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Thursday, 2nd September 2010

Consequences of bagged salads

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Published Date: 07 May 2009
ALMOST two-thirds of households buy bagged salads on a regular basis, making this market more lucrative than bread or breakfast cereal.
So what, you may ask. What are the environmental consequences of eating more lettuce? Surely that's a good thing?

If you listen to the healthy food police, they will almost certainly encourage you to eat more salad leaves, but is bagged salad a
good choice?

The environmental impact of an item is often difficult to determine, since there are so many factors to take into account.

In an item as mundane as a bag of salad, you have to deconstruct the whole process of putting it together in order to arrive at some conclusions.

The invention of bagged salad revolutionised the way in which lettuce could be transported since it substantially increased its shelf-life.

This enabled lettuce to be transported by air-freight around the globe all year round. Your bag of salad is now more likely to come from Kenya than a local producer.

When growing salad in countries such as Kenya, more pesticides and water are likely to be used in production than in more forgiving temperate climates.

However, growing in Africa offers the advantage of an all-year round season. In order to keep the salad leaves young and fresh looking for as long as possible, many are washed in chlorine and then placed in bags where the air inside has been modified to reduce the oxygen content.

Some research has suggested that the effect of this process has been to reduce the nutritional value of the salad compared with whole lettuces.

Interestingly, the market for lettuce has increased by 90 per cent in the last 15 years, while only 20 per cent more lettuce is actually grown.

This is due almost entirely because retailers have become cleverer at marketing lettuce. We actually want someone else to wash it and chop it up for us!

The problem is that lettuce is also now the number one food item thrown away by householders. Is that another consequence of the bagged salad?

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  • Last Updated: 07 May 2009 11:05 AM
  • Source: n/a
  • Location: Worthing
 
 
 


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