If you really care about climate change
you'll stop eating burgers
If we don’t alter the way we eat and farm, the food industry
will cause an environmental disaster
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Give up
meat, save the planet. It really could be that simple, as new research warns that without radical
changes to our diets, the food industry alone is likely to cause an 80 per cent
increase in greenhouse gas emissions by 2050, exceeding the current emissions
targets for the entirety of the global economy.
This
creates something of a dilemma for steak loving environmentalists, like myself,
who have so far managed to skirt around the issue of meat, instead preferring
to focus our righteous efforts on recycling yoghurt pots or investing in energy
efficient light bulbs.
Burgers,
chops and pies are regular winners of the daily contest to satiate my
carnivorous cravings. But, every tenderly roasted, lovingly stewed and
patiently encrusted bit of flesh, that once made salivary glands froth and
bellies expand, are now unambiguous contributors to the climate change problem.
Of
course, we’ve known for a long time that eating piles of meat is bad for the environment.
So far, around 35 per cent of Earth’s ice-free land has been cleared for food
production causing deforestation, biodiversity loss and water pollution, while
the egregious levels of methane produced at every end of a cow contribute
directly to the greenhouse effect.
What’s
new is the scale of our collective appetite. At the ratewe’re munching through burgers, the amount of
land used in the race to provide us with enough medium-rare-rump will have
ballooned by 42 per cent by 2050 causing massive further deforestation,
pollution, and loss of species. The message is clear: if we don’t alter the way
we eat and farm, the food industry will cause a climate disaster all by itself,
making meat eating a relatively selfish hobby.
The
question is, can we – the assembled patty-lusting, climate-caring
humans of earth - do it? Can we quit meat for the sake of the planet? Can we
turn our backs on the cheap beef and the plump cuts? Can we avoid the glossy
explosion of new burger bars and steak houses that have hit Britain’s streets?
Can we stop drooling over the barbeque and instead forge an environmentally
responsible life of ascetic vegetarianism and endless beans?
In
fact, going cold turkey might not be completely necessary. The authors of the
paper, published in the journal Nature Climate Change, suggest that if each of
us was to cut our seven day grill-fests down to a modest but perfectly
achievable two portions of red meat a week, the damage might just be avoided.
But,
perhaps that approach sends us in the wrong direction. Year-round we fret about
governmental inaction on climate change, bemoan the reluctance of the world’s
statesmen to take the threat posed by global warming seriously, and grow tired
of the bluster that accompanies every retreat from prioritising sustainable
energy. As individuals, we often feel powerless to put a dent in reports of
mounting emissions, or alter the direction of our planet’s worrying future:
doomed by science and neglected by politics.
Eating
meat, however, is down to us. The associated climate change danger can be
pinned squarely on our insatiable appetites and our collective demand for more
ribs on more plates, and no one can stop chewing on that cow for you. The
market marches to the growl of our stomachs, and if we eat less, they’ll farm
less. By dropping meat we can make a positive impact on global warming, while
if we keep up our habits, the opposite is equally certain. It might be time to
put down the steak knife and embrace a meat-free future.
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