It is thought that four thousand years ago, in ancient Mesopotamia, the Babylonians celebrated the rebirth of the natural world – a sort of ancient New Year – in mid-March, the start of the planting season.
So it’s perhaps unsurprising that food still figures prominently in New Year’s resolution-making today.
Of that group, 60 per cent aim to consume less sugar, 43 per cent fewer carbs and 30 per cent to drink less or no alcohol.
Losing weight and improving health remain a priority for many (“Cigarettes 22, calories 5,424” as Bridget Jones’s Diary famously opens in her entry on 1 January in 1996). But the polling results suggest individual well-being is not the only consideration at hand.
While only 6 per cent of those who are resolved to change their diet say they intend to go vegetarian, 34 per cent hope to eat less meat (rising to 43 per cent among men, versus 28 per cent among women). Similarly, while just 4 per cent aim to become vegan, 16 per cent want to eat less dairy.
These stats fit with a broader trend towards reductetarianism and possibly also climatarianism (a person who chooses what to eat according to what is least harmful to the environment).
Meat and dairy provide just under a fifth of humanity’s calorie intake, yet their production occupies more than four-fifths of the world’s farmland. This unsustainable situation is also contributing to 14.5 per cent of global greenhouse gas emissions.
If the world is to keep below 1.5 degrees of warming, changes to diet will be necessary, scientists say.
People all over the world eat too much- and they don't have any control over their addiction to food. Obesity is the the number one killer of mankind. It all ' sign a of weakness.