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Earth

Meat Accounts For Nearly 60% of All Greenhouse Gases From Food Production, Study Finds (theguardian.com) 252

An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Guardian: The global production of food is responsible for a third of all planet-heating gases emitted by human activity, with the use of animals for meat causing twice the pollution of producing plant-based foods, a major new study has found. The entire system of food production, such as the use of farming machinery, spraying of fertilizer and transportation of products, causes 17.3 billion metric tons of greenhouse gases a year, according to the research. This enormous release of gases that fuel the climate crisis is more than double the entire emissions of the US and represents 35% of all global emissions, researchers said.

The use of cows, pigs and other animals for food, as well as livestock feed, is responsible for 57% of all food production emissions, the research found, with 29% coming from the cultivation of plant-based foods. The rest comes from other uses of land, such as for cotton or rubber. Beef alone accounts for a quarter of emissions produced by raising and growing food. Grazing animals require a lot of land, which is often cleared through the felling of forests, as well as vast tracts of additional land to grow their feed. The paper calculates that the majority of all the world's cropland is used to feed livestock, rather than people. Livestock also produce large quantities of methane, a powerful greenhouse gas. [...] The difference in emissions between meat and plant production is stark – to produce 1kg of wheat, 2.5kg of greenhouse gases are emitted. A single kilo of beef, meanwhile, creates 70kg of emissions. The researchers said that societies should be aware of this significant discrepancy when addressing the climate crisis.

The researchers built a database that provided a consistent emissions profile of 171 crops and 16 animal products, drawing data from more than 200 countries. They found that South America is the region with the largest share of animal-based food emissions, followed by south and south-east Asia and then China. Food-related emissions have grown rapidly in China and India as increasing wealth and cultural changes have led more younger people in these countries to adopt meat-based diets. The paper's calculations of the climate impact of meat is higher than previous estimates -- the UN's Food and Agricultural Organization has said about 14% of all emissions come from meat and diary production.
The study has been published in Nature Food.
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Meat Accounts For Nearly 60% of All Greenhouse Gases From Food Production, Study Finds

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  • by FudRucker ( 866063 ) on Tuesday September 14, 2021 @08:18AM (#61795273)
    i drastically changed my diet to mostly green vegetables and just a fraction of the meat & eggs i used to eat, (mostly keto with a little Adkins) and it helped me a lot, i lost over 60 pounds, i exercise more and i now ride a bicycle everyday and i sure feel better for it too
    • by sinij ( 911942 ) on Tuesday September 14, 2021 @09:10AM (#61795539)
      Your lost weight because you reduced your calorie intake and/or increased your activity level, not because you started eating more vegetables. Reducing meat consumption by itself will not make you lose weight.
      • by lsllll ( 830002 )
        Yup. The key in his post is "I exercise more and I now ride a bicycle everyday".
      • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Tuesday September 14, 2021 @12:22PM (#61796257)
        You can eat a lot more of them relative to the calories. A pound of carrots has a lot less calories than a pound of hamburger meat. Especially the kind of hamburger meat most people want to eat (80/20, about what a fast food restaurant has). A good mix of vegetables we'll also give you a better mix of vitamins and minerals and decrease the odds that your body is going to keep sending hunger signals because you're missing something. The downside is that at least in America we don't subsidize vegetables very much or at all ( Just grains not vegetables) so eating a healthy vegetarian diet gets really expensive really fast. It's also very time-consuming to cook vegetables compared to meat. You can throw some meat in a pot with some seasoning and cook it for a bit and it tastes fine even if you're not a very good cook. It's a lot harder to do the same with vegetables unless you're just eating beans and rice.

        For the record I'm more or less did the same as what the GP did. So while you're right about the physics of it there's more to human beings and how we eat then calories in calories out.
      • There is such a thing as bad calories. It's called sugar, to be precise, fructose. https://www.ted.com/talks/robe... [ted.com] and https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
      • by angel'o'sphere ( 80593 ) <angelo.schneider ... e ['oom' in gap]> on Tuesday September 14, 2021 @06:24PM (#61797199) Journal

        Depends on how the meat is cooked - and how fat it is.
        When he switched to more vegetables, he likely reduced sugar/carbs. As he most likely has less french fries, and most certainly less ketchup.

        I would suggest to read a book about nutrition - and your mods as well.

        As you post is most certainly completely wrong. The problem with weight gain is most of the time not calories, but combination of fat and sugar that let insulin levels spike.

    • by dnaumov ( 453672 )

      i drastically changed my diet to mostly read meat 3 years ago (I'd reckon 95% red meat, 5% white meat, berries and nuts) and I lose 25kg of weight in the first 6 months and my blook pressure dropped significantly despite a massive increase in salt intake.

  • I'm too lazy to figure it out.
  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Tuesday September 14, 2021 @08:26AM (#61795313)
    First, I have no doubt meat takes more energy than plants. That's inevitable since meat consumes plants to make it and you're going to lose some energy in the conversion.

    But are we comparing calories to calories? Meat is a lot more calorically dense. Yes, a kilo of wheat makes 1/35th the emissions as a kilo of meat, but is that a kilo of wheat flour (the stuff you actually eat) or a kilo of the raw plant? It wasn't clear from the article.

    In any case no, we're not all going vegetarian. If you want to fight climate change this is not how you do it. Threatening to take away people's meat will just put them into a defensive posture and lose you supporters.
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      But are we comparing calories to calories? Meat is a lot more calorically dense.

      No it isn't. Carbohydrate, 4 calories per gram; Protein, 4 calories per gram. Fat is higher, but it doesn't matter whether it's animal fat or vegetable oil.

      • That's wheat flour compared to meat. Same calorie density. But the weight in the article is raw plant, not flour.

      • by dfghjk ( 711126 )

        except that meat != protein and vegetable != carbohydrate. This is obvious even to the most uneducated layman. Just not obvious to you.

        Meat is far more calorically dense, this is not even controversial. Furthermore, the question of whether a kilo of wheat is the whole plant or the resulting edible food product isn't even addressed.

        Then there's the issue of nutrition. A 100% wheat diet is deadly, a 100% meat diet, as it turns out, is not. See Masai.

    • I think the more pressing item of interest is that food production in general is only about 10% of the greenhouse gas production out there. So focusing on meat is science geek at best, but more likely about controlling public opinion of environmental policy. Given that most of the greenhouse production is industrial or transportation related and the ready solutions there might cost some rich people some of their riches, I'm leaning towards the latter.

    • by Dusanyu ( 675778 )
      Deal with climate change in other ways but leave food production out of it you start telling people they will loose access to meat and dairy you will recoil them from the issue many people agree that climate change is a problem but they are still waiting for a reasonable and affordable way to address the issue. Transportation: Bicycling in the US is Dangerous so people don't bike electric cars are far from affordable yet and they are just a band-aid for a bigger problem with transportation in the US . p
    • Calories is also the wrong measure since almost all people are already consuming an excess of those. Calorie per calorie wheat is a much weaker source of nutrition than beef and that needs to be accounted for.
    • The real question is whether you can produce something that tastes just as good with lower greenhouse emissions.
      People aren't going to stop eating meat just because New York City might flood.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      At best animals can concentrate calories in their meat, but as you point out they can't offer more calories than they themselves consumed, only far fewer in fact.

      So the question is, is farming plants to collect calories less efficient than allowing an animal like a cow to collect them and then eating its flesh? And the answer is no, the losses are great enough and the emissions from cows high enough that it's better to grow crops that humans can eat and harvest them with a machine.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      It's not a threat. It's reality. The house is burning down, and we're busy trying to rearrange the furniture. Is it a threat if someone tells you your house is burning down?

      And calling it a threat is just another excuse. The reality is you will be eating less animal products in the future. We have to progress, similarly the car you're driving consumes less gas (or none.) If you want to drive a high MPG car, it's becoming less and less an option.

      The comparisons are almost always actual 'food', there's also a

  • The real question is what is the percentage of overall greenhouse emissions. Food accounts for ~26% of total production. So about 15% is from meat. While fossil fuels account for over 60% of all. So if we can reduce our dependence on that sector by 25%+ we can afford to eat meat.
  • by infuriatedweasel ( 1326439 ) on Tuesday September 14, 2021 @08:46AM (#61795419)

    The paper lists no competing interests, but one of the authors is from PlantPure Communities, Inc, whos mission includes helping "educate people about evidence-based nutrition that shows that optimal health may be achieved through a whole food, plant-based (WFPB) diet."
    When they're the ones coming up with the evidence, it seems like they might possibly have a particular outcome in mind when starting the study.

  • People account for 100% of greenhouse gas production.

    There are too many people. We are the problem.

  • I'm not going to eat bugs. Ok? Just putting that out there...

    • I'm not going to eat bugs. Ok?

      I'll take that lobster off you then.

    • Probably not raw, but if they're ground up into flour why would you care? I've tried some that weren't ground up and it's mostly just a cultural squeamishness that would stop me from eat them regularly. The texture isn't the best, but I've had worse.
  • by Craefter ( 71540 ) on Tuesday September 14, 2021 @09:39AM (#61795667)

    ...the EU allowed open-loop scrubbers on container ships. https://www.hellenicshippingne... [hellenicshippingnews.com]

    If governments really cared about the environment they would install nuclear reactors everywhere. But they don't. Most of them really like to burn fossilized dinosaur while I'm being lectured by a plant-eater.

    • EU bashing again?

      Your article has nothing to do with the EU. It is about the IMO - International Marine Organization.

      If governments really cared about the environment they would install nuclear reactors everywhere.
      Governments can not do that. Only companies can do.
      And they need a permit, which in theory the government got give.
      But: next election the government would be gone.
      Because: against popular believe, it is not the government or even parliament which has the big say in nuclear, it is the population.

      No

    • If governments really cared about the environment they would install nuclear reactors everywhere. But they don't.

      It's just as well that nuclear is dirt cheap and the onlything standing in the way is the evil gubbmint. Oh wait it isn't and there are plenty nuclear friendly nations in the world that aren't building reactors everywhere because unlike your fantasy world there are very real problems with building nuclear reactors today that have nothing to do with the government itself.

      As for your pointless EU bashing, maybe try and understand the difference between an atmospheric emission and an ocean discharge. Hint: One

  • Eating Meat (Score:2, Insightful)

    by DERoss ( 1919496 )

    My brother once said: "If we are not supposed to eat animals, why are they made out of meat?"

    The human digestive system -- from teeth through the stomach an into the gut -- is that of an omnivore, eating both meats and vegetables. We are advised to minimize our consumption of processed foods. The new "meats" synthesized entirely from vegetables, however, are the ultimate processed foods.

  • I was expecting over 80%. Even ignoring methane farts, meat requires a lot more prep work, transportation, refrigeration, etc.
    Plants convert C02 to oxygen.

    To me this is not a call to action, but instead a note to look elsewhere for major environmental gains

  • by argStyopa ( 232550 ) on Tuesday September 14, 2021 @10:26AM (#61795829) Journal

    ...the problem is population, not cows.

    It's just that the message 'we have to get rid of all the cows' is a lot more palatable than 'we have to get rid of some people'.

  • Beef alone accounts for a quarter of emissions...

    Holy cow!

  • I once tried to work out how many tons of grass-eating ungulate were on the North American plains before and after ecological warriors offended by ungulate methane killed 60 million bison.

    There are now over 100 million cows in the "North American Herd", and they produce 3X as much methane towards the end when being fattened up, but about the same while just grazing.

    But the bison lived a full life if they made it past childhood, so 80% of a given herd were adult size, which hit over a ton on the males. The

  • Ya, so what? If there were less people there would be no problem. Why are we still talking about this shit when the answer is so obvious?
  • Lifetime of Methane (Score:4, Informative)

    by schweini ( 607711 ) on Tuesday September 14, 2021 @11:11AM (#61796019)
    One interesting tidbit about Methane is that it only stays in the atmosphere for aprox. 12 years, compared to CO2's partly thousand year lifespan (although the CO2 cycle is way more complex). But, during those 12 years, it wreaks havok, and has a Global Warming Potential of 25 times CO2 in the first 10 years.
    So, on the one hand, Methane isn't THAT critical, because it's effect is relatively short-term - but on the other hand, it is so potent that it can accelerate other positive warming feedback loops.
    https://www.epa.gov/ghgemissio... [epa.gov]
  • And, what's worse, food accounts for nearly 100% of emissions from food production. The world needs to stop producing food right away to curb climate change.

  • Leave food production alone, industrial and transportation sources of greenhouse gas emissions are what need to be cleaned up.
  • The carbon footprint of fertilizer and pesticides for crops is huge.

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