Food Choices as Influenced by Environmental Concerns: Study Involving Participants from 16 Countries
Volume 10, Issue 1 (2020), pp. 61–71
Raquel Guiné
Manuela Ferreira
Paula Correia
Marcela Leal
Vanessa Ferreira
Ivana Rumbak
Ayman EL-Kenawy
Maria Papageorgiou
Viktória Szűcs
Elena Vittadini
All authors (18)
Pub. online: 30 September 2020
Type: Article
Open Access
Published
30 September 2020
30 September 2020
Abstract
The activities related to food production, processing, handling, transportation, storage and disposal of food products have an important impact on sustainability. Hence, people’s food choices also contribute for the definition of the extension of this impact and therefore this work aimed at studying some motivations that influence people’s eating habits. This was an observational, cross-sectional study, undertaken on a non-probabilistic sample of 11960 participants form 16 countries (Argentina, Brazil, Croatia, Egypt, Greece, Hungary, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Serbia, Slovenia, Romania, United States of America). The survey was undertaken by means of a questionnaire of self-response, applied only to adult citizens. The results obtained indicated that a great number of participants admit to shape their food choices according to some environmental concerns, like, for example, they prefer foods from the season or those that comply with sustainable processing and packaging. Regarding the food surplus, this seems a priority to avoid at home, but not so much when it comes to restaurants. Factor analysis indicated two types of concerns: Purely Environmental Concerns (PEC) and Sustainability allied to Quality Concerns (SQC), and cluster analysis showed that 54% of the participants tend to make their food choices considering both types of concerns, which is very expressive and positive towards sustainability of the food chain.