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                            4 articles                        
                    
                Article    8 Nov 2024
    
                                    Chioma Ezeanaka and                             Trung Hieu Tran                        
    
    3952 Views611 Downloads
Article    2 May 2023
    
                                    Floros Flouros                        
    
        Highlights of Sustainability
Volume 2 (2023), Issue 2, pp. 62–74
Volume 2 (2023), Issue 2, pp. 62–74
    3046 Views1166 Downloads
Commentary    24 Feb 2023
    
                                    Ada Rocha and                             Cláudia Viegas                        
    
                            
                                    Food service comprises the production of meals consumed outside the home, including consumers from all age groups and in different sectors, such as schools (from kindergarten to university), public and private companies, the health sector (from
                                                    
                    
                            
            
                                    Food service comprises the production of meals consumed outside the home, including consumers from all age groups and in different sectors, such as schools (from kindergarten to university), public and private companies, the health sector (from hospitals to elderly care institutions), military, sports facilities and restaurants (from fine dining to fast-food). Food service units (FSU) achieved importance and responsibility not only for feeding the population but also as an important setting for public health interventions, potentially educating consumers and modulating behaviours through the meals provided. In addition to its socioeconomic impact, the food service industry has a strong environmental impact. More sustainable food service starts with the basics: minimizing environmental impact by reducing carbon footprint. Food service industry is being encouraged to make choices that positively impact the environment. Nevertheless, most of the efforts and research made in the last years have been focused on evaluating and reducing food waste. This article focuses on strategies that could be implemented beyond food waste, and act on changing the food offer towards health and sustainability while promoting consumers’ behaviour change.
                                
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        Highlights of Sustainability
Volume 2 (2023), Issue 1, pp. 10–15
Volume 2 (2023), Issue 1, pp. 10–15
    4403 Views1338 Downloads2 Citations
Article    26 Aug 2022
    
                                    Stephen K. Wegren                        
    
                            
                                    Although Russia’s grain growing regions have experienced episodic droughts, the financial impact of climate change has to date been modest when measured in terms of value of production lost. As industrial agriculture continues to emit greenhouse
                                                    
                    
                            
            
                                    Although Russia’s grain growing regions have experienced episodic droughts, the financial impact of climate change has to date been modest when measured in terms of value of production lost. As industrial agriculture continues to emit greenhouse gases, the impact of climate change will intensify, making Russia’s southern regions drier and hotter, and potentially forcing a structural shift in production northward, an event that will lead to lower yields and grain output. The sustainable sector in Russia’s agricultural system is not able to compensate for lower grain output in the south, nor is it able to feed the nation or ensure food security across the full spectrum of commodities that consumers expect. The prospect of Russia as a declining grain power impacts the dozens of nations that import Russian grain, most notably authoritarian regimes in the Middle East.
                                
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        Highlights of Sustainability
Volume 1 (2022), Issue 3, pp. 188–201
Volume 1 (2022), Issue 3, pp. 188–201
    5250 Views5511 Downloads3 Citations
Volume 3 (2024), Issue 4, pp. 374–393