Serious About Addressing Climate Change?
It’s Time to Get Serious About Changing Your Diet
Did you know livestock production accounts for 51 percent of
global greenhouse gas emissionsannually? This makes livestock
production the leading cause of climate change, yet all signs point to the fact
that based on global diet trends,
these numbers are only poised to grow. So, as a global community we’re in a bit
of a pickle (to say the very least).
A new report from Nature Climate
Change reveals that our current trends in food production alone
will cause us to reach, and possibly exceed global targets for greenhouse gas
(ghg) emissions by 2050. Meaning all the other sources of ghg’s,
including burning fossil fuels and natural gas, will push us far over 2050
targets. Yikes.
As the report explains, more and more cultures across the world
are adopting a “Western”
diet that emphasizes meat consumption.
The result is more land is needed to grow feed for livestock,
and more space is needed to house this additional animals that are being
introduced into the global food
system.
However, the sad reality is the earth is not growing, and we’re
running out of arable land fast in trying to meet this demand. The only
solution to allow us to produce more
livestock to satisfy a meat-intensive diet is to cut down old
growth forests to make space.
And deforestation does not come without consequence. As rich rainforests are
chopped down, all the carbon they have absorbed over their lifetime
is released back into the atmosphere. So as these forests disappear to make room for
livestock: carbon dioxide levels go up, biodiversity goes down, and
the introduction of methane producing cattle, chickens, and pigs means more
greenhouse gases added to our already stressed
atmosphere.
Nature Climate Change predicts that by 2050, if we continue on a
business as usual course with agriculture, cropland to grow feed will have to
increase by 42 percent.
Additionally, fertilizer use will rise by 45 percent,
and an additional one-tenth of the world’s pristine rainforest will be
sacrificed at this cost.The grand total of all these additions figures to an increase of
greenhouse gases credited to food production by 80 PERCENT!
Projected fertilizer increase needed by 2050
In millions of tons
2050
50
230.55
100
150
200
2009
2011
2012
2016
2050
And even if these projections come to fruition, there still
won’t be enough food available to feed the9.6 billion
people who will inhabit Earth in 2050. Agriculture centered
around livestock
production is incredibly inefficient. For every 100 calories of
grain grown to feed livestock, only 3 calories of
beef are produced.
Wow. So, this huge problem must involve an incredibly complex
solution…right? Actually, the answer is no. While the study details these
rather daunting figures, this is by no means a death sentence. In fact, the
author of this report asserts that by simply eating a more balanced diet thateliminates an
excess of meat, we can effectively
drive down greenhouse gas emissions before they come to a
cataclysmic head.
By simply phasing out meat derived from animals, and
incorporating more plant-based meat
optionsinto your diet you can help to lower the global demand for
increased livestock
production. While the best solution is to eliminate all meat, dairy,
and eggs from your diet, even making a gradual change that slowly removes meat
from the center of your daily meals can make a huge difference.
If we consider the environmental
impact that our food choices make everyday, we can shape a more
efficient food system that is able to sustain life well beyond the next 35
years.
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