Consumption of meat during the last decade drops by about 20% in the UK
3% increase in the number of vegetarians
Editorial Comment
The importance of vegetarianism gradually catching the attention of the Western people is a matter of great satisfaction. |
London (UK) – Research from the University of Oxford has revealed that over the past decade, 20% of people in the UK have drastically reduced their meat intake, as it is the root cause of cancer, diabetes (Type 2) and cardiovascular diseases.
UK public now eating significantly less meat https://t.co/AbOikkIY97
— BBC Science News (@BBCScienceNews) October 7, 2021
The research states,
People have reduced the consumption of meat or have it in negligible quantity only, for good health. There has been a sharp decline in the sale of ‘red meat’ (meat from mammals like goat, sheep, pig etc.); but people’s tendency towards chicken and fish is increasing.
In the year 2008-09, the average daily consumption of red meat was 103 grams per person per day in the UK, which in the year 2018-19 has been recorded as 23 grams per person per day.
The number of vegetarians in the UK has increased from 2% to 5% in the past decade. It has also been observed that there has been an increase in the amount of meat intake in people born after 1999.