis, aiming to inform evidence-based, societal-level actions to address both. Recent therapeutic developments now offer transformative interventions for millions of people living with obesity. However, treating all affected adults and children with major bariatric surgery or lifelong anti-obesity medication is unsustainable given the risks and costs. The obesity crisis has been driven primarily by the transformation of our food environment toward diets dominated by ultra-processed foods (UPFs) that exert multiple addictive and obesogenic mechanisms. Emerging evidence shows that not all UPFs have the same impact: processed meat and low-fiber, energy-dense UPFs are linked with poorer outcomes compared with less energy-dense, high-fiber, plant-rich UPFs, indicating that more nuanced classifications would be helpful. This food system also contributes significantly to climate change and other environmental harms, primarily through ruminant meat consumption. Both climate change and obesity are driven by unsustainable, but profitable, consumption. Solutions exist but have not been adequately implemented owing to a lack of political will. They require food system reforms that replace energy-dense UPFs with unprocessed foods and reduce animal-sourced foods. Accumulating evidence supports prioritizing actions to remove market distortions via increasing cost transparency, taxing unhealthy foods (redirecting the proceeds to public health), combating marketing, effective food labeling, facilitating healthy food choices, promoting healthy living environments, and public and professional education. New economic models, market demand shifts, and technological innovation should all be harnessed to ...
Document Type: article in journal/newspaper
Language: English
Relation: https://doi.org/10.3389/fsci.2025.1613595
DOI: 10.3389/fsci.2025.1613595
Availability: https://doi.org/10.3389/fsci.2025.1613595; https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:a10f13d6-c7a9-4220-be40-22d0267c85d6
Rights: info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess ; CC Attribution (CC BY)
Accession Number: edsbas.3992A1F3
Database: BASE