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In September 2019, we received multiple inquiries about news reports that claimed a scientist in Sweden had proposed, advocated or suggested that people should turn to cannibalism as a way of combating climate change. The Epoch Times published an article with the headline Swedish Researcher Advocates Eating Human Flesh to Combat Climate Change Food Shortages, which went on to report that: Climate change alarmism has taken a macabre turn that looks like satire, but isn’t. It happened in Sweden. At a summit for food of the future (the climate-ravaged future) called Gastro Summit, in Stockholm on Sept. 3 to 4, a professor held a PowerPoint presentation asserting that we must 'awaken the idea' of eating human flesh in the future, as a way of combating the effects of climate change. In a talk titled 'Can You Imagine Eating Human Flesh?', behavioral scientist and marketing strategist Magnus Soderlund from the Stockholm School of Economics argued for the breaking down of ancient taboos against desecrating the human corpse and eating human flesh. He refers to the taboos against it as 'conservative' and discusses people’s resistance to it as a problem that could be overcome, little by little, beginning with persuading people to just taste it. That Epoch Times article informed several other reports, such as the one posted by Fox News, whose headline claimed Swedish Scientist Floats Eating Human Flesh as Solution to Global Climate Change, and the London Evening Standard, whose headline read Scientist Suggests 'Eating Human Meat' to Tackle Climate Change. The right-leaning website Breitbart posted an article with the headline, Swedish Scientist Proposes Cannibalism to Fight Climate Change, and Hannity.com, the website of Fox News anchor Sean Hannity, reported that: A European scientist speaking at a summit in Sweden last week suggested a controversial new trend to combat climate change: consuming human flesh as an alternative to animal products. All these reports presented Söderlund as having proposed, suggested, or advocated for humans eating other humans as a way to combat the effects of climate change. In reality, the evidence for this is lacking. Most reports based their claims on Söderlund's Sept. 3 interview on the TV4 television channel, which can be viewed in full (and in Swedish) below: James Savage, CEO and publisher of The Local, a network of English-language news websites in Europe with headquarters in Stockholm, provided Snopes with a translation of the most relevant portions of the TV4 interview, adding that it would not be accurate to say Söderlund advocated cannibalism in his remarks. In the interview, Söderlund told the host his Gastro Summit presentation was part of a series of investigations into different kinds of food to see where to draw the line. He added: When it comes to human flesh there are various taboos that are hard to break, and it’s probably the case that human flesh will never be a large scale thing in the West or in our time. [But] given that there are so many taboos, it’s important to understand why we don’t want to do something. You could say this [presentation] is part of a study into things that people avoid doing. In light of the taboo around eating human flesh, Söderlund said, It would be difficult for anyone who wanted to break into the human flesh business. At one point in the interview, the interviewer asked Söderlund how likely he thought it was that eating human flesh would catch on, in the same way that eating insects has been touted as a possible means to lower carbon emissions and combat food shortages. Söderlund responded that he thought cannibalism was unlikely to become appealing: Two and a half billion people eat insects more or less regularly, but they’re not in the Western world. And surveys that have been carried out on people’s attitudes to insects as food show that very few people think [eating insects] is attractive and want to try it, and you’d have to assume that human flesh would have an even bigger ‘yuck factor.' He later added: But if we need to turn over every stone when it comes to climate and sustainability, it’s still worth raising this question. Contrary to the claims made in various news reports, Söderlund did not advocate or propose or suggest cannibalism as a solution to the challenges of climate change in his TV4 interview. Rather, he explained that the purpose of his research and his Gastro Summit presentation was to stimulate thinking about what people would and would not be willing to do or consume in order to combat climate change, or in the event of food shortages brought on by climate change. This is much less clear. The Epoch Times article included descriptions of Söderlund's Sept. 3 presentation at the Gastro Summit in Stockholm, using terms that suggested the author had watched a video of it: At a summit for food of the future (the climate-ravaged future) called Gastro Summit, in Stockholm on Sept. 3 to 4, a professor held a PowerPoint presentation asserting that we must 'awaken the idea' of eating human flesh in the future, as a way of combating the effects of climate change ... He can be seen in his video presentation and on Swedish channel TV4 saying that since food sources will be scarce in the future, people must be introduced to eating things they have thus far considered disgusting — among them, human flesh ... In his talk, Soderlund asks the audience how many would be open to the idea. Not many hands go up. Some groaning is heard. We have not yet found publicly available video footage of Söderlund's presentation at the Gastro Summit on Sept. 3, nor a copy of any slideshow or PowerPoint presentation. We asked the author of the Epoch Times article for further details about the source of her descriptions, but we did not receive a response in time for publication. The event's organizers told us they did not have a copy of the presentation, and Söderlund himself indicated that the presentation was not readily available to him, for technical reasons. However, Söderlund did provide a firm and categorical rejection of claims that he had advocated or proposed eating human flesh as a solution to climate change, and reiterated that his presentation — which involved a survey of attendees — was designed only to gauge where the audience would draw the line in their willingness to eat various kinds of meat, and to ask questions about this issue. In an email, Söderlund wrote: Notwithstanding Söderlund's clear and detailed account of his presentation, without being able to examine a copy of that presentation, or watch a video of it, we can't determine definitively what he did and did not say. Until and unless that material becomes available to us, this element of the claim remains unproven. If that changes, we will update this fact check accordingly. However, we can say that Söderlund did not advocate or propose cannibalism as a solution to climate change in his TV4 interview. Rather, he merely discussed it and explained that his research involved asking questions about it. For those reasons, this element of the claim is false. On the whole, therefore, we issue a rating of Mixture.
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