UN says eat less meat to curb global warming

People should have one meat-free day a week if they want to make a
personal and effective sacrifice that would help tackle climate
change, the world's leading authority on global warming has told The
Observer

Dr Rajendra Pachauri, chair of the United Nations Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change, which last year earned a joint share of the
Nobel Peace Prize, said that people should then go on to reduce their
meat consumption even further.

His comments are the most controversial advice yet provided by the
panel on how individuals can help tackle global warning.

Pachauri, who was re-elected the panel's chairman for a second
six-year term last week, said diet change was important because of the
huge greenhouse gas emissions and other environmental problems -
including habitat destruction - associated with rearing cattle and
other animals. It was relatively easy to change eating habits compared
to changing means of transport, he said.

The UN's Food and Agriculture Organisation has estimated that meat
production accounts for nearly a fifth of global greenhouse gas
emissions. These are generated during the production of animal feeds,
for example, while ruminants, particularly cows, emit methane, which
is 23 times more effective as a global warming agent than carbon
dioxide. The agency has also warned that meat consumption is set to
double by the middle of the century.

'In terms of immediacy of action and the feasibility of bringing about
reductions in a short period of time, it clearly is the most
attractive opportunity,' said Pachauri. 'Give up meat for one day [a
week] initially, and decrease it from there,' said the Indian
economist, who is a vegetarian.

However, he also stressed other changes in lifestyle would help to
combat climate change. 'That's what I want to emphasise: we really
have to bring about reductions in every sector of the economy.'

Pachauri can expect some vociferous responses from the food industry
to his advice, though last night he was given unexpected support by
Masterchef presenter and restaurateur John Torode, who is about to
publish a new book, John Torode's Beef. 'I have a little bit and enjoy
it,' said Torode. 'Too much for any person becomes gluttony. But
there's a bigger issue here: where [the meat] comes from. If we all
bought British and stopped buying imported food we'd save a huge
amount of carbon emissions.'

Tomorrow, Pachauri will speak at an event hosted by animal welfare
group Compassion in World Farming, which has calculated that if the
average UK household halved meat consumption that would cut emissions
more than if car use was cut in half.

The group has called for governments to lead campaigns to reduce meat
consumption by 60 per cent by 2020. Campaigners have also pointed out
the health benefits of eating less meat. The average person in the UK
eats 50g of protein from meat a day, equivalent to a chicken breast
and a lamb chop - a relatively low level for rich nations but 25-50
per cent more than World Heath Organisation guidelines.

Professor Robert Watson, the chief scientific adviser for the
Department for Environment Food and Rural Affairs, who will also speak
at tomorrow's event in London, said government could help educate
people about the benefits of eating less meat, but it should not
'regulate'. 'Eating less meat would help, there's no question about
that, but there are other things,' Watson said.

However, Chris Lamb, head of marketing for pig industry group BPEX,
said the meat industry had been unfairly targeted and was working hard
to find out which activities had the biggest environmental impact and
reduce those. Some ideas were contradictory, he said - for example,
one solution to emissions from livestock was to keep them indoors, but
this would damage animal welfare. 'Climate change is a very young
science and our view is there are a lot of simplistic solutions being
proposed,' he said.

Last year a major report into the environmental impact of meat eating
by the Food Climate Research Network at Surrey University claimed
livestock generated 8 per cent of UK emissions - but eating some meat
was good for the planet because some habitats benefited from grazing.
It also said vegetarian diets that included lots of milk, butter and
cheese would probably not noticeably reduce emissions because dairy
cows are a major source of methane, a potent greenhouse gas released
through flatulence.

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