Your plate of vegetables might look the same, but it could be quietly losing its nutritional punch. A sweeping new review of 143 studies from around the world reveals that climate change is reshaping the nutrient profile of the vegetables, legumes, and grains we rely on.
The findings are a mixed bag. On one hand, higher carbon dioxide levels are causing average increases in total carbohydrates (up 11% in experimental studies), simple sugars (up 12%), and antioxidants (up 14%). Vitamin C and E also ticked upward. But those gains come with steep losses: dietary fiber dropped 13%, folate plummeted 30%, and essential minerals like iron, zinc, and protein are projected to decline by 3% to 8%.
The review included experimental studies, meta-analyses, and modeling studies. The evidence is still fragmented, and the exact impact varies by crop and region. But the pattern is clear: the same greenhouse gases that warm the planet are also quietly diluting the nutritional value of some of our most important foods.
This doesn't mean you should stop eating vegetables. It does mean that climate change isn't just about heat waves and storms. It's also about the quiet erosion of the food quality we depend on for health.