Nutrition and Environmental Impact of Vegetarian and Vegan Diets in UK Children, 2023

Coffey, Alice (2026). Nutrition and Environmental Impact of Vegetarian and Vegan Diets in UK Children, 2023. [Data Collection]. Colchester, Essex: UK Data Service. 10.5255/UKDA-SN-858221

As plant-based (PB) diets become more common among UK children, understanding their nutritional adequacy and environmental impact is vital. This study assessed nutrient intake and dietary greenhouse gas emissions among children following omnivorous, vegetarian, and vegan diets.
A cross-sectional analysis was conducted using three-day weighed food diaries from 39 UK children aged 2–12 years (omnivore n=15; and PB: vegetarian n=11; vegan n=13). Nutrients were analysed with and without supplementation using Nutritics software. GHGEs were calculated at the ingredient level (kgCO₂e/day) and grouped by Eatwell Guide food categories.
No dietary group met all nutrient reference values. Omnivores exceeded recommended intakes for saturated fat and free sugars while failing to meet the recommended intake for fibre, whereas PB children had intakes of these nutrients in the healthy range. PB diets were adequate in protein and vitamin B12 even in the absence of supplementation. Vegan children also met iron requirements from diet alone, whereas omnivore and vegetarian children did not meet iron targets without supplementation. Vitamin D intake was insufficient across all groups when supplements were excluded, with only vegan children achieving recommended levels through supplementation. Zinc requirements were met only by vegetarian children with the aid of supplements and were not met by vegan or omnivore children with or without supplementation. Iodine intake remained inadequate in vegan children even with supplementation. Mean daily GHGEs differed significantly between diet groups (p < 0.001): omnivores having the highest emissions, while vegans had the lowest emissions: 46% lower than omnivores, and 20% lower than vegetarians.
Well-planned PB diets can meet most nutrient needs in UK children when supported by fortified foods and supplements, while substantially reducing dietary GHGEs compared with omnivorous diets. Shifting away from animal protein and dairy provides the greatest opportunity for improving both nutritional quality and environmental sustainability.

Data description (abstract)

As plant-based (PB) diets become more common among UK children, understanding their nutritional adequacy and environmental impact is vital. This study assessed nutrient intake and dietary greenhouse gas emissions among children following omnivorous, vegetarian, and vegan diets.
A cross-sectional analysis was conducted using three-day weighed food diaries from 39 UK children aged 2–12 years (omnivore n=15; and PB: vegetarian n=11; vegan n=13). Nutrients were analysed with and without supplementation using Nutritics software. GHGEs were calculated at the ingredient level (kgCO₂e/day) and grouped by Eatwell Guide food categories.
No dietary group met all nutrient reference values. Omnivores exceeded recommended intakes for saturated fat and free sugars while failing to meet the recommended intake for fibre, whereas PB children had intakes of these nutrients in the healthy range. PB diets were adequate in protein and vitamin B12 even in the absence of supplementation. Vegan children also met iron requirements from diet alone, whereas omnivore and vegetarian children did not meet iron targets without supplementation. Vitamin D intake was insufficient across all groups when supplements were excluded, with only vegan children achieving recommended levels through supplementation. Zinc requirements were met only by vegetarian children with the aid of supplements and were not met by vegan or omnivore children with or without supplementation. Iodine intake remained inadequate in vegan children even with supplementation. Mean daily GHGEs differed significantly between diet groups (p < 0.001): omnivores having the highest emissions, while vegans had the lowest emissions: 46% lower than omnivores, and 20% lower than vegetarians.
Well-planned PB diets can meet most nutrient needs in UK children when supported by fortified foods and supplements, while substantially reducing dietary GHGEs compared with omnivorous diets. Shifting away from animal protein and dairy provides the greatest opportunity for improving both nutritional quality and environmental sustainability.

Data creators:
Creator Name Affiliation ORCID (as URL)
Coffey Alice University of Warwick https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1059-4685
Sponsors: Leverhulme Trust
Topic classification: Health
Keywords: SUSTAINABILITY, CHILDREN, CHILD NUTRITION, DIETARY HABITS, VEGETARIANISM, PUBLIC HEALTH, SPECIAL DIETS, ENVIRONMENT, FOOD AND NUTRITION
Project title: Nutritional availability and carbon footprints of vegetarian and vegan diets: a cross-sectional analysis of dietary data for UK children
Grant holders: Alice Coffey
Project dates:
FromTo
6 March 202329 March 2024
Date published: 03 Mar 2026 14:02
Last modified: 03 Mar 2026 14:02

Available Files

Data and documentation bundle

Downloads

data downloads and page views since this item was published

View more statistics

Altmetric

No resources to display

Edit item (login required)

Edit Item Edit Item