Environmental groups place a lot of attention on trying to stop new oil, gas, and coal development since current fossil fuel projects would likely already blow us past the less-than 2ยฐC upper limit for warming laid out in the 2015 Paris Climate Agreement. In fact, thereโs a whole movement, known as โKeep It in the Ground,โ predicated on thisย idea.
But when faced with a resurgence of support for fossil fuels from the White House, perhaps just as important is talking about how to โKeep It in the Cow,โ according to some reports. Right now, experts predict agriculture is set to eat up half the greenhouse gas emissions the world can release by 2050 and still stay below 2ยฐC (3.6ยฐF) ofย warming.
That is, unless the world takes a big bite out of its meat consumption, especially from cattle and other livestock that chew their cud, say researchers at Chalmers University of Technology in Sweden. Raising these ruminants produces a lot of methane, a much more potent but shorter-lived greenhouse gas than carbonย dioxide.
While โMeatless Mondaysโ is one approach to this problem, their studies show that itโs not necessarily how much meat people eat thatโs linked to the climate impacts of their diet. Instead, itโs the amount of beef, lamb, andย dairy.
A 2017 Chalmers study concluded that: โA switch from diets rich in ruminant meat to diets with meat from monogastric animals (pork, chicken) reduces [methane] emissions by almost the same amount as a switch to an entirely vegan diet.โ Researchersย at the University of Oxford in 2016 found similar benefits, concluding that shifting to a vegetarian diet could lessen greenhouse gas emissions byย two-thirds.
(If you want to eat vegan, of course, thatโs also an option. In addition, eggs and dairy each have about half the climate impact of eating chicken andย beef.)
Itโs worth noting that many of these studies donโt take into account the land-use changes that come with supporting different diets. However, the United Nations (UN) Food and Agriculture Organization estimates that about 70 percent of Amazon forest has been converted to pasture for livestock, and the Chalmers researchers note swapping in beans for bovine burgers likely wouldnโt drive an increase inย cropland.
Agriculture at UN Climateย Talks
Of course, changing whatโs on your plate is only one way to cut your dietโs climate impact (though for the U.S., itโs one of the most immediate and arguably easiest ways). Two other major approaches include making farms more productive (though livestock plays a big role here too) and using climate change-mitigating techniques such as planting cover crops that store carbon in theย soil.
In addition, the UN climate talks are increasingly bringing agriculture into discussions about reducing greenhouse gas emissions. For example, the 2016 climate talks in Marrakech, Morocco, saw at least 80 sessions touching onย agriculture.
This hasnโt always been theย case.
โAgriculture has really lagged,โ Craig Hanson, director of the food, forests, and water program at the World Resources Institute, told InsideClimate News. โ[I]t’s surprising it’s taken so long โฆ But it’s finallyย happening.โ
Furthermore, in 2014 the UN launched the Global Alliance for Climate-Smart Agriculture. However, its efforts appear more focused on helping farmers with productivity and resilience in the face of climate change, while reducing farmingโs greenhouse gas contributions comes with the caveat โwhenย possible.โ
How much this yearโs climate talks in Bonn, Germany, will touch on agriculture remains to beย seen.
Global Health Down on theย Farm
Industrial livestock production, or factory farming, has also been called out specifically for both its climate and public health consequences. In May, about 200 experts in fields ranging from medicine to climate research published an open letter asking that the next leader of the World Health Organization (WHO) tackle the global health effects of climateย change.
The letter states: โAlthough many previous attempts to tackle factory farming have been largely framed around animal welfare or environmental concerns, we believe that limiting the size and adverse practices of factory farming is also central to improving globalย health.โ
In addition to climate change, it goes on to list antibiotic resistance and the rise of obesity and non-infectious diseases (e.g., diabetes) among the harmful fallout of factory farming. The letterย continues:
โClimate change does not recognize borders and neither do drug-resistant infectious diseases. Although they contribute least to the global burden of animal farming, the worldโs poorest countries are also the most vulnerable to rising water levels, natural disasters caused by climate change, food insecurity, and infectiousย diseases.โ
Encouragingly, the WHOโs new director-general, Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, lists addressing the health impacts of climate and environmental change as one of hisย priorities.
Of course, this issue has been on the radar of the WHO for a while. First published in 2000, the agency updated itsย assessment of climate changeโs health impacts in 2014. This latest version found that โclimate change is expected to cause approximately 250,000 additional deaths per year between 2030 and 2050.โ The organization cites childhood malnutrition, malaria, diarrhea (from lack of safe water), and heat exposure as the primary causes of those deaths. However, it likely underestimates the full health impacts from climateย change.
In addition, switching how your meat is produced doesn’t necessarily address its climate footprint.ย Environmental economist Fredrik Hedenus of Chalmers University authored several of the studies on beef and dairyโs climate contributions mentioned earlier. He saysย that producing the same level of meat by โgrazing animals [is] not better from a climate perspective compared to intensive factory farming. On the other hand, without factory farming the high level of consumption would not beย possible.โ
The world is already feeling the impacts of a changing climate after becoming, on average, just 1.8ยฐF (1ยฐC) warmer than before we started burning massive quantities of coal, oil, and gas. With our already slim chances of avoiding โdangerousโ global warming, the science suggests we canโt afford to leave food and farming off the negotiatingย table.
Main image: Beef cattle in an Oklahoma feedlot.ย Credit:ย Alice Welch, U.S. Department of Agriculture, publicย domain
Subscribe to our newsletter
Stay up to date with DeSmog news and alerts