090209 How Meat Contributes to Global Warming?
February 4, 2009
Most of us are aware that our cars, our coal-generated electric power and
even our cement factories adversely affect the environment. Until recently,
however, the foods we eat had gotten a pass in the discussion. Yet according to
a 2006 report by the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), our
diets and, specifically, the meat in them cause more greenhouse gases carbon
dioxide (CO2), methane, nitrous oxide, and the like to spew into the atmosphere
than either transportation or industry. (Greenhouse gases trap solar energy,
thereby warming the earth's surface. Because gases vary in greenhouse potency,
every greenhouse gas is usually expressed as an amount of CO2 with the same
global-warming potential.)
The FAO report found that current production levels of meat contribute
between 14 and 22 percent of the 36 billion tons of "CO2-equivalent" greenhouse
gases the world produces every year. It turns out that producing half a pound of
hamburger for someone's lunch a patty of meat the size of two decks of cards
releases as much greenhouse gas into the atmosphere as driving a 3,000-pound car
nearly 10 miles.
In truth, every food we consume, vegetables and fruits included, incurs
hidden environmental costs: transportation, refrigeration and fuel for farming,
as well as methane emissions from plants and animals, all lead to a buildup of
atmospheric greenhouse gases. Take asparagus: in a report prepared for the city
of Seattle, Daniel J. Morgan of the University of Washington and his co-workers
found that growing just half a pound of the vegetable in Peru emits greenhouse
gases equivalent to 1.2 ounces of CO2 as a result of applying insecticide and
fertilizer, pumping water and running heavy, gas-guzzling farm equipment. To
refrigerate and transport the vegetable to an American dinner table generates
another two ounces of CO2-equivalent greenhouse gases, for a total CO2
equivalent of 3.2 ounces.
But that is nothing compared to beef. In 1999 Susan Subak, an ecological
economist then at the University of East Anglia in England, found that,
depending on the production method, cows emit between 2.5 and 4.7 ounces of
methane for each pound of beef they produce. Because methane has roughly 23
times the global-warming potential of CO2, those emissions are the equivalent of
releasing between 3.6 and 6.8 pounds of CO2 into the atmosphere for each pound
of beef produced.
Raising animals also requires a large amount of feed per unit of body
weight. In 2003 Lucas Reijnders of the University of Amsterdam and Sam Soret of
Loma Linda University estimated that producing a pound of beef protein for the
table requires more than 10 pounds of plant protein with all the emissions of
greenhouse gases that grain farming entails. Finally, farms for raising animals
produce numerous wastes that give rise to greenhouse gases.
Taking such factors into account, Subak calculated that producing a pound of
beef in a feedlot, or concentrated animal feeding operation (CAFO) system,
generates the equivalent of 14.8 pounds of CO2 pound for pound, more than 36
times the CO2-equivalent greenhouse gas emitted by producing asparagus. Even
other common meats cannot match the impact of beef; I estimate that producing a
pound of pork generates the equivalent of 3.8 pounds of CO2; a pound of chicken
generates 1.1 pounds of CO2-equivalent greenhouse gases. And the economically
efficient CAFO system, though certainly not the cleanest production method in
terms of CO2-equivalent greenhouse emissions, is far better than most: the FAO
data I noted earlier imply that the world average emissions from producing a
pound of beef are several times the CAFO amount.
Solutions?
What can be done? Improving waste management and farming practices would
certainly reduce the "carbon footprint" of beef production. Methane-capturing
systems, for instance, can put cows' waste to use in generating electricity. But
those systems remain too costly to be commercially viable.
Individuals, too, can reduce the effects of food production on planetary
climate. To some degree, after all, our diets are a choice. By choosing more
wisely, we can make a difference. Eating locally produced food, for instance,
can reduce the need for transport though food inefficiently shipped in small
batches on trucks from nearby farms can turn out to save surprisingly little in
greenhouse emissions. And in the U.S. and the rest of the developed world,
people could eat less meat, particularly beef.
The graphics on the following pages quantify the links between beef
production and greenhouse gases in sobering detail. The take-home lesson is
clear: we ought to give careful thought to diet and its consequences for the
planet if we are serious about limiting the emissions of greenhouse gases.
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