The New York Times
October 31, 2009
Op-Ed Contributor
The Carnivore’s Dilemma
By NICOLETTE HAHN NIMAN

Bolinas, Calif.

Is eating a hamburger the global warming equivalent of driving a
Hummer? This week an article in The Times of London carried a
headline that blared: "Give Up Meat to Save the Planet."  Former
Vice President Al Gore, who has made climate change his signature
issue, has even been assailed for omnivorous eating by animal
rights activists.

It’s true that food production is an important contributor to
climate change. And the claim that meat (especially beef) is
closely linked to global warming has received some credible
backing, including by the United Nations and University of
Chicago. Both institutions have issued reports that have been
widely summarized as condemning meat-eating.

But that’s an overly simplistic conclusion to draw from the
research. To a rancher like me, who raises cattle, goats and
turkeys the traditional way (on grass), the studies show only that
the prevailing methods of producing meat -- that is, crowding
animals together in factory farms, storing their waste in giant
lagoons and cutting down forests to grow crops to feed them --
cause substantial greenhouse gases. It could be, in fact, that a
conscientious meat eater may have a more environmentally friendly
diet than your average vegetarian.

So what is the real story of meat’s connection to global warming?
Answering the question requires examining the individual
greenhouse gases involved: carbon dioxide, methane and nitrous
oxides.

Carbon dioxide makes up the majority of agriculture-related
greenhouse emissions. In American farming, most carbon dioxide
emissions come from fuel burned to operate vehicles and
equipment. World agricultural carbon emissions, on the other hand,
result primarily from the clearing of woods for crop growing and
livestock grazing. During the 1990s, tropical deforestation in
Brazil, India, Indonesia, Sudan and other developing countries
caused 15 percent to 35 percent of annual global fossil fuel
emissions.

Much Brazilian deforestation is connected to soybean
cultivation. As much as 70 percent of areas newly cleared for
agriculture in Mato Grosso State in Brazil is being used to grow
soybeans. Over half of Brazil’s soy harvest is controlled by a
handful of international agribusiness companies, which ship it all
over the world for animal feed and food products, causing
emissions in the process.

Meat and dairy eaters need not be part of this. Many smaller,
traditional farms and ranches in the United States have scant
connection to carbon dioxide emissions because they keep their
animals outdoors on pasture and make little use of
machinery. Moreover, those farmers generally use less soy than
industrial operations do, and those who do often grow their own,
so there are no emissions from long-distance transport and zero
chance their farms contributed to deforestation in the developing
world.

In contrast to traditional farms, industrial livestock and poultry
facilities keep animals in buildings with mechanized systems for
feeding, lighting, sewage flushing, ventilation, heating and
cooling, all of which generate emissions. These factory farms are
also soy guzzlers and acquire much of their feed overseas. You can
reduce your contribution to carbon dioxide emissions by avoiding
industrially produced meat and dairy products.

Unfortunately for vegetarians who rely on it for protein, avoiding
soy from deforested croplands may be more difficult: as the
Organic Consumers Association notes, Brazilian soy is common (and
unlabeled) in tofu and soymilk sold in American supermarkets.

Methane is agriculture’s second-largest greenhouse gas. Wetland
rice fields alone account for as much 29 percent of the world’s
human-generated methane. In animal farming, much of the methane
comes from lagoons of liquefied manure at industrial facilities,
which are as nauseating as they sound.

This isn’t a problem at traditional farms. "Before the 1970s,
methane emissions from manure were minimal because the majority of
livestock farms in the U.S. were small operations where animals
deposited manure in pastures and corrals," the Environmental
Protection Agency says. The E.P.A. found that with the rapid rise
of factory farms, liquefied manure systems became the norm and
methane emissions skyrocketed. You can reduce your methane
emissions by seeking out meat from animals raised outdoors on
traditional farms.

CRITICS of meat-eating often point out that cattle are prime
culprits in methane production. Fortunately, the cause of these
methane emissions is understood, and their production can be
reduced.

Much of the problem arises when livestock eat poor quality
forages, throwing their digestive systems out of
balance. Livestock nutrition experts have demonstrated that by
making minor improvements in animal diets (like providing
nutrient-laden salt licks) they can cut enteric methane by
half. Other practices, like adding certain proteins to ruminant
diets, can reduce methane production per unit of milk or meat by a
factor of six, according to research at Australia’s University of
New England. Enteric methane emissions can also be substantially
reduced when cattle are regularly rotated onto fresh pastures,
researchers at University of Louisiana have confirmed.

Finally, livestock farming plays a role in nitrous oxide
emissions, which make up around 5 percent of this country’s total
greenhouse gases. More than three-quarters of farming’s nitrous
oxide emissions result from manmade fertilizers. Thus, you can
reduce nitrous oxide emissions by buying meat and dairy products
from animals that were not fed fertilized crops -- in other words,
from animals raised on grass or raised organically.

In contrast to factory farming, well-managed, non-industrialized
animal farming minimizes greenhouse gases and can even benefit the
environment. For example, properly timed cattle grazing can
increase vegetation by as much as 45 percent, North Dakota State
University researchers have found. And grazing by large herbivores
(including cattle) is essential for well-functioning prairie
ecosystems, research at Kansas State University has determined.

Additionally, several recent studies show that pasture and
grassland areas used for livestock reduce global warming by acting
as carbon sinks. Converting croplands to pasture, which reduces
erosion, effectively sequesters significant amounts of carbon. One
analysis published in the journal Global Change Biology showed a
19 percent increase in soil carbon after land changed from
cropland to pasture. What’s more, animal grazing reduces the need
for the fertilizers and fuel used by farm machinery in crop
cultivation, things that aggravate climate change.

Livestock grazing has other noteworthy environmental benefits as
well. Compared to cropland, perennial pastures used for grazing
can decrease soil erosion by 80 percent and markedly improve water
quality, Minnesota’s Land Stewardship Project research has
found. Even the United Nations report acknowledges, "There is
growing evidence that both cattle ranching and pastoralism can
have positive impacts on biodiversity."

As the contrast between the environmental impact of traditional
farming and industrial farming shows, efforts to minimize
greenhouse gases need to be much more sophisticated than just
making blanket condemnations of certain foods. Farming methods
vary tremendously, leading to widely variable global warming
contributions for every food we eat. Recent research in Sweden
shows that, depending on how and where a food is produced, its
carbon dioxide emissions vary by a factor of 10.

And it should also be noted that farmers bear only a portion of
the blame for greenhouse gas emissions in the food system. Only
about one-fifth of the food system’s energy use is farm-related,
according to University of Wisconsin research. And the Soil
Association in Britain estimates that only half of food’s total
greenhouse impact has any connection to farms. The rest comes from
processing, transportation, storage, retailing and food
preparation. The seemingly innocent potato chip, for instance,
turns out to be a dreadfully climate-hostile food. Foods that are
minimally processed, in season and locally grown, like those
available at farmers’ markets and backyard gardens, are generally
the most climate-friendly.

Rampant waste at the processing, retail and household stages
compounds the problem. About half of the food produced in the
United States is thrown away, according to University of Arizona
research. Thus, a consumer could measurably reduce personal global
warming impact simply by more judicious grocery purchasing and
use.

None of us, whether we are vegan or omnivore, can entirely avoid
foods that play a role in global warming. Singling out meat is
misleading and unhelpful, especially since few people are likely
to entirely abandon animal-based foods. Mr. Gore, for one,
apparently has no intention of going vegan. The 90 percent of
Americans who eat meat and dairy are likely to respond the same
way.

Still, there are numerous reasonable ways to reduce our individual
contributions to climate change through our food choices. Because
it takes more resources to produce meat and dairy than, say, fresh
locally grown carrots, it’s sensible to cut back on consumption of
animal-based foods. More important, all eaters can lower their
global warming contribution by following these simple rules: avoid
processed foods and those from industrialized farms; reduce food
waste; and buy local and in season.

==

Nicolette Hahn Niman, a lawyer and livestock rancher, is the
author of "Righteous Porkchop: Finding a Life and Good Food Beyond
Factory Farms."

_______________________________________________
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visit:  http://www.sustainabletompkins.org/

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