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3.5 kg CO2e per kg (about 0.35 kg CO2e per 100g) — compare with similar foods below.
3.5
kg CO2e / kg
214
litres water / kg
0.3
m² land / kg
0.9g
protein / 100g
Producing 1 kg of Tomatoes (greenhouse) generates the same CO₂ as driving a petrol car for approximately 21 km, or charging a smartphone 426 times. These are global average figures — actual values vary by country, farming method, and supply chain.
How does Tomatoes (greenhouse) compare to other foods in the Vegetables category?
kg CO2e per kg — lower is better
Foods with a lower carbon footprint you could consider instead.
Values are lifecycle-style estimates (farm to retail gate, typical global production mix), consistent with meta-analyses such as Poore & Nemecek (2018) and summaries like Our World in Data — environmental impacts of food. Your country, brand, and cooking method can shift real impacts; use comparisons on this page for directional choices, not exact accounting.
Browse the full food carbon database · Diet carbon calculator.
Tomatoes (greenhouse) produces approximately 3.5 kg of CO2 equivalent per kilogram. Per typical serving (150g / 1 medium tomato), that's about 0.53 kg CO2e.
Tomatoes (greenhouse) has a relatively low carbon footprint at 3.5 kg CO2e/kg, making it a more climate-friendly food choice.
Producing 1 kg of Tomatoes (greenhouse) requires approximately 214 litres of water. This includes irrigation, processing, and supply chain water use.
Lower-carbon alternatives include Watermelon (0.3 kg CO2e/kg), Carrots (0.4 kg CO2e/kg), Apples (0.4 kg CO2e/kg). Switching to these can significantly reduce your dietary carbon footprint.
Values represent global median estimates. Actual environmental impacts vary by region, farming practices, season, and supply chain.