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Earth

Europe's Farming Lobbies Recognize Need To Eat Less Meat in Shared Vision Report (theguardian.com) 139

Europe's food and farming lobbies have recognized the need to eat less meat after hammering out a shared vision for the future of agriculture with green groups and other stakeholders. From a report: The wide-ranging report calls for "urgent, ambitious and feasible" change in farm and food systems and acknowledges that Europeans eat more animal protein than scientists recommend. It says support is needed to rebalance diets toward plant-based proteins such as better education, stricter marketing and voluntary buyouts of farms in regions that intensively rear livestock. The stakeholders also agreed on the need for a major rethink of subsidies, calling for a "just transition fund" to help farmers adopt sustainable practices, and targeted financial support to those who need it most.

The European Commission president, Ursula von der Leyen, who commissioned the report to quell furious farmer protests at the start of the year, said the results would feed into a planned vision for agriculture that she will present in the first 100 days of her new mandate. "We share the same goal," said Von der Leyen. "Only if farmers can live off their land will they invest in more sustainable practices. And only if we achieve our climate and environmental goals together will farmers be able to continue making a living." Animal agriculture is one of the biggest drivers of climate breakdown and the destruction of natural habitats, but European leaders have made little effort to steer diets heavy in meat and milk to whole grains and plant-based sources of protein. The report did not set targets for meat production, such as culling herds, but called for support to help shift dietary habits, such as free school meals, more detailed labels, and tax reductions on healthy and sustainable food products.

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Europe's Farming Lobbies Recognize Need To Eat Less Meat in Shared Vision Report

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  • Unless you happen to be flying in for DAVOS on your private jet. Then you can have all the steak you want. The message is "You fucking plebs need to stop eating so much meat. That's for your betters." Now that Ursula says she "shares the same goal" (ie.. the one you never agreed with which was to eat less meat), they can crack down on farmers using "too much" of one product or another that the Green folks do not like (fertilizer, pesticides, etc..). Next they'll tell you what you "can have" is a bug sandwic
    • That is not how it works down here. Efforts are done to discourage the use of private jets. It is still in the design phase though. We care.
    • by skam240 ( 789197 )

      So "less meat" means no steak which then means a whole giant slippery slope of shit, is that what you're saying?

      Yes, for anything they set up for this the wealthy will probably be able to side step it. You see this in SoCal where they charge through the rough for excessive water usage. The wealthy dont care, they have more than enough money to keep their giant lawns green. The rest of your post is just an illustration of the slippery slope logical fallacy in action though.

  • by iamhigh ( 1252742 ) on Wednesday September 04, 2024 @11:07AM (#64761772)
    It's weird they didn't link to it: https://agriculture.ec.europa.... [europa.eu]
  • Meat for me but not for thee
  • Why are Europeans trying to kill themselves off in every way they can think of?

    • Why are Europeans trying to kill themselves off in every way they can think of?

      I didn't realise you would die by eating one less steak a week. Shit am I dying right now? BRB need to go slaughter a cow.

      • What people will be pushed to do when this gets converted into taxes/prices is brain drain out of Europe. First the meat eaters with the ability to leave will find some place you don't have to be rich to eat meat, the vegetarians and vegans won't be far behind.

        People don't want to eat the bugs and live in the pod in far-northern-Africa.

        PS. I think allow killing of animals is a moral failure, but I fail a lot.

    • Why are Europeans trying to kill themselves off in every way they can think of?

      Unfortunately we are following right along behind them (and "leading" the way in some ways) here in the United States.

      The insane drive to feminize society and demonize the people who make up the majority of the productive population here is cultural suicide on a level I am not sure can be measured using mundane scales.

      When there is eventually a violent pushback here (maybe a ways off, maybe close, who knows), I just hope that I'm not living in town anymore.

  • From the article: "The report did not set targets for meat production, such as culling herds, but called for support to help shift dietary habits, such as free school meals, more detailed labels, and tax reductions on healthy and sustainable food products."

    Anyone seen the actual report as opposed to another bullshit Guardian article from msmash?

  • Europeans eat more animal protein than scientists recommend

    They do, eh? Who are those scientists, what are the scientific studies, on which the recommendations are based? Have they been reproduced [nature.com]?

    And even if they have — and humans really are eating more meat, than is good for us, why is it anyone's business to force us to stop, at our own expense?

    better education, stricter marketing and voluntary buyouts of farms in regions that intensively rear livestock

    Note, how conveniently all of these measures l

  • It's frustrating to see the push against animal agriculture, particularly for ruminants like Cows, Sheep, and Goats. These critters are extremely carbon negative if you feed them grass in high density managed intensive grazing systems. The ground stays covered, minimizing erosion, and runoff is drastically reduced because of the way hoof pressure, manure, and soil critters interact to increase water's ability to soak in.

    We have real-world examples of these systems turning old "used up" land into high quali

    • It's frustrating to see the push against animal agriculture, particularly for ruminants like Cows, Sheep, and Goats. These critters are extremely carbon negative if you feed them grass in high density managed intensive grazing systems. The ground stays covered, minimizing erosion, and runoff is drastically reduced because of the way hoof pressure, manure, and soil critters interact to increase water's ability to soak in.

      We have real-world examples of these systems turning old "used up" land into high quality farmland from the carbon they put in the soil, and the same process has been shown to work in in desert and mine-reclamation moonscapes too.

      People want to believe that animal agriculture is the problem. It's not. The real problem is how we're feeding them.

      Add to that grazing herds on grasses also prevents the need to inject them with antibiotics or idiotic hormones to keep them from dying because they aren't able to digest corn properly. Many of the things that are done in intensive cattle and poultry production is beyond ludicrous.

      • They still need antibiotics if they get sick, but that's less likely when they are on fresh pasture every day because you've moved the herd. Stocking densely, moving them often, and giving land long periods of time to recover are the keys to MIG. As to hormones, that is still a thing. When you castrate a bull, they have very little sex hormones, estrogen or testosterone, and grow slower. A subdermal estrogen chip raises the estrogen level to slightly less than a heifer and helps that growth issue. I don
        • They still need antibiotics if they get sick, but that's less likely when they are on fresh pasture every day because you've moved the herd. Stocking densely, moving them often, and giving land long periods of time to recover are the keys to MIG. As to hormones, that is still a thing. When you castrate a bull, they have very little sex hormones, estrogen or testosterone, and grow slower. A subdermal estrogen chip raises the estrogen level to slightly less than a heifer and helps that growth issue. I don't have a significant issue with this, but do understand if it makes people uncomfortable. Another solution would be to not castrate them, but they have instincts to fight that make them dangerous to themselves and others.

          I should have phrased better, yes antibiotics if they are sick, I was instead referring to the practice of giving them proactively when cows are fed corn-based diets.

  • Developing countries all over the world increase their meat consumption as they grow richer. https://www.sciencedirect.com/... [sciencedirect.com]. People like to eat meat. How about instead of eating less, we find ways to reduce the impact on the environment?

    • This would be the most logical thing. Unfortunately most humans want to feel like they're superior to others - so person or group X (call it the davos crowd for ease of use) want to pretend they're the ubermensch because the untermensch aren't allowed to eat animal protein.
  • "I'm not European. I don't plan on being European. So, who cares if they're socialists or not? They could be fascist anarchists for all I care. It still doesn't change the fact that I don't own a car."

  • As soon as politicians claim they're doing it for science, everyone forgets they're politicians with their own agendas.

    It's time to get very sceptical about what they're pushing.

    Diet is a complex topic, hence the deep disagreements. If a diet is healthy then it should be demonstrable for life, from cradle to grave, and that kind of study is just too expensive to do for real. There's lots of confounders.

    By all means, experiment with your diet and see what works for you.

    This is not an area where governments s

  • "And only if we achieve our climate and environmental goals together will farmers be able to continue making a living." Animal agriculture is one of the biggest drivers of climate breakdown and the destruction of natural habitats, but European leaders have made little effort to steer diets heavy in meat and milk to whole grains and plant-based sources of protein."

    The what exactly the "climate and environmental goals" are is not defined. But we can say that any climate goals the EU has can have nothing to d

  • I drink a ton of milk, and I'm not likely to stop. As I eat less meat, I add milk protein (or whey when I can't buy milk protein--whey doesn't contain casein so it's less like actual food) to my diet. Some quick googling says milk production is half as harmful to the environment as beef production. This is still not great. However, since milk is a homogeneous liquid, it should be easier to synthesize than meat.

    And it could taste better--my country does a lot of UHT milk, and the processing messes up the tas

  • by bradley13 ( 1118935 ) on Thursday September 05, 2024 @05:57AM (#64764532) Homepage
    In other words: Overly subsidized agriculture searching for even more subsidies.

Never test for an error condition you don't know how to handle. -- Steinbach

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