Environmental impacts

Making links

Summary information

Age range:

7 - 11 year olds

Curriculum links:

Geography, D&T

Time needed:

60 minutes

Group size:

Pairs or small groups

Setting:

Classroom or similar

Key vocabulary:

Food miles, local produce, fertilizers, pesticides, herbicides, irrigation, greenhouse gas emissions, packaging, landfill, incineration, processed food, reduce, reuse, recycle

Sustainability learning outcome(s):

  • To understand that some items of food and drink are produced in a more sustainable way than others.
  • To understand that people need to have access to the information that will allow them to develop more sustainable lifestyles.

Preparation:

Pupils could be asked to record details about the origin of foods and drinks that they consume over a period of two to three days.

Resources needed:

A banana, a piece of locally produced organic fruit or vegetable and a selection of food products showing information about country of origin and/or information about origin of ingredients used in school meals. The following website provides brief information about the banana trade:
www.oxfam.org.uk/coolplanet/kidsweb/banana/banana.htm

Procedure:

1. Display the banana and the locally produced organic fruit or vegetable, and ask pupils to brainstorm the environmental impacts of the life cycle of each item. Think about:

  • Land – What habitats were destroyed when the land was converted into agricultural use?
  • Production – Does it require chemical fertilizers, pesticides, herbicides, irrigation, machinery, packaging?
  • Transportation – How far did it travel? How was it transported? How much greenhouse gas emissions were created?
  • Processing – Was it processed in a factory? (Processed foods consume 15 times as much energy as raw foods)
  • Waste – How much waste does it create? What happens to this waste?

2. Ask the pupils to create a visual display that can be used to allow people to compare the environmental impacts of different items of food or drink. This display could be designed for a number of different purposes – information on packaging, a website, a leaflet, a poster, a classroom or dining hall display. The displays should allow consumers to make comparisons between at least some of the following factors:

  • Distance travelled (food miles)
  • Amount of packaging (and type – reusable or recyclable)
  • Amount of energy used in processing
  • Amount of chemicals used
  • Habitat destruction

3. As a whole class, invite pupils to share their work. Discuss: “Which are the most important factors when people are choosing what food and drink they’ll buy – cost, taste, brand, impact on health or impact on the environment?” “How might farmers, shops and shoppers be persuaded to pay more attention to the environmental impacts of food and drink?”

Extension:

Plan, prepare and enjoy a school meal with a low environmental impact or organise a low-waste lunch day.

Evaluation:

Sketch mapping diagrams showing the environmental impacts of two items of food or drink that you’ve consumed in the last few days – choose a pair of items where one has much larger impact than the other.

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