Speaking to the Washington Post on Thursday, Princeton University agricultural researcher Timothy Searchinger said, “It’s pretty much a consensus view among global environmental scientists that we would be better off if we ate less meat.”

Moreover, consumers must change their diets to combat rising numbers of preventable chronic diseases which occur from poor nutrition and physical inactivity, the report states. About 117 million Americans are obese or suffer from diabetes, cardiovascular disease, certain types of cancer, and other health problems, due to their diet and lifestyle.

Committee member and report co-author Marian Neuhouser told the Washington Post that the findings are not “gloomy… [they’re] reality.”

Donlon added, “Promoting systems that work with nature instead of against her is an investment in our children’s future.”

The committee’s findings are not official guidelines, but are used to inform the government’s updated versions of dietary rules. The Department of Health and Human Services and the USDA will issue their own guidelines later this year based on the report.

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