{"id":2713,"date":"2019-10-04T14:54:35","date_gmt":"2019-10-04T21:54:35","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/c21-wp.phas.ubc.ca\/?post_type=article&p=2713"},"modified":"2020-01-08T13:47:52","modified_gmt":"2020-01-08T21:47:52","slug":"food-as-energy","status":"publish","type":"article","link":"https:\/\/c21.phas.ubc.ca\/article\/food-as-energy\/","title":{"rendered":"Food as Energy"},"content":{"rendered":"

Basal metabolism<\/strong><\/p>\n

We need a constant input of food energy to keep our internal organs functioning and to allow us to move – this is called our basal metabolism.<\/p>\n

For mammals, M<\/em>b<\/sub> \u2248 50 (A<\/em>\/m2<\/sup>) W;\u00a0\u00a0 for humans, surface area A<\/em> \u2248 1.7 m2<\/sup>, i.e. ~ 85 W for sleeping<\/p>\n

Fast walk or cycle (20 km\/h): M<\/em> ~ 700 W<\/p>\n

Overall mean M<\/em> ~ 100 \u2013 150 W (2000 \u2013 3000 kcal\/d)<\/p>\n

Where does this energy come from?<\/strong><\/p>\n

Most of the energy required for agriculture comes from sunlight, right? Wrong. Most of the energy comes from burning oil.<\/p>\n

The usable energy content of beef and bread is about 2500 kcal\/kg or 10 MJ\/kg (+\/- 30%). For chicken and fish the number is about half that [note] Beef calories and nutrients, https:\/\/www.freedieting.com\/calories-in-meat [2019-10-04].[\/note] [note] Peter Rez, Simple Physics of Energy Use, Oxford UP 2017.[\/note]\n

Overall for a typical Western diet, the ratio of embodied energy of the food to the dietary energy in the food $r$ is about 6, i.e. for every joule (or calorie) of dietary energy, six joules (or calories) of oil have been burned. The ratio for vegetables is generally more favourable; that for meat (especially beef) is much worse. However, the picture is complicated, as can be seen from a British study by David Coley et al.[note] Coley, D., Goodliffe, E. and Macdiarmid, D. (1998) The Embodied Energy of Food: The Role of Diet, Energy Policy, 6, 455\u2013459.[\\note]:<\/p>\n