U.S. Diet Detrimental to Fresh Water Supply, and Rain
Forest, and Oceans.

Q. How does eating meat affect water usage, water
pollution and the ocean?

>From Jolinda Hackett,

Source >
http://vegetarian.about.com/od/vegetarianvegan101/f/waterpollution.htm


A. The global effects of meat consumption don’t stop
on land. Agriculture also requires water consumption,
and animal agriculture is no exception. Animal
production consumes an amount of water roughly
equivalent to all other uses of water in the United
States combined. Besides grains, animals need water to
survive and grow until they are slaughtered. One pound
of beef requires an input of approximately 2500
gallons of water, whereas a pound of soy requires 250
gallons of water and a pound of wheat only 25 gallons.
Meat production is inefficient as it requires the
consumption of an extensive amount of resources over
many months and years before becoming a usable food
product. With the water used to produce a single
hamburger, you could take a luxurious shower every day
for two and a half weeks. 
Even the EPA identifies agriculture as a major water
pollutant. 

(1) Agricultural pesticides and nitrates used in
fertilizers and manures seep into our groundwater,
eventually spilling out into the oceans creating
so-called “dead zones” (expansive areas so toxic that
neither plant nor animal life can survive) viewable
from space in places like the Gulf of Mexico where the
Mississippi spills out into the sea. Besides the
chemicals used in cultivation, accidental pollution
though chemical spills and manure dumps are an ongoing
source of water pollution from feedlots. The manure
created from the billions of animals killed for food
has to go somewhere, and often, it ends up in rivers
and streams, killing millions of fish in one fell
swoop (2).

Previous: Rainforest Depletion and Destruction

Previous: Meat Consumption and Fossil Fuels

Sources:
(1) US Environmental Protection Agency. 1984. Report
to Congress: Nonpoint Source Pollution in the US
Office of Water Program Operations, Water Planning
Division. Washington, D.C.

(2) Merritt Frey, et al., Spills and Kills: Manure
Pollution and America's Livestock Feedlots, Clean
Water Network, Izaak Walton League of America and
Natural Resources Defense Council (August 2000)
-------------------------------------------------------

2,500 Gallons All Wet?

by John Robbins

Source >
http://vegetarian.about.com/gi/dynamic/offsite.htm?zi=1/XJ&sdn=vegetarian&zu=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.earthsave.org%2Fenvironment%2Fwater.htm

I have been asked recently whether the figures given
in Diet For A New America for how much water it takes
to produce a pound of meat today are still accurate.

The figure of 2,500 gallons to produce a pound of meat
that I used in Diet For A New America comes from a
statement by the renowned scientist Dr. Georg
Borgstrom at the 1981 annual meeting of the American
Association for the Advancement of Science, in a
presentation titled “Impacts On Demand For And Quality
Of Land And Water.” He was then head of the Food
Science and Human Nutrition Department of the College
of Agriculture and Natural Resources at Michigan State
University in Lansing, Michigan. Dr. Borgstrom has
since passed away (his widow Greta has returned to
their native Sweden), but his outstanding books
(including The Food And People Dilemma, The Hungry
Planet, Too Many, etc.) are still available through
used book searches.

It was not only Diet For A New America that publicized
this particular statement of Dr. Borgstrom’s. The
tenth anniversary edition of Diet For A Small Planet
by Frances Moore Lappe states, on page 76, “According
to food geographer Georg Borgstrom, to produce a
1-pound steak requires 2,500 gallons of water.”

Furthermore, it is not only Dr. Borgstrom that has
come to similar conclusions. In their landmark book
Population, Resources, Environment, Stanford
Professors Paul R. and Anne H. Ehrlich stated that the
amount of water used to produce one pound of meat
ranges from 2,500 to as much as 6,000 gallons. (Dr.
Borgstrom, Drs. Ehrlich and I all used the word
“meat,” to refer specifically to beef.)

Are These Figures Outdated? 
I’m not aware of anything that has changed in the
production of modern meat that has made the industry
more water efficient.The December, 1999, issue of
Audubon concurs, stating (page 110), “Nearly half the
water consumed in this country…is used for livestock,
mostly cattle.” There have, however, been interesting
developments relative to these figures.

In 1978, Herb Schulbach (Soil and Water Specialist,
University of California Agricultural Extension),
along with livestock farm advisors Tom Aldrich,
Richard E. Johnson, and Ken Mueller, published
extensive research on water use in California
agriculture in the journal Soil and Water (no. 38,
fall 1978). They concluded that the average pound of
beef produced in California required 5,214 gallons of
water.

The livestock industry took great offense at this.
Schulbach told me that they “turned a scientific
project into political football.” Subsequently, at the
behest of the cattlemen, Jim Oltjen and colleagues in
the Department of Animal Science at U.C. Davis came
out with a very different calculation, asserting the
requirements for a pound of beef to be 441 gallons of
water. Jim Oltjen’s work, along with similar work by
Gerald Ward (Department of Animal Science, Colorado
State University) forms the basis for the figures that
the National Cattlemen’s Beef Association have used
ever since to rebut the arguments of environmentalists
who point to the enormous waste of water involved in
modern beef production. (How identified Jim Oltjen is
with the industry can be glimpsed from his official
portrait at the University of California, where he
wears a cowboy hat.)

When Alan Durning wrote Worldwatch Paper #103, “Taking
Stock: Animal Farming and the Environment,” which was
the basis for Worldwatch Editorial Director Ed Ayres’
recent major piece in the November 8, 1999 issue of
Time magazine (in which Ed references 840 gallons per
pound of beef), he based his calculations on the
cattlemen’s own figures. Right after that came out, I
discussed the matter with Alan, and asked him why he
had used these fi gures. He said it was because the
cattlemen use them, and while the accurate figure is
undoubtedly far higher, it seemed better to publish
figures the cattlemen couldn’t argue with since these
figures are damning enough.

Making Sense of it All 
How is the layperson to determine which of these
figures is most accurate and up-to-date? A remarkable
source of objective information for this question is
the Water Education Foundation in Sacramento. This
non-profit organization prides itself on being “the
only impartial organization to develop and implement
educational programs leading to a broader
understanding of water issues and to resolution of
water problems.” The Water Education Foundation
currently distributes a comprehensive analysis titled
“Water Inputs in California Food Production,” which
references the work of both Herb Schulbach and Jim
Oltjen, as well as the work of Gerald Ward (the other
source for the Cattlemen’s data), and hundreds of
other experts in the field. Extraordinarily thorough,
this 162-page analysis is uniquely pertinent because
it surveys the work in this area done by many of the
leading experts representing the livestock industry
(including the American Meat Institute), and many
others representing public interest and environmental
perspectives. Currently distributed by the Water
Education Foundation, the study concludes that each
pound of California beef requires 2,464 gallons of
water — a number virtually identical to the 2,500
gallon figure I use in Diet For A New America.

Western Water Crisis 
For further understanding, one can also read authors
such as Marc Reisner, former staff writer at the
Natural Resources Defense Council and the author of
the highly acclaimed Cadillac Desert, a history of
water and the American West. (PBS made a multi-part
documentary series of Cadillac Desert.) Writing in the
New York Times in 1989, Reisner wrote: “In California,
the single biggest consumer of water is not Los
Angeles. It is not the oil and chemicals or defense
industries. Nor is it the fields of grapes and
tomatoes. It is irrigated pasture: grass grown in a
near-desert climate for cows. In 1986, irrigated
pasture used about 5.3 million acre-feet of water — as
much as all 27 million people in the state consumed,
including for swimming pools and lawns…. Is California
atypical? Only in the sense that agriculture in
California, despite all the desert grass and irrigated
rice, accounts for proportionately less water use than
in most of the other western states. In Colorado, for
example, alfalfa to feed cows consumes nearly 30% of
all the state’s water, much more than the share taken
by Denver…. The West’s water crisis — and many of its
environmental problems as well — can be summed up,
implausible as this may seem, in a single word:
livestock.”

Of course, beef produced in different parts of the
country will take different amounts of water. Beef
produced in the Southeast takes much less water
because you don’t need to irrigate nearly as much
thanks to so much more rain during the growing season.
Arizona and Colorado beef, on the other hand, take
even more water than California’s. Even Jim Oltjen
(the author of the lower figure that the cattlemen
use) acknowledges that nationwide, half of the grain
and hay that is fed to American beef cattle is grown
on irrigated land. Putting this all together, a figure
of 2,500 gallons for a national average strikes me as
still valid and useful.

(Incidentally, the primary reason more water is used
to produce a pound of beef than a pound of pork or
chicken is because the pork and poultry industries in
the United States are generally concentrated in areas
where grain fields need little or no irrigation, and
because their feed conversion ratios are more
efficient.)

Underestimating water use has hazards. The problem
with water, as has often been pointed out, is that the
shortfalls don’t show up until the very end. You can
go on pumping unsustainably until the day you run out.
Then all you have is the recharge flow, which comes
from precipitation, and which comes nowhere close to
the levels of use you’ve come to take for granted.
It’s a bit like driving a car without a fuel gauge.
You push down on the gas pedal and the car
accelerates, and you conclude that you’ve got plenty
of gas — until the moment that you suddenly run out.
But it’s even more important with water that we don’t
underestimate usage because there are alternatives to
oil, such as hydrogen, solar, wind, etc., but there
aren’t alternatives to water. If we run out, we can’t
grow food nor maintain other essential life functions.
If we continue pumping out the Ogallala aquifer at
current rates for U.S. beef production, it is only a
matter of time before wells in Kansas, Nebraska,
Oklahoma, Colorado, and New Mexico go dry, and
portions of these states become scarcely habitable for
human beings.

The More Things Change… 
It’s true that Diet For A New America is now twelve
years old. Some things have changed in the meantime.
For example, the discussion of AIDS, written in 1986,
could not possibly have included the enormous
developments that have taken place concerning this
disease since then. For another example, incidents of
E. coli 0157:H7 poisoning have become far more
frequent — and with USDA scientists now using more
sensitive technology that has only recently become
available, they will soon be finding this deadly
strain of bacteria to be far more prevalent in cattle
than anyone had thought. Mad Cow disease had not
arisen when the book was written, and so is not
mentioned. A great many examples lie in the areas of
nutrition, where knowledge has advanced greatly in the
past dozen years. But I see no evidence that the
amount of water used in the production of beef has
declined during this time. Nor do I see any evidence
that the disastrous environmental impact and
exorbitant waste of natural resources involved in
modern meat production has improved in the slightest. 



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