Healthy Lifestyle Sustainability This Food Pyramid Helps You Make Healthy, Sustainable Food Choices We think a lot about the impact our diet has on our own health, but what about the environment?This guide may help you eat better for both. By Karen Asp Karen Asp Karen Asp, M.A., is an award-winning journalist and author who covers health, nutrition, fitness, travel and animals (companion and farmed). She has more than two decades of experience writing for Martha Stewart Living, Better Homes and Gardens, O, Self, Real Simple, Forks Over Knives, Clean Eating, Oxygen, Shape, Reader's Digest, EatingWell, Health, Sentient Media, Prevention, Good Housekeeping and other publications. EatingWell's Editorial Guidelines Published on March 28, 2022 Reviewed by Dietitian Jessica Ball, M.S., RD Reviewed by Dietitian Jessica Ball, M.S., RD Jessica Ball, M.S., RD, is nutrition editor for EatingWell. She is a registered dietitian with a master's in food, nutrition and sustainability. In addition to EatingWell, her work has appeared in Food & Wine, Real Simple, Parents, Better Homes and Gardens and MyRecipes. EatingWell's Editorial Guidelines Close What the food pyramid and MyPlate did for better nutrition—providing an iconic, at-a-glance guide to what to eat—experts have now done with sustainable eating. Enter the Double Health and Climate Pyramid, created by researchers at the Barilla Foundation, a European think tank focused on food and the environment. How Your Food Choices Can Help Fight Climate Change The new tool combines a health and sustainability pyramid side by side: on the left are nutrition guidelines based on scientific literature linking diet to various health outcomes, particularly cardiovascular disease. On the right is an inverted climate pyramid ranking foods based on their environmental impact using data from Su-Eatable Life, a European Union-funded project that examined factors like carbon emissions and water usage. The simple, clever graphic shows that a healthy, sustainable diet might not be so complicated. For the most part, the food groups on both sides of the pyramid line up with each other, demonstrating that what's good for our bodies is good for the planet, too, says Marta Antonelli, Ph.D., the foundation's head of research. Walter Willett, M.D., a professor of epidemiology and nutrition at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health in Boston, and co-chair of the EAT-Lancet Commission, whose mission is determining how we can have a healthy, sustainable food system, considers the Double Pyramid a major advance. He hopes it will motivate people to shift to a plant-forward diet. "We are currently on track to increase global temperature by almost 10 degrees Fahrenheit, which will make much of the world uninhabitable and devastate food production systems," Willett says. "We need to do everything possible to avoid this disaster, and although eliminating the use of fossil fuels is most important, even if we do that, we still won't have a sustainable future unless we change our diets." Was this page helpful? Thanks for your feedback! Tell us why! Other Submit