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How nudge theory is subtly getting more people to eat plant-based food and help fight climate change

  • Catering institutions are using nudge theory – small interventions and gentle persuasion – to get people to eat less meat to save the planet
  • Serving more vegan dishes, removing meat from recipes for dishes such as stir fries and curries, and describing dishes as ‘feel good’ all help

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Cutting out meat and taking up plant-based diets will help reduce greenhouse emissions, and nudge theory – small interventions and gentle persuasion – is being used to persuade people to change their habits. Photo: Shutterstock

Placing plant-based lasagne in the most popular part of the canteen. Serving vegetable stir-fry or curry so diners have to ask for meat. Giving vegan food enticing adjectives like “feel good” and “juicy”.

These are some of the small changes adding up to a quiet revolution in school cafeterias, hospitals and university canteens from the United States to Norway.

The goal is to shift diners toward plant-based options – not by removing animal products entirely, but by nudging people into making different choices.

“Your choice is never in a vacuum,” says Sophie Attwood, a senior behavioural scientist at the non-profit World Resources Institute, based in Washington, which works on climate solutions.

Our choices are not made in a vacuum, says Sophie Attwood, a senior behavioural scientist at the non-profit World Resources Institute, which works on climate solutions. Photo: plantforwardkitchen.org
Our choices are not made in a vacuum, says Sophie Attwood, a senior behavioural scientist at the non-profit World Resources Institute, which works on climate solutions. Photo: plantforwardkitchen.org

“Your choices are always being nudged, whether it’s nudged for the profit motive of the company, or for the environmental motive of the company.”

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