• Why Plant-Based?
    • Overview
    • Sustainability
    • Better health
    • Compassion for animals
  • Resources
    • Virtual speaker series
    • Speakers program
    • Pamphlets
  • Blog
  • About Us
    • Who we are
    • Contact us
  • How to Help
    • Join us
  • Donate
EarthsaveEarthsave
EarthsaveEarthsave
  • Why Plant-Based?
    • Overview
    • Sustainability
    • Better health
    • Compassion for animals
  • Resources
    • Virtual speaker series
    • Speakers program
    • Pamphlets
  • Blog
  • About Us
    • Who we are
    • Contact us
  • How to Help
    • Join us
  • Donate

The Good Food Cities Declaration: Earthsave Canada’s submission to the Vancouver Food Policy Council

The Good Food Cities Declaration: Earthsave Canada’s submission to the Vancouver Food Policy Council

The Good Food Cities Declaration: Earthsave Canada’s submission to the Vancouver Food Policy Council

September 21, 2020 Posted by Jen Flood

Earthsave Canada recently made a submission to the Vancouver Food Policy Council, asking for its support in urging Vancouver City Council to adopt the Good Food Cities Declaration. The Declaration represents a commitment to achieving a “Planetary Health Diet” by 2030 by supporting an overall increase in healthy plant-based food consumption, shifting away from unsustainable and unhealthy diets, and reducing food loss and waste. Over a dozen other cities globally, including Toronto, signed the Declaration at the 2019 C40 Mayor’s summit in Copenhagen, but Vancouver did not. 

Earthsave Canada’s submission highlights the serious damage that animal agriculture does to the environment, including through greenhouse gas emissions, deforestation, water pollution, biodiversity loss, and inefficient use of land and water resources. The submission also describes how animal-based diets contribute to human diseases, including cardiovascular and chronic disease, antimicrobial resistance, and zoonotic viruses such as COVID-19. The submission concludes that the City must support the shift to plant-based diets on an urgent basis in order to halt environmental degradation, chronic disease trends, and zoonotic virus growth.

A copy of Earthsave Canada’s submission may be found here. We expect that it may be considered at an upcoming meeting of the Food Policy Council.


Photo by Ella Olsson on Unsplash

Share
Avatar photo

About Jen Flood

Jen is a lawyer with a J.D. from UBC and a B.Sc. in physics from Queen's University. A vegan for over a decade and an avid cyclist, she joined Earthsave Canada in 2018.

You also might be interested in

Ontario’s new “ag gag” legislation

Ontario’s new “ag gag” legislation

Jun 30, 2020

The bill has been called out as obviously unconstitutional by a plethora of legal experts. According to those experts, mostly law professors, major provisions in it may not withstand challenge in the courts.

Trying to stop climate change? Eating plant-based is more helpful than eating local

Trying to stop climate change? Eating plant-based is more helpful than eating local

May 18, 2020

While eating locally sourced food is still beneficial to the community, it’s important to remember that you aren’t significantly lowering your carbon footprint, or helping out the climate, without reducing or cutting out animal-based products from your diet.

Meat is a social justice issue

Meat is a social justice issue

May 31, 2016

The world is facing a food crisis of unprecedented magnitude. Grain stocks are at record lows. Food prices are skyrocketing. Hundreds of millions of people – Hundreds of Millions of People – are starving. Fully 800 million are on the brink. They cannot afford to feed themselves.

Donate

Recent Posts

  • The Plant-Based Cities Movement: Taking climate action to the municipal level
  • Eating meat leads to longer lives? Beware poorly designed studies with even more poorly interpreted results.
  • Corn chips walking: How the overuse of corn in animal agriculture is devastating our environment

Follow us

Categories

  • Blog

© 2026 · Earthsave Canada.