James Kanter, NYTimes
February 2010
But the virtues of vegetarianism as part of the battle to curb climate change are far from being an issue just for the spiritually inclined.
Delegates arriving at the gates of the climate conference in Copenhagen
last month were met by women in furry animal suits holding placards showing
pictures of lambs, cows and pigs and warning, “Don’t Eat Me.”
The women were representatives of Ching Hai, the leader of a group that
advocates adherence to Buddhist precepts, including following vegan or
vegetarian diets.
As they lined up for hours in freezing conditions, many of the delegates
seemed grateful for the neatly wrapped snacks — meat-free sandwiches — that
the women were handing out free.
Followers of Ching Hai say that one of her principal goals is to fight
environmental disasters, and her representatives in Copenhagen appeared
eager to spread the message that methane, which is belched in large
quantities by cows and other livestock raised for the meat and dairy
industries, is among the most potent planet-warming gases.
But the virtues of vegetarianism as part of the battle to curb climate
change are far from being an issue just for the spiritually inclined.
Long before the summit meeting in Copenhagen, rising demand for meat and
dairy products, particularly among the burgeoning middle classes in
countries like China and India with fast-developing economies, meant that
links between climate change and food policy were becoming an important
element in the debate over what to do about the rising levels of greenhouse
gases.
The issue appeared to have gained traction in the weeks leading up to the
Copenhagen conference, with prominent figures from the worlds of science and
entertainment stepping into the fray.
Speaking at the European Parliament in early December, Paul McCartney, a
former member of the Beatles, said there was an urgent need to do something
about meat production, not only because of its effects on the climate but
also because of related issues like deforestation and ensuring secure
supplies of water.
Mr. McCartney, who has long advocated vegetarianism, urged European
legislators to support policies like encouraging citizens to refrain from
eating meat for one day a week, something that he said could become as
commonplace as recycling or cars that run on hybrid technology.
Civil servants in the Belgian city of Ghent and schoolchildren in Baltimore
already observe a meat-free day each week, he said.
Mr. McCartney was joined at the parliament by Rajendra Pachauri, the
chairman of the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize-winning Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change, which is the main United Nations body studying the climate.
Public awareness of the problems linked to meat is low, and the authorities
might have to consider levying a surcharge on beef to discourage
consumption, Mr. Pachauri said in comments reported by Agence France-Presse.
Meat farmers immediately branded the comments as an assault on the industry,
and criticism came from as far away as New Zealand.
“Cutting out meat one day a week might seem a simple solution, but there is
little evidence to show any benefit,” Rod Slater, the chief executive of
Beef and Lamb New Zealand, told the country’s press association.
“Suggesting meat’s not green is an emotive slur on an industry which
continues investment in ongoing research, striving for further
improvements,” added Mr. Slater, who said people living in New Zealand
obtained daily nutritional necessities, and most of their protein, zinc and
vitamin B12, from beef and lamb.
In fact, like a number of other areas of research in climate science, the
greenhouse gas intensity of meat production is contested.
When a study in the November-December issue of the magazine World Watch
claimed more than half of human-produced, planet-warming gases were caused
by meat industries, a research group for the livestock industry countered
that a study by the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization already
had shown that the relevant figure was closer to 18 percent.
The study published in World Watch failed “to enlarge on any
counterfactuals, such as what a world without domesticated livestock would
look like,” Carlos Seré, the director general of the International Livestock
Research Institute in Nairobi, wrote to Green Inc. in November.
“Would, for example, wild herbivores and termite mounds take over many of
these environments, and end up producing as much greenhouse gases as
domestic ruminants?” Mr. Seré asked. “We frankly don’t, and can’t, know that
yet.”
Certainly the issue may be more nuanced than some commentators have
suggested.
For example, cattle fed on grass may have much lower carbon footprints than
those fed in feedlots because animals in pasture lands require fewer fossil
fuel-based inputs like fertilizers and because they help the soil sequester
carbon.
Renewed efforts are under way to get to the bottom of the matter.
Early this month, the Paris-based World Organization for Animal Health said
it would study the effect of meat output on climate change in light of
requests from its member countries.
“It’s a question that needs to be studied with a lot of distance,” Bernard
Vallat, the organization’s director-general, told a news conference,
according to Reuters. “We want to make a modest and independent
contribution,” he said.
Mr. Vallet said that one of the thorniest issues was how to involve
agriculture in efforts to reduce gases while maintaining food security.
Mr. Seré, of the livestock research institute, acknowledged the need to
develop a form of livestock production between factory and family farming
that would ease poverty without depleting natural resources or hurting the
climate.
He said environmental campaigners should keep in mind that the “biggest
concern of many experts regarding livestock in developing countries is not
their impact on climate change but rather the impact of climate change on
livestock production.”
The “hotter and more extreme tropical environments being predicted threaten
not only up to a billion livelihoods based on livestock but also supplies of
milk, meat and eggs among hungry communities that need these nourishing
foods most,” he said.
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