Tumgik
#New crop of corn for animal feed
alexanderwales · 2 months
Text
Alright, here's my dream Stardew Valley style game, designed for my own tastes.
You come to a small town with the usual twenty to thirty people. It's in the middle of nowhere. It's a fantasy town, and no one actually farms anymore, partly because it's only questionably profitable, partly because a lot of the knowledge has been lost. Instead, everyone uses these magic doodads which are very powerful but also very limited. The tavernkeeper has a doodad that makes him a single kind of weak ale and a single variety of off-tasting wine. The clothier has basically a square mile of linen to work with, and everyone wears her drab clothes. Tools are made from a doodad that the blacksmith owns, not even made of any actual metal, just a material that wears away after a month and needs to be replaced by a new copy from the blacksmith's doodad. People get their meals from the doodads. They get their medical checkups. It's all a bit shit.
Because I'm a worldbuilder at heart, I would have this all exist in the wake of a large-scale war that depleted the town of its fighting-age population, with the doodads being a sort of government program to ensure that more of the lifeblood of the town could be drained away. And for there to be some reason for the town to continue existing, perhaps the government is harvesting some resources necessary in the creation of doodads. That's enough for a pro-doodad faction and maybe some minor drama with them, though I do like the idea that the only reason things are Like This is because there was a war and things got bad. It's not necessarily a bleak town, but there's definitely a listlessness to it, a "what's the point".
So you're a farmer, but no one is really a farmer anymore. Maybe there are a few books, but you don't learn farming from books, you learn it from practical experience; that's a lot of what this game is about. When you start, there's no one to buy seeds from, there's just a bunch of wilderness where farms once stood, now all long overgrown.
So you go out and forage, for a start, and you clear the land, and you pay attention to the plants and how they can be used, and you start in on making recipes with them, maybe with the help of your grandfather's old, partially incomplete books. You find some wild corn that's a descendant of the old times. You find some tomato seeds in an urn. You discover potatoes because you see them dug up by a wild boar, which itself was once a domesticated animal.
In my ideal game, you need to pay attention to the soil quality, to how far apart things are planted, to what crops work well together. Farming is a matter of companion planting and polycultures. You get some chickens by giving them consistent feed, and you keep them around because they're natural pest control. Your climbing beans climb the stalks of your maize. You're attracting pollinators. (From a gameplay perspective, yeah, we probably put this all into a grid, and you have crop bonuses from adjacencies, and emergent gameplay that comes from all that, some plants providing shade, others providing nitrogen fixing.) You're a scientist making observations about the plants, maybe with your incomplete book giving you confirmation on the nature of all your crops once you hit certain production goals or a perfect specimen or whatever.
Cooking is the same. There has got to be a system that I like better than just "combine tomato with bread to get tomato bread". I'm pretty sure that it's some variant of the actual process I use when cooking, which is making sure that things are properly cooked, balancing flavors against each other, adding in a little salt or acidity or umami or whatever. Time in the kitchen, in this game, is often about making meals, ensuring that if you have a fatty piece of meat you have some asparagus that's coated with lemon to go with it. (From a gameplay perspective, I think building the dish once is probably sufficient and it can be automated after that, and building the meal is the same. I don't want to play this minigame every time I'm cooking a dish, I just want to play it a single time until I have good knowledge of the best way to grill a BBQ chicken breast with a homemade sauce.)
But if we're having a little minigame here where we pay attention to how long we're cooking the kale to make sure that it's the right texture, and we're paying attention to abstractified mouthfeel and palette, then we can get something else for free: variation. See, you're not just cooking to get an S grade, you're cooking for people with different tastes. The cobbler has a sweet tooth, the librarian loves fruity things, the mayor cannot stand fish, that sort of thing. From a gameplay perspective, maybe we represent this with a radar graph with some specific favorite and least favorite individual flavors, and maybe it's visible to the player, but the important thing is that player gets feedback and have a reason to strive for both "good" and "perfection" and some of this is going to depend on the quality of the ingredients.
And this is, gradually, how the town is brought back into the fullness of life. You're not just cooking for these people, you're also selling them food, and they're making their own recipes, and all the stuff that's not food is making their businesses not suck anymore. After the first test keg of ale goes swimmingly, the tavernkeeper wants more, a lot more, and puts in an order for hops, wheat, grapes, anything he can use to make things that will improve nights at the tavern. The clothier will skeptically take in wool and spin her own yarn, and then eagerly want more, because how awesome is it to have a new textile? There's a chemist who is extremely interested in dyes and paints, and wants you to bring him all kinds of things to see what might be viable for going beyond the ~3 colors that the doodads can provide.
So by year two, if you're doing things right, you're the lynchpin of the revivalist movement. People are now moving to the town, for the first time in decades, because they hear that you're there and doing interesting things with the wilderness. Maybe there are other farmers following in your wake, but maybe it's just new characters who are specifically coming because a crate of wine was shipped to the capital city. Maybe some of them bring new techniques for you, or a handful of plants from a botanical garden, and there are new elements for the minigames, or maybe some automation for the stuff that's old hat.
I think something that's important to me is that there's a reason for the crops you plant and the things you do. I always like these games best when it feels like I'm doing something for someone, when I can look at a plot of cabbages and think "ah, those are the cabbages I owe to Leon". Where these games are at their worst, everything is entirely fungible and I've planted eight million blueberries because they have the highest ROI.
And yeah, in most of these games, there are other minigames like fishing and mining and logging and crafting, and since this is just a blog post and not a game, I definitely could massively expand an already sizeable scope.
I think for mining the player would use doodads of their own, and maybe you could make a mining minigame out of that, using the same planting tile system to instead create an automated ore harvesting machine that plumbs the depths of the earth (possibly dealing with rocks of different hardness, the water table, and other challenges along the way).
Fishing is a question of understanding the different fish species, what they eat, where they congregate, and then setting nets or lines, since I have never met a fishing minigame I really enjoyed. Again, there's some idea that the player is gaining information over time, building up a profile of these fish, noticing that some of them go nuts when it rains, understanding the spawning season, that they go to deeper water when it's cold, etc.
Crafting really depends on what you're crafting, but if you're reintroducing traditional artisan processes to this town, then people are going to need tools and machines and things. I'm not sure I know what a proper crafting game looks like. The only experience I have to draw on is wood shop, where I made wooden boxes, cutting boards, and picture frames. Since this is an engineering-lite puzzle-lite game, you could maybe do something in that vein, e.g. defining a number of steps that get you the correct thing you're trying to make, but ... eh. I love the idea of designing a chicken coop, for example, or building a trellis if I want my climbing beans to not need maize, or whatever, but I don't know how you actually implement that. There are definitely voxel-based and snap-to-grid games where you build bases, and I tend to find that fun ... but it's mostly cosmetic, for the obvious reason that doing it any other way than cosmetic requires programmatic evaluation, which is difficult and maybe unintuitive. The closest I think I've seen is ... maybe Tears of the Kingdom? Contraption building? But I don't know how you translate that to a farming game. Maybe I should ask my wife about this, because she's always doing little projects around the house (an outdoor enclosure for our cats, a 3D-printed holder for our living room keyboard, a mounting for our TV).
Making an interesting crafting system is difficult, which is why pretty much no one has done it.
And if I'm talking pie in the sky, without concern for budget or scope, I want the villagers to all have a mammoth amount of writing for them. I want petty little dramas and weird obsessions, lives that evolve with or without my input, rudimentary dialog trees that let me nudge things in different directions. This is just an unbelievable amount of work on its own, it would be crazy, but I would love having a tiny little town game where sometimes other people would fall in love. I would like to be invited to a wedding, maybe one that happened because I encouraged the chemist to hang out with the clothier, and in the course of working together on dyes, they fell in love. With twenty people in town and another ten that come in over the course of the game if you hit the right triggers, I do think this is just a matter of having a ton of time/budget. You write tons and tons of dialogue so there's not much that's repeated, you have some lines of conversation between characters that are progressed through, you have others that trigger off of events, and then you have personal relationships between NPCs that can be progressed through time or with player intervention. Give single characters a pool of love interests, have their affections depend on their routine which depends on what's changed in town ... very difficult to do without spending loads and loads of time on it though.
Anyway, that's one of my dream games. No one is ever going to make it, it would be a niche of a niche, and as scoped here, is too much for a small team to ever actually finish, let alone polish. But it's the sort of thing I'm imagining in my head when I think about playing Stardew Valley and its successors.
189 notes · View notes
turtlesandfrogs · 2 years
Text
One of the things I think about a lot is productivity comparisons between conventional and unconventional agriculture. Mostly because that's the first question you get asked when you talk about anything that's outside the norm*, but, on what metric are we measuring? Per acre? Per hour worked? Per cost of input? Are we measuring yields of product or dollars earned?
This question also, to me, rings of fear. Fear of food shortages, which are really a problem of greed & distribution, not the world's capacity to grow food. If we were really worried about calories though, I think we'd at least switch to pastured animals instead of sending so much corn and soy to livestock (for any non-farmers out there, you do not get nearly the calories out of a chicken or pig that you put in- you get much less**). Or we would put more effort into making cities great places to live so we stopped turning farmland into suburbia. Or we would be much more concerned with how to prevent erosion & loss of arable land. But we don't, and we're not.
I also think of the complexity of non- conventional farming, and how instead of it being a return to the past, it actually relies on new information and methods***.
Take the plot of land that I'm working to make into a market garden. It's soil is, from a farmer's perspective, crap. It's gravely, sandy, very little organic matter. If I were to farm it conventionally, I'd basically have till to open the soil and kill weeds, and then provide all of the plant nutrients through fertilizers, which would cause the plants to kick out their symbiotic fungi, leaving them vulnerable to pathogenic fungi, and more dependant on me for water. There would also be bare soil everywhere, increasing evaporation & providing plenty of opportunities for new weeds. My costs would be very high, paying for fertilizers, pesticides, & herbicides, and I would have to water, a lot. It probably wouldn't be at all economically feasible to grow food on this plot using conventional methods.
Now, I look at it and say, I'm going to do no-till. I look at the hard, weedy, depleted soil and there's no way a seed is going to be able to come up through that. But, I'm not just doing no-till, because I'm not looking at it from a conventional mindset and just trading out one practice. I'm doing basically everything different from above.
Instead of tilling, I'm laying down a thick layer of mulch, to shade out the weeds, increase soil organic matter (increasing the amount of water and nutrients the soil can absorb & good on to), and feed the soil ecosystem. By the time spring rolls around, the soil underneath will be much better, but I'll still add more compost in most cases.
Instead of fertilizers I've had to pay for, I'm using mulches that I got for free from my gardening work & composts made for free from restaurant kitchen wastes****. I'm going to use over crops, plants that fix nitrogen and also serve as perennial hosts to beneficial soil fungi, which will also form symbiosis with most of my crops, increasing their resistance to pathogenic fungi while also providing them with increased access to water and soil minerals.
Instead of bare soil, there will be mulches and cover crops every where. Instead of monocrops & pesticides, I'll be intercropping which will help by hosting beneficial native insects that will chow down on aphids and other crop pests.
From this framework, there's an upfront investment of effort and planning, but farming this land now seems feasible.
And the thing is, each of those choices is backed up by research. We know so much more now about soil and nutrient cycling and how it actually works than when conventional ag really got started. We know so much more, and so many practices are new, so growing non-conventionally isn't a step back into the past of how things were grown.
But at the same time, it's not exactly completely information either- other cultures have different ways of growing food crops, and if you broaden your concept of what cultivating plants looks like, there's examples everywhere. We're just studying it now and providing it scientifically.
*and I honestly think that it's a result of the extractive mindframe that comes from being the decendants of colonizers. Just look at the different perspectives between many western foragers ideas and Indigenous peoples' relationship with the land.
** chickens are one of the most efficient, with a feed conversion ratio of 1.6, which means for every 1.6 pounds of food you give them, you can expect the chicken to gain 1 pound (cows are over 4 pounds of feed to pound of live weight, and pigs are 3 to 4ish). That's the whole bird though, counting all the parts we don't eat- guts, feathers, bones, etc. Even so, a pound of chicken food has over 1300 calories, and is about 20% protein for starter/grower, where as a pound of chicken has about 500 calories and about 30% protein (for dark meat, you get fewer calories from white meat). I'm not saying everyone should give up meat, but I am saying that the amount of meat in mainstream diets has increased dramatically, much of it comes from cafos where animals are fed on grains & legumes, and if we're measuring productivity and yield per acre because we're worried about feeding the world, this is a huge factor. Look up how much of the corn & soy crop goes to actually directly feeding people.
*** from a western, colonizing prospective
**** is this a particular boon from my particular circumstances? Yes. But everyone has their own challenges and resources, there is no cookie-cutter solution to all agriculture, everywhere. You have to find the solutions that work for you.
809 notes · View notes
butcherlarry · 1 year
Text
Kent farm and country Clark Headcanons
Some headcanons about the Kent family farm that @januariat requested I post about :) 
I grew up on a farm and at our peak we had a couple hundred head of beef cattle (we’ve had registered angus cattle for about 100 years, and have been farming since the family settled in that area in the mid 1800s I think?  We’re no longer at that farm, the parents moved themselves and the cattle to another one in the state, so they’re still farming).  We also did a lot of crop farming, mostly corn, wheat, and soybeans.  Dad had some hay fields that he would mow and bale multiple times throughout throughout the summer/fall to make bales as some of the food to feed our cattle throughout the year.  My siblings and I were involved in 4H/FFA growing up (my sister and I were in 4H, my brother did 4H and then FFA when he got to high school).  We always raised two steers to take to our county fair as projects (and maybe some breeding and open class projects on the side), and my brother did shop/metal working projects as well.  Needless to say, I have a lot of THOUGHTS and FEELINGS about Clark growing up on a farm in a small rural community.
I don’t read the comics (except WFA), and most of my interaction with the Superman/Clark Kent fandom has been through watching the newer movies, being in fandom discords, reading Tumblr posts, and fanfic that I’ve read.  This was just something fun for me to ponder about based on my life experiences (I also work in the ag industry, specifically the meats industry if you couldn’t tell from my username, lol)
For the type of farm, I think the Kents would have a lot of acreage do crop farming. I'm not as familiar with any specialty crops grown in Kansas, but as I stated before, the big three that were grown on my farm growing up were corn, wheat, and soybeans.  Those are pretty popular crops to grow in the midwest, so I could see the Kents growing those too. Not sure how viable it would be, but sunflowers can also grown as a crop.  I like the thought of the Kents maybe growing that because, you know, Kansas. 
If they had any livestock, it would be a small amount.  I’m not 100% sure on Clark’s current age in the comics, but if he was around before the 1980s, he might remember his parents raising some cattle or hogs as an extra way to get cash.  Unfortunately, there was a farm crisis that hit the Midwest in the 80s, and it hurt a lot of small farms.  Now a days, you have to to be raising a lot of one animal to make any kind of profit (if any).  If you’re raising hogs, you need a barn that holds 2000+ head finishing hogs to make money (I worked in one of these barns and a hog nursey that held 5000+ during covid when I got laid off from my job.  It SUCKS.  I developed a new fear in life of being eaten alive by 300+ lb pigs, but that’s a story for another day).  It’s the same with chicken and turkey as well, but I’m not as sure on the barn size.  If the Kents do have any livestock, it would be animals that would be used to supplement their diet, like a small flock of chickens for eggs, and a dairy animal (goat or cow?  Maybe goat since they’re smaller and don’t take up as much space as a cow.  Might also be easier to handle for the Kent parents as they get older, but I’ve never owned a goat before, so don’t quote me on that.  Goats are smart and are pretty good at getting in trouble, lol).  
If the Kents have any large meat livestock, like cattle, it would only be one or two, which leads me to my next headcanon, that Clark was in 4H/FFA growing up!  I love, love, LOVE the idea of Clark being in 4H or FFA while in school at Smallville, and having a beef or dairy beef steer(s) as a livestock project.  Also, Clark would show his project animals at his county fair!  I don't think he would win or do well in the main classes.  From my experience, usually it's families that are big into showing cattle, and you need a lot of money for that for all the equipment and supplies that goes with it. They also tend to travel a lot with those animals, and show them in other contests as well (maybe state fair.  If you want to hear a rant about how much I don’t like show cattle and the show cattle industry, hmu). If anything, Clark would probably do well in the showmanship shows. That's more dependent on the trust between you and your animal, and how much you've worked with them.  I can definitely see Clark working with his animals everyday, cleaning, feeding, and leading them.  You know someone has really worked with there animal if they can lead and stop them so the animal’s feet are positioned correctly without having to use a show stick to move the feet (yes, there is a correct way cattle need to stand when showing.  A lot of terminology describing the feet positions too.  Again, if you want more details, hmu).
On top of showing cattle, I also love the thought of Clark taking a shop project through FFA/4H, especially if it's welding. He could use it as a way to practice with his laser vision!  You can definitely tell a good weld from a bad weld, and I can see Clark working on his laser vision skills to improve.  My brother and Dad would work on, fix and build equipment and fences with welding, so I can also see Clark learning how to do that to help out on the farm!  And I'm sure Jonathan Kent would appreciate it since he wouldn't have to spend as much money on the welding and torch gasses and the equipment that goes with it.
Welp, those are my headcanons for Clark, the Kents, and farming.  I’m sure if you poke me, I could go into more detail on somethings, or think of more headcanons about those topics.  Most of my ag experience has been in raising beef cattle, so that shaped most of these headcanons that I have.   If you or someone else in the Superman fandom have a farming background, please tell me what your headcanons are!!  I would love to hear them!  Growing up on a farm was a big part of Clark’s life, so we need more country Clark stories!
88 notes · View notes
balkanradfem · 2 years
Text
On agriculture, sustainability of cities, and monocrops.
So if you've lived in the countryside, or even seen a rural village on a map, you know how it's set up. There's a road, the area around the road is peppered with houses, and then behind every house, there's several fields growing grains, beans and potatoes. Most often, there's also a little vegetable garden in the back yard, and sometimes a few chickens, goats, or a sheep. Around the fields, there are forests, and every clearing in the forest is growing something, even if it's just grass that is set to be cut into hay.
It's clear where these people's food comes from, and how big of an area it takes to grow it. It's visible just by monitoring, that for one family it takes a field of wheat, potatoes, smaller area for beans, a vegetable garden, and corn or a similar grain for their animals. It makes sense, these people have inherited the land that can feed them, and they do it. The forests are used for firewood, but also replanted, there are new trees constantly planted, and only old, dangerous and rotten trees are felled.
And then you look at a city, and it doesn't make sense. The area is more densely populated, but there are no fields, no grains, no vegetable gardens, no chickens. So how do they eat?
The answer is – the fields are elsewhere. They're planted far from view. And the food is brought to the people, instead of grown where they live. Isn't that a bit inconvenient? The people in the city don't think so. They make a lot of money, and they can have food delivered to them. But what does it take to produce the food for a densely populated city? That's where we meet agriculture.
In order to produce massive amounts of food, enough to feed an entire city, you'll need a big amount of agricultural land. And, you'll need that food produced cheaply enough, so that when people buy it, there is some profit for you as well. So, you'll want to own a big area of land that is yours to do with as you please, and you'll need big machines, so you don't have to pay for human labour, and all of the profits go to you.
Now, the big machines that harvest food do not work like human hands do – they do not differentiate one plant from another. If you want a machine to harvest your field, your field has to grow 1 single type of crop. Otherwise, your harvest will be a mess, and it will take additional, expensive work to separate usable crops from waste. So, you create massive fields with only one type of plant growing on them.
I remember looking at big fields of wheat or corn, and thinking, neat! That's so much food growing! And it looks so clean and well grown! I don't have those thoughts anymore, sadly. The reality of a whole field growing only one type of plant, is now upsetting to me.
The thing with natural, wild fields is, they feed the wildlife. They have flowers that open even in the winter and early spring, and then continue to produce different types of flowers throughout the entire season, making sure bees have food all year long. They house different insects and good bacteria, they lure in birds, worms, ants, ladybugs, grasshoppers, butterflies, bumblebees, and all kinds of beneficial, lovely bugs. If there's a presence of water, you'll find frogs, dragonflies, and much more birds, who are there to feed on the insects and pick off the caterpillars. You might find a hedgehog, a snake, a turtle in there. All are coming because there are sources of life for them in that field, plants they can eat, or plants that bugs can eat, and bugs are then delicious resource to the animals. Bugs we consider pests, are also a great food resource for the birds and the animals, and their population is monitored and controlled by all of the other animals. Plants rarely get destroyed by pests, or they evolve to defend themselves, or to attract a predator who fends off of the pests.
Now, a field of let's say, only corn, doesn't do that. The corn is pollinated by wind, and the flowers of corn do not attract the bees. They do not serve as a home to many insects, and they do not make a good resource for the wildlife – until of course, they make the corn itself, which is then attractive to the birds. But they cannot sustain life for the entire year. There's only a short window when these crops can serve as source of food.
The area where corn will be planted, has to be tilled early in the winter or spring, making sure every life-giving plant in that area, is dead. Then, corn is planted, and then often weeded or sprayed with herbicide, if any other plant manages to grow inbetween. And they will grow, because no matter how hard you try to kill every weed, seeds are carried by the wind, by the birds, buried deep into the ground, some are capable of growing back from just one single piece of root. You cannot exterminate them, except, by herbicide. And that is what happens in monocultures – in order to fight nature to the point where you establish a monoculture, you have to distribute poison for plants.
After the monocrop is harvested, the field is left barren and void of life. There are no flowers, no food for bees, no hiding places for the insects to hibernate in. Some may hibernate deep in the soil, if they have not yet gotten poisoned, but most will not even bother, as there are no food sources in the area.
Have you noticed how wild fields do not get their soil depleted and  poor at any time? Year after year, the wild plants are growing anew, never losing nutrients, never lacking food. And there's a reason for this – the wild plants are left to wither, dry, lay flat on the ground, and then decompose. The bugs, worms, bacteria and insects in the ground use them as a food source, and after going thru their digestive systems, it decomposes and becomes soil again. This way, all of the nutrients, minerals and food they took from the soil while growing, comes back around, creating fertile ground for a new season.
But monocrops do not do that. Once harvested, the soil remains depleted, the waste products of grains are usually extremely low in nutrients, there are no bugs to aid composting, the space remains empty of minerals and nutrition the plants have absorbed. So what do you do to keep growing? You have to buy the nutrients and physically distribute them all over the field, in order for the next year's crop to grow again. This almost ensures that you will have to do this again and again, and that your crops will only be able to feed on whatever you put there, and will only have the minerals you yourself have put in the soil. The soil itself becomes void of life, because it's those worms and insects and bacteria that are keeping the soil alive and healthy, they're creating an ecosystem where plants love to grow, where a healthy balance of nutrients and air and water and compost and roots is kept. Your field cannot do it. You have given the soil nothing to live off of. There is only a single crop, and it doesn't support any life in the soil. It doesn't feed the beneficial bacteria, bugs, or animals.
But you know what it does feed? The pests. There will always be some types of bugs evolved specifically to feed on your crop, and once you plant your crop over several kilometers, you have given them a perfect food source, and they will not restrain from multiplying rapidly, enjoying what you provided. Your monocrop will start getting eaten at a rapid rate, unless, you spray it with pesticide. So you do, you have to, there are no birds, predatory bugs, animals, or any other kind of natural pest control that would do the work for you or stop the pests from multiplying uncontrollably. You have to poison your monocrop in order to protect it from getting eaten away.
Wild plants are usually good at fending off diseases, because they will cross-pollinate, and some will contain disease-resistant genes that ensure that the next generation of plants will grow stronger. Your monocrop, is carefully planted so only ever one type of plant is growing, same type of seed, protected from cross-pollination, same dna. So when a disease hits, there will be no resistance. Your plants will all get infected. If it's a bit too hot, or too cold, or a disaster hits, or a new type of bacteria attacks, your plants have no way of defending themselves, or evolving into a stronger, more disease-resistant versions of themselves. You'll have to develop a different type of plant on your own, and rely on chemicals again, to stop the disease, to save your plants. This is actually the reason why bananas as we know them, are soon to be extinct, and a new variety is being developed to replace them – they've all grown sick, and there's nothing that can be done to save them, except developing a different variety that will hopefully, be resistant to that disease (but not to a new one, repeating the cycle again and again.)
So, once you've secured your giant fields of monocrops, convenient for your big machines to work and harvest, you've started to notice that you have to spray the chemicals on your fields to fertilize the soil, then to kill of weeds, then to kill off pests, then to fend off disease, and you're in fact, spending a lot of money on all these chemicals that you are now completely dependent upon. And what happens next is, these chemicals start getting more and more expensive. Maybe the seeds prices are getting higher too. And now, you're in a situation where you don't have many options. You cannot grow the same volume of food without monocrops, and you can't sustain your practice with ever-higher prices it takes to grow in this unnatural, diversity-eliminating way. In the older times, people learned to rotate their crops, allowing the land to grow some wild plants and recover from the intense use of agriculture, but now you can't afford to own land that you are not actively using for profit.
This is why agriculture is getting less and less productive, and why we keep needing new agricultural land to grow on, the soil is getting depleted, and land unusable. This also caused by the wind erosion and sun erosion. While the crops are not growing, the land is barren, tilled, and left exposed to the sun, which dries the top layer, since there are no plants covering it, and then the wind dries it even more, dissipates it into tiny particles, and turns it into dust. Without constant and consistent rain – which is rarely available, the soil gets turned into dust. This is a hard lesson learned by the 'dust bowl' example, where the agriculture combined with drought created soil erosion so intense, the people couldn't see in the times of storms due to the dust, and would often get lost in their own fields.
Soil erosion and wind erosion can be mitigated by growing 'cover crops', meaning plants are allowed to grow, or are specifically sown in the times of year where the main crop isn't growing, so the sun and the wind could not deplete the top layer of soil. The plants also help keep the soil alive with insects, worms and bacteria, and keep moisture in, more effectively than the barren land could. Another solution for gardeners is mulching, covering the soil with a layer of organic matter, it can be leaves, hay, straw, pine needles, wood bark, wood chips, anything that will decompose and create food for insects, generate a protective layers from the sun and the wind, and keeps moisture inside. In combination with this, it's important to not till the soil. Tilling exposes several layers of soil to the elements and disrupts or completely destroys the established ecosystem inside. No-till and no-dig methods are protective of the health in soil, specifically for smaller areas.
For large areas, what helps the soil stay safe and properly structured is allowing wild plants to grow, which have deep, resilient roots. You know when you grow a plant in a pot, and you pull it out, it holds the entirety of the soil together, just with the roots? That is what the wild plants are doing as well. The deeper their roots, the better structure and stability of the soil will be. Deep roots can draw the water from deep inside of the soil and keep the moisture level even in a drought. Big trees are also a factor in keeping the soil structured and safe, for example, if you keep trees on the riverbank, their roots will protect the soil from being carried away and depleted by the water. If you were to remove the trees, the water would erode the soil of the riverbanks. They also protect the soil from getting blown away by the wind.
There is a problem of decreased availability of water. We have now extracted so much water from our planet, it's getting harder to find water sources for our crops. And there are thousands of kilometers of these monocrops, making sure that no wild life species can live in that huge area that was once wilderness. This resulted in many species being threatened into extinction, if not already extinct. Bees cannot live on agricultural land, because there is no food. And all of these areas are not being used to feed the people in the cities, no. The majority of agricultural land isn't even used to grow the crops for human consumption. The plant products that the people eat is about 20-30% of all of the crops we grow. The rest is growing crops that feed the animals meant for human consumption. And these fields need to grow crops sometimes for years, until the animal is heavy enough to be used as a source of food. Reducing animal products could easily reduce the amount of monocrops we need to sustain our food sources, by big percentages. But, we're not trying to do that. Instead, the demand is steadily rising up.
Thinking of this makes me wonder if big cities are ultimately, unsustainable. Growing food to be harvested by human hands enables incredible diversity, fertilizing with compost, manure, bone powder, fish meal, and rich organic fertilizers that can be distributed over smaller areas easily. No till gardens can preserve all of the healthy bacteria, insects, worms and ecosystems in the soil. Using mulch and cover crops to protect the land from sun and wind erosion, and to keep the moisture in, can stop soil depletion in those areas, and feed and protect the wildlife and life in the soil. Animals can be used as pest control and as a method of fertilizing – if you leave chickens, pigs, or cows to graze an area and leave manure behind, they will bring fertility to the land. But, you would not be able to grow the amount of food that would feed an entire city, not without it requiring a vast amount of human labour, which would make the food expensive, and unavailable to the poorest citizens.
But, we can't get rid of cities, so we have to keep developing healthier and more soil-protecting ways to grow big amounts of food, in order to create sustainable, resilient and secure sources of food for people living in all kinds of areas. Encouraging people to change their habits and eat less beef, lamb, poultry and animal products would help significantly, since the amount of food that needs to be grown would reduce by a lot. Encouraging people to grow their own food, in rich and diversity-preserving ways, also helps cut carbon emissions by a lot, since this food no longer needs to be shipped and transported. Having people understand how their food is grown, what it takes to produce, and what is lost in the process, might inspire them to change their habits, and put more effort into reducing waste. Because even after destroying all that wildlife and diverse ecosystems – 20 to 30% of that food is simply thrown away. Food that people grow themselves is most often, never thrown away, because then it is a prized produce, something they worked hard on, something they treasure. In case of a spoiled produce, it gets composted right back into the soil, making the waste non-existent.
Home grown food is often at least somewhat affected by bugs and pests, and that is normal. It's a sign of the food being healthy, unpoisoned, and obviously a great food source, since the bugs are all for it. I've noticed home-gardeners, who understand how pests work, feel skeptical about the store-bought food, just because it being so pest free is in fact, unnatural. 'What did you do to it, so the bugs didn't want it?' opens up the answers of how far one needs to go to make the produce undesirable and uninteresting to bugs. You need to go as far as convince them that this is not a good food source anymore. And the bugs acknowledge it, and go find food elsewhere. And we often have no choice, but to buy that exact same food.
Food grown for selling in stores has proved to be less nutritious, grown merely for the visual appeal, storage and transportation, rather than taste. This is why, after eating store-bought produce, homegrown will taste infinitely better, sweeter, with more intense flavour and noticeably better nutrition.
What we'll need to do is spread awareness, learn about the cost of our food, and change our habits to make it less damaging on the planet. We can also try growing food. Make barren areas into wildlife again. Build ponds to attract birds, animals and bugs. We can try making diverse no-till gardens where all of the different varieties grow on top of each other, together with flowers and weeds and mushrooms. Make it a place for birds, ladybugs and bees to gather. Make it friendly to little mice, frogs, lizards and butterflies. We might just help save some of the dying species on this planet.
178 notes · View notes
rjzimmerman · 17 days
Text
Excerpt from this story from Grist:
A new report finds that the United States could more efficiently produce food if half the country’s protein supply came from plant-based or alternative proteins rather than meat or dairy. 
The analysis demonstrates how a shift toward a plant-based diet provides ample benefits for the environment and the climate. In its latest report, the Good Food Institute, or GFI — a nonprofit think tank that supports the growth of alternative proteins — calculates that if Americans replaced 50 percent of their animal protein consumption with plant-based options, then 47.3 million fewer acres of cropland would be needed to grow the same amount of protein.
That land, which altogether makes up an area roughly the size of South Dakota, represents tremendous opportunities for carbon sequestration and biodiversity, according to GFI. The organization argues that if those acres weren’t used to grow crops, they could instead be transformed into carbon sinks or used to restore threatened ecosystems. That would deliver climate benefits on top of the reduction of animal agriculture’s more direct emissions sources: manure and cow burps.
The U.S. currently devotes a tremendous amount of land to agriculture: Over 60 percent of land in the contiguous U.S. is used for agriculture, and 21 percent of that is cropland. A majority of the nation’s cropland — 78 percent — is used to raise crops that are primarily used to feed animals. 
The shift toward increased alternative protein production detailed in the GFI report would not require growing more plants. Instead, the U.S. could meet its current protein demand by growing fewer crops overall, and ensuring that more of the commodity crops we already produce — such as soy, grain, corn, barley, oats, and sorghum — are grown for human consumption.
“I think a lot of people, when they hear about plant-based diets, they’re like, ‘That’s going to take so much soy,’” said Priera Panescu Scott, GFI’s lead plant-based scientist, whose background is in material and agricultural science. But Panescu Scott, who co-authored the report, points out that soy is mostly grown to feed livestock, not humans. Worldwide, a majority of soy is used for animal feed, while only 7 percent winds up becoming tofu, tempeh, soy milk, or other foods. 
7 notes · View notes
Text
Making a world (Part 4)
Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 3.5
It's culture time!
I should be writing my book (or practicing for my driving test -_-) but I'm doing this instead because the novelty is more appealing. I'm going to do each island individually, focusing on settlements but talking a bit about the native species of plants and animals, food sources and all that.
The Island of Alseid
Alseid is in encircles by a ring of other islands. No monsters comes from the mainland or from the sea as they are many more places that are more convenient.
This city of Alsea is considered a wonder of history, art and invention. The shining city on the hill has been an inspiration for many heroes, poets and legends of old (think Arthurian).
Being inland, and on a hill helps keep the city safe from attack from raiders, while the wide river Achelous allows decently sized ships to travel to the sea.
Other than the city, there are five large towns worth mentioning: Crocus, Nelumbo, Nucifera, Iris and Lycoctonum. Yes, these are all flower names. There are many, many farms and small villages and shires that follow the river in both directions to and from the city itself.
Alseid is a gentle island with rolling hills and many small woods and forests. It's beaches are rocky and its weather is gentle with most of the storms having blown themselves out over other islands before arriving from the sea.
The main crops grow like corn but the kernels need to ground up into a flour in order to be used. The roots of this plant are also edible when roasted, but considered to be a poor person's food and is often used instead to feed the short, wooly cows found here instead. These cows are sometimes eaten by eagles and the small number of wolves that still live on the island.
The children here are educated until they reach ten and any of those who have shown talent (or have connections) will be given a patron to pursue their talents.
All others are allowed two 'fallow' years where they are allowed to work or be with family before being conscripted (until they reach 16). Once again, those who have shown talent are encouraged to remain in the military and those who have not are released.
There are policies in place to try and find every boy a trade to study at this stage. For some, it is easy. For example, a carpenter's son will be placed with his father unless there is good reason not to.
The girls are brought to the temple to serve for another year, where they are awarded merits. These merits are used to increase their bride-price for their family. Girls without families are also awarded merits and their bride-price are given towards the temple unless they decide to become priestesses.
Women are considered to be the protectors of the Alsean culture because of an old myth and all women are taught to read and write and write poetry in other to safe-guard the Alsean way of life. Any Alsean woman who travel out into the world (with their husbands, for the temple or by themselves) are expected to bring their culture with them and establish their traditions in new settlements.
Children educated outside of the city have instructors, who are to report any 'auspicious' children. Each school is visited yearly by a examiner who interviews the children and looks at their work. Any children who show talent are brought to a school in the city.
All 12-year-olds have to report to the city for their military training. Celebrations and festivals in Alseid mostly feature its naval pride and discipline in some way. Either through parades, the cleansing festival (think of it like a country-wide spring clean), the celebration of the construction of a new ship or a new bath construction. There is a celebration for births, but they only happen a year after the child is born and focuses on the mother 'overcoming the battle of birth'.
Naming conventions in Alseid are quite simple. A person's has a family name, but outside of their hometown the will refer to themselves as having the name of that hometown as their last name.
For example: in Iris, Atticus will be referred as Atticus Hann. Anywhere else, he will be Atticus Of Iris. Unless he meets someone else from the town, in which case they may swap 'home names'. I have a bit more on each of the towns themselves, (such as Crocus being Alsea's shield and Lycoctonum being next a wild forest with various beasts inside used for the last round of training for recruits in a annual 'Hunt') but the post is long enough.
I also have an idea for a series of short stories about a kid growing up through the military training and experiencing the island's features and faults - but I have a book to write and I really should focus on that.
9 notes · View notes
cognitivejustice · 5 months
Text
From ancient fertilizer methods in Zimbabwe to new greenhouse technology in Somalia, farmers across the heavily agriculture-reliant African continent are looking to the past and future to respond to climate change.
Zimbabwe
A patch of green vegetables is thriving in a small garden the 65-year-old Tshuma is keeping alive with homemade organic manure and fertilizer. Previously discarded items have again become priceless.
“This is how our fathers and forefathers used to feed the earth and themselves before the introduction of chemicals and inorganic fertilizers,” Tshuma said.
He applies livestock droppings, grass, plant residue, remains of small animals, tree leaves and bark, food scraps and other biodegradable items like paper. Even the bones of animals that are dying in increasing numbers due to the drought are burned before being crushed into ash for their calcium.
Somalia
Greenhouses are changing the way some people live, with shoppers filling up carts with locally produced vegetables and traditionally nomadic pastoralists under pressure to settle down and grow crops.
“They are organic, fresh and healthy,” shopper Sucdi Hassan said in the capital, Mogadishu. “Knowing that they come from our local farms makes us feel secure.”
The greenhouses also create employment in a country where about 75% of the population is people under 30 years old, many of them jobless.
Kenya
In Kenya, a new climate-smart bean variety is bringing hope to farmers in a region that had recorded reduced rainfall in six consecutive rainy seasons.
The variety, called “Nyota” or “star” in Swahili, is the result of a collaboration between scientists from the Kenya Agricultural and Livestock Research Organization, the Alliance of Bioversity International and research organization International Center for Tropical Agriculture.
The new bean variety is tailored for Kenya’s diverse climatic conditions. One focus is to make sure drought doesn’t kill them off before they have time to flourish.
--------
Other moves to traditional practices are under way. Drought-resistant millets, sorghum and legumes, staples until the early 20th century when they were overtaken by exotic white corn, have been taking up more land space in recent years.
Leaves of drought-resistant plants that were once a regular dish before being cast off as weeds are returning to dinner tables. They even appear on elite supermarket shelves and are served at classy restaurants, as are millet and sorghum.
This could create markets for the crops even beyond drought years
6 notes · View notes
wildwildwasteland · 1 year
Note
what about the environmental impact of eating animal products? For example, the production of beef has 30x the ecological impact of the production of tofu per calorie. I understand the point about why we should prioritize minimizing animal suffering over animal death, but why is no one mentioning environmental impact? Eating local doesn't solve the problem, this is mainly a issue linked with trophic levels
"30x the ecological impact" is not a specific measurable value. Beef can use up to 9x the amount of water vs. tofu, for example. However, the typical per kg measurements also account for water used in growing their feed. Grass-fed beef is more sustainable than grain fed (particularly in the case of corn feed). I wouldn't so readily advocate for a soy monoculture as a replacement to everything, either.
Also, this example arbitrarily positions beef against soy since it's the most extreme example, as opposed to something less favourable for vegans like almonds vs. poultry.
Land use per calorie or per gram of protein is also another specific consideration. Beef rates poorly in this also, while poultry rates better than grains.
Basically I'm trying to say nicely that this is simply a garbage factoid and claiming that "nobody is mentioning the environmental impact" about a brief tumblr post doesn't make much sense. It's not as if nobody knows about this except for you? There is a huge ongoing effort by farmers and ecologists to mitigate the impacts of animal and crop agriculture and explore new avenues, it just wasn't the topic of that post lmao.
16 notes · View notes
Text
I watched Interstellar and 2001: A Space Odyssey
Interstellar: manifest destiny, exploration conquest, the white settler colonialism fantasy. something like 5% of oceans have been explored and you want to relocate planets smh. engineers and physicists are real scientists but the plant bio and ecology needed for successful agriculture is for the uneducated and stupid huh. "Blight" is wiping out all crop species. Either those crops got too specialized to survive without human care and herbicides, or like all angiosperms got wiped out in which case eat pine nuts or something. creative problem solving. Toxic masculinity? Why does only cooper have the redneck accent but none of his kids Good science tho like with the black hole or ammonia atmosphere. I do think sending your brightest minds into a death trap is a terrible idea like at that point you are breeding yourselves to be stupid. Most unrealistic part is that they don't have drones, they are sending inefficient humans to do things manually while amazon is over here navigating cities to deliver packages the same day No way they got video feed you know how much data that takes compared to audio or text Corn discourse. oh the corn discourse i could give here Grow some fucking algae. don't have bare soil. live underground with a hepa filter. i am going to scream. This film needs solar punk soooo badly. I am chewing on the screen for some sustainable farming. i going to beat the creators over the head with a textbook. A captain going down with the ship. Why save humanity if other species or the integrity of earth can not be saved. Why is humanity's survival a priority. If Dr. Mann ran out of supplies how is he going to support a colony, even with the new ship. Ah he lied. Newtons 3rd law only getting somewhere by leaving something behind. Plan B. Cooper. No way he's alive in a black hole Space oddessy 2001 moment Wait wait. What did that equation do again? That was for plan A right? mass migration of humanity off of earth. Why did they need that equation again? I forgot. And this leads to saturn space stations? Sound track is great I cried at the point of the death bed reveal that they cant go to earth but i did not cry for the astronauts (also side note the soviets won this round cosmonaut is a better name), i cried for the Earth that had been exploited to the point of collapse and then abandoned. i mentioned this in an earlier post on "who turns off the lights", if humans had removed their influence and left the planet in joy for it to continue its existence without humans that would be one thing, but to destroy it and refuse to take responsibility for that like in the movie angers me. The Dust Bowl was a man made disaster. the dust bowl happened because of unsustainable agriculture (like unless american farmers switch to soil retaining practices and sustainable agriculture the US is going to run out of topsoil in like 100 years). modern pandemics both agricultural and human are caused by humans, the increasingly global range of markets means there's far more transmission of possible pathogen agents than ever before and due to changes in land use and human encroachment on natural areas (as well as displacement of wildlife ex: slash and burn) there's increased contact between wild animals and humans so more chances for diseases to jump. I've got complicated feelings on interstellar. on one hand it's a well made movie and the science is surprisingly good, i can see why people like it. on the other hand i am opposed to some of the core ideas and fundamental concepts of the movie that i mostly feel disgust and despair towards it and humanity. All these planets and only 10 were worth investigating, 3 had promising data, and 1 was barely habitable and you're already giving up on earth which was doing far more than supporting 1 human. this reminds me of all those times "smart" people logic themselves to the wrong conclusion, like you can use logic and still miss the point.
Man and robot get lost together in a space time wormhole out by saturn guided by some mystery incomprehensibly advanced civilization? You know what 2001 space oddessy time. Never watched but ive read its tvtropes page and its ao3. 20min of a bunch of people jumping around in monkey suits Interstellar is paced like an action movie, a marvel movie, it ends up felling generic in a way? space odyessy is much slower paced and feels refreshing compared to modern high budget movies. Like the whole sequence with clavius I really liked. It was subtle information dense (even if the actors forgot they were suppose to be in 0 gravity sometimes). Like how the movie shows through character interactions that Dr. Heywood is a very important and influential man, how delicate soviet relations could be during the cold war, and that while loving Heywood isn't often home to spend time with his daughter. and then we just don't know what happens to them Hal introduces themself as foolproof, incapable of error, and unable to lie Is this why when hal did indeed make an error and a small one at that it got caught in a desperate control loop as thing spiraled further from what was suppose to happen hal took more extreme actions which made things worse. Did the robit develop a sense of identity, stake everything on that sense of identity and then have a crisis when the fundamental of that identity were challenged? A snowballing and compounding situation HAL purposefully brings up how suspicious the mission is to dave. Guilt? Confession? Trust with dave? And this of course is the moment hal makes a mistake while in the pits of guilt about deceiving dave and coming too close to spilling secrets, dave who seems to be forming a friendship with them. …and now im psychoanalyzing the robot. Steven universe style halman gem GASLIGHT Now is murder girlbossing or gatekeeping Why did hal respond to dave at all? Why not take control of davecs pod? Hmm probably a manual overrride for that Hiven the conversation hal innitiates earlier and how they had regressed to their first memory. I think hal played that recording for dave Much slower definitely weirder. Just had to add a giant fetus huh. i like this better than interstellar it is far more visionary. cornfield chase is still a banger.
3 notes · View notes
ajstein · 1 year
Text
Avoiding meat and dairy in one’s diet is indeed the biggest way to reduce one’s impact on the environment (continued)
[Posted on 26 Jun. 2023. Last updated on 19 Sep. 2024: sources added]
This post continues the list of articles discussing the greater sustainability of plant-based diets (i.e. of avoiding meat and dairy to reduce one’s impact on the environment), which are compiled here: https://ajstein.tumblr.com/post/174828704325/
New articles are added on top of the following list:
The Hidden Environmental Costs of Food https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2024/09/19/climate/food-costs-protein-environment.html
Damage to the natural world isn’t factored into the price of food… our grocery bills would be considerably more expensive if environmental costs were included… The loss of species as cropland takes over habitat. Groundwater depletion. Greenhouse gases from manure and farm equipment. For years, economists have been developing a system of “true cost accounting” based on a growing body of evidence about the environmental damage caused by different types of agriculture. Now, emerging research aims to translate this damage to the planet into dollar figures… Large disparities between the retail price of food and its environmental costs are found in the proteins many of us eat every day...      Beef has the highest environmental costs of the foods we examined, pound for pound, and it wasn’t close. Cattle are very inefficient at converting what they eat into body weight. For every 100 grams of protein a cow eats, less than 4 grams end up in the beef we eat. Cows are ruminants, and their burps send enormous amounts of planet-warming methane into the atmosphere… But most of the environmental cost of eating beef… comes from the amount of land that’s needed to grow cattle feed… Environmental costs can add up exponentially if cattle or their feed have displaced an ecosystem with high carbon-storage potential and rich biodiversity. Cheese has a higher environmental cost than chicken or pork on a pound-for-pound basis, which may seem surprising. Some of that comes from the methane emissions associated with cows (sheep and goats, too). But, although smaller than those of beef, the biggest effects from cheese stem from the cropland and pasture required to feed dairy cows. Cheese production is very water-intensive. Dairy cows require more water than their beef counterparts, often consuming 30 to 50 gallons of water per day…      Chicken is less environmentally harmful than beef and pork, in part because chickens are smaller and grow faster, so it takes less food to fatten them up. They also emit much less methane than other livestock because they don’t ruminate like cows and they produce proportionally less manure than most animals we eat. Chicken producers have grown more efficient and can now get roughly one pound of meat for every two pounds of feed… But that has a cost to the welfare of animals… which the analysis doesn’t account for. “For them to grow like that, you need to grow them mostly in industrial conditions”… [And t]he amount of chicken we eat adds up. In the aggregate, though chickens eat far less than cattle, they consume a little over a third of the animal feed produced in the world, in the form of corn and soybeans. A lot of the chicken we produce is turned into nuggets and other processed foods. The factories that make those products have their own environmental costs, such as water use, which the analysis also doesn’t take into account.      Soy is one of the fastest-growing crops in the world, but the vast majority of the world’s soy goes to animal feed. Eating soy directly would be a lot more efficient. Tofu, which is made of processed soy, is a way of doing that. It delivers about half as much protein as meat… and uses less water…  If you’re looking for a low-impact source of protein, meet the humble chickpea. It has deep roots and requires little water or fertilizer, and so can be grown without irrigation even in arid regions. Most of the global crop is both produced and consumed in India, but the U.S. Mountain West states have started growing more chickpeas, which enrich soil when rotated with other crops… One-quarter cup of cooked chickpeas has the protein equivalent of one ounce of cooked meat… Recommended portions of meat are typically three or four ounces… so about a cup of cooked chickpeas would offer up a similar amount of protein. (The same goes for lentils, another low-impact protein)…  
Creating a healthy and sustainable food environment https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-024-19121-5
A shift away from diets high in animal-based foods towards diets high in plant-based foods is desirable considering human health, environmental sustainability, and animal welfare... Western diets containing a relatively high amount of meat and other animal-based foods and a relatively low amount of plant-based foods are related to multiple urgent health and sustainability issues. First, diets high in animal-based foods, and especially red and processed meat, rich in saturated fatty aid, are related to obesity. Omnivore diets are related to increased mortality rates and non-communicable diseases such as hypertension compared to vegetarian, and especially vegan diets. Lower health risks (e.g., diabetes 2 and coronary heart disease) are associated with diets relatively high in plant-based foods, and in particular with diets high in healthy plant-based foods such as whole grains, fruits, vegetables, nuts and legumes. Such healthy plant-based diets offer a protective cardiometabolic advantage compared to omnivorous diets that are also considered healthy, i.e., containing the recommended amount of vegetables, fruits and grains. Second, compared to diets relatively high in plant-based foods, diets high in animal-based foods, specifically red meat and dairy, have a higher environmental impact, i.e. more greenhouse gas emissions, land use, energy use and acidification- and eutrophication potential. Third, intensive livestock farming, as is common in Western countries, results in poor animal welfare. Consequently, there is increasing attention to moving away from animal-based foods as the main source of foods in diets, towards more plant-based foods. This shift is commonly referred to as the “protein transition”. The protein transition is not only endorsed by science, but also increasingly translated to practice via, inter alia, dietary guidelines for the general public…
Can gene-editing accelerate the protein shift?  https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodpol.2024.102665
Reducing food waste and shifting consumption patterns towards more plant-based diets are important changes to ensure sustainable consumption and production patterns.... the transition towards more environmentally sustainable food systems entail increased consumption of plant-based proteins in favour of meat, since meat production causes higher levels of greenhouse gas emissions and requires larger land areas relative to other protein sources. Plant-based meat-analogue products provide a feasible transition towards increased plant-based diets and reduced meat consumption...
The environmental impact of mycoprotein-based meat alternatives https://doi.org/10.1016/j.fufo.2024.100410
Within the global food system, the production of meat and meat-based food products is the largest driver of adverse environmental effects, contributing significantly to greenhouse gas emissions (GHGe), land use, eutrophication, acidification, and scarcity-weighted water use... Due to increasing awareness of the adverse environmental impacts of meat production, as well as concerns around healthiness and animal welfare, the consumption of meat alternatives has risen… Several LCA studies have examined the environmental impact of meat alternative products and compared them to meat equivalents… This review, like its predecessors, concluded that plant-based meat alternatives have lower median emissions compared to animal-based protein sources such as cheese, eggs, chicken, fish, beef and pork... This systematic review identified production of mycoprotein base product as less GHGe [greenhouse gas emissions] intensive than production of either soy protein or pea protein. The overview also identified that mycoprotein-based mince, burger and sausage products had comparable GHGe to equivalent soy- and pea-based meat alternatives… Overall, mycoprotein- and plant-based meat alternative products were found to have broadly similar GHGe impacts, but all had GHGe much lower than for equivalent animal-based meats… 
Shift in Diet to Reduce Land Footprint for Estonia https://doi.org/10.1007/s10666-024-09996-4
We investigated how the land footprint of food consumption in Estonia could be decreased through socially acceptable moderate dietary changes while ensuring adequate nutrition… adopting an optimized diet resulted in a decrease in the consumption of milk and red meat, and an increase in the consumption of cereals, tubers, vegetable oils, and nuts, ultimately leading to an up to 56% reduction in the diet-related land footprint…      The availability of agricultural land worldwide is limited, and demand for it is expected to increase due to a rise in the global population and a shift in food consumption patterns towards environmentally intensive products like meat and dairy… approximately 40% of the ice-free land surface is used for food production. This extensive use of land not only compromises carbon sinks but also disrupts the natural habitats of species and threatens the integrity of ecosystems… However, there is a significant potential for dietary changes to mitigate these environmental impacts and improve human health. Studies have shown that shifting towards sustainable diets that are rich in plant-based foods and low in animal-based products can reduce the environmental footprint of food production and improve public health outcomes… The health benefits of dietary change may derive from a reduction in red and processed meat consumption and increases in fruit and vegetable consumption… dietary changes offer greater environmental benefits than what producers can achieve currently or in the future through intensification of production. Therefore, shifting to a sustainable diet has been proposed as a key strategy to… ensure the well-being of both people and the planet.
Food and sustainability: the water footprint assessment of menus https://doi.org/10.18472/SustDeb.v15n2.2024.53192
This… research… points out that animal-based foods, especially beef, present a high level of Water Footprint. In addition, the lack of vegetarian options on the menus was observed. These findings indicate the need to reformulate the menus under analysis so that they are more in line with the principles underlying sustainability… animal-based food comprises only 20.9% of the global weight of meal, nonetheless, on average, it counts 77.7% of global Water Footprint of the meal… those containing beef had the largest water footprints… Specialised studies show the positive environmental benefits of rising plant-based food consumption. Promoting the adoption of more balanced diets is crucial to mitigate environmental impacts due to the diets…
Consumer perceptions of healthy and sustainable eating https://doi.org/10.1017/S0029665124004853
The current food system is unsustainable. It encourages unhealthy food choices, increasing the risk of non-communicable diseases, and has a substantial environmental impact, responsible for around a third of all anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions. Improving both public and planetary health will require dietary change. To promote this transition, it is crucial to understand how consumers conceptualise healthy and sustainable eating… Most consumers have a reasonable understanding of what constitutes a healthy diet… However, consumers perceptions of healthy eating often extend beyond these health-centric recommendations, incorporating concepts such as the pleasure of eating and supporting mental well-being. Sustainable eating, on the other hand, is less well understood. Most consumers overemphasise the importance of eating local, organic food and reducing packaging and underestimate or are unaware of the environmental impact of red meat consumption...      Unhealthy diets are a major cause of death and disability... These poor-quality diets are typically characterised by the overconsumption of less healthful foods and nutrients (e.g. processed meats… Compounding this health burden, food systems exert a considerable strain on the environment… the global food system accounts for around a third of all greenhouse gas emissions (GHGe), approximately 70 % of all freshwater use, and is responsible for 78 % of fresh and oceanic eutrophication… even in a scenario where all fossil fuel emissions were immediately halted, the 1·5°C Paris Agreement target would remain elusive without substantial changes to the food system. There is now a broad consensus that improving both human and planetary health will require us to change the way we produce and consume food… The precise makeup of a sustainable diet depends on the country context… most organisations agree on some fundamental principles: only eat to meet ones’ energy needs, prioritise plant-based foods and moderate intakes of animal sourced foods, especially ruminant meat, limit the consumption of energy-dense and nutrient poor foods and minimise food waste…
Agriculture, forestry and food in a climate neutral EU https://www.agora-agriculture.org/publications/agriculture-forestry-and-food-in-a-climate-neutral-eu#downloads
The greenhouse gas intensity of food consumption is determined mainly by the proportion of plant-based products. Most greenhouse gas emissions occur in the production part of the value chain. Changes in transportation distance, in contrast, have a comparatively small impact on the greenhouse gas relevance of a diet… a decrease in livestock husbandry within the EU… results in a major contribution to lowering EU greenhouse gas emissions from agriculture… The shift in food consumption patterns and the resulting reduction in the demand for animal products leads to a strong reduction in animal feed demand… This alleviates pressure on land, creating opportunities for other uses, such as for biomass production for material use and for biodiversity conservation. The demand for imported feed also declines, resulting in a 60% reduction in the arable land needed in other parts of the world to produce that feed for the EU. This reduces pressure on global land resources and can indirectly contribute to global food security, biodiversity and climate change mitigation… 
Regenerative agriculture is sold as a climate solution. Can it do it? https://www.npr.org/2024/09/10/g-s1-17179/regenerative-agriculture-climate-change-soil-carbon
Cows are one of the biggest sources of climate pollution in food, largely because their burps and manure release the potent planet heating gas, methane. In the search for solutions for cows’ climate pollution, some companies and governments have embraced “regenerative grazing,” or “rotational grazing.” Instead of cows grazing in one place, with rotational grazing farmers deliberately move cows from one place to another. Some food companies claim that rotational grazing can make the soil store enough extra carbon that it can negate cows’ methane pollution and make beef “climate-smart” or “carbon neutral.” But... this is another example of the climate benefits of soil carbon being oversold. “Folks have claimed that [regenerative grazing] pulls so much carbon out of the atmosphere and into the soils through healthier soil that it completely offsets or negates cattle's methane emissions... That's not correct.” Also, research finds that cows doing regenerative grazing on grasslands can use up to 2.5 times more land, which could lead to the loss of ecosystems that store carbon...
One of the most potent greenhouse gases is rising faster than ever https://www.washingtonpost.com/climate-environment/2024/09/10/methane-emissions-increase-climate/
Emissions of methane — a powerful greenhouse gas — are rising at the fastest rate in recorded history… defying global pledges to limit the gas and putting the Earth on a path toward perilous temperature rise. New research… finds that methane levels in the atmosphere are tracking those projected by the worst-case climate scenarios. Because methane traps about 30 times more heat than carbon dioxide over a 100-year time frame, the accelerating emissions will make it nearly impossible for the world to meet its climate goals… These extra methane emissions bring the temperature thresholds ever closer… human-caused methane emissions grew as much as 20 percent between 2000 and 2020 and now account for at least a third of total annual releases. The largest growth came from expanding landfills, booming livestock production, increased coal mining and surging consumption of natural gas. The report also uncovered worrying evidence that human disruptions have boosted the amount of methane released by lakes, marshes and other ecosystems…      It’s the only greenhouse gas where we can reduce climate change in the next decade or two through emissions reductions… Yet the inverse is also true… As long as methane releases continue to grow, the world will feel dramatic and immediate temperature rise every year that methane releases continue to grow… In contrast with carbon dioxide emissions, which have plateaued over the last decade, the accelerating rate of methane production matches what would be expected in the “high emissions” scenario used by scientists to project what might happen if humanity takes no action to combat climate change… About a third of human-caused emissions comes from animal agriculture, particularly beef and dairy… Bacteria in the stomachs of Earth’s approximately 1.5 billion cows generate vast amounts of methane as they help the animals digest. More of the gas gets released by microbes as they break down the billions of tons of waste that livestock produce each year. Despite efforts to address these emissions by changing cows’ diets and capturing manure fumes for fuel… methane from livestock increased 16 percent from 2000 to 2020… For the first time, the scientists also analyzed how human activities have affected the methane that comes from ecosystems, revealing that roughly a third of emissions that were once considered natural can actually be traced back to people. Runoff from farms and communities provides more nutrients for microbes in lakes and wetlands, accelerating their metabolisms and allowing them to produce more methane…
Sustainability considerations are not influencing meat consumption https://doi.org/10.1016/j.appet.2024.107667
The consumption of animal-source foods, and particularly red meat from ruminants, is a major contributor to greenhouse gas emissions, freshwater use, and loss of biodiversity. Reducing red meat consumption has been identified as a key strategy to mitigate climate change... Food production is associated with approximately 30% of greenhouse gas emissions (GHGe), 70% of freshwater use, and is the largest contributor to biodiversity losses. Animal-source foods, particularly ruminants such as beef and lamb, have the largest impact on GHGe, as compared to plant-based food sources. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s Sixth Assessment Report identified reducing meat consumption, particularly meat derived from ruminants, as a key response option for climate change mitigation, given its high environmental footprint. In addition to growing environmental concerns related to meat production, there are public health concerns related to high levels of red and processed meat consumption. Excessive red meat consumption has been linked to an increased risk of diet-related diseases such as cardiovascular disease, stroke, and some cancers. Moreover, the added salt and preservatives often used in processed meat are associated with a higher risk of heart disease and cancer, especially colon cancer...
Latin America report of the Lancet Countdown on health and climate https://doi.org/10.1016/j.lana.2024.100746
… commodity-driven deforestation and expansion of agricultural land remain major contributors to tree cover loss in the region, accounting for around 80% of the total loss. Additionally, animal-based food production in Latin America contributes 85% to agricultural CO2 equivalent emissions... From a health perspective, in 2020, approximately 870,000 deaths were associated with imbalanced diets, of which 155,000 (18%) were linked to high intake of red and processed meat and dairy products...      The escalating tree cover loss in Latin America underscores the urgent need for comprehensive conservation strategies, sustainable agricultural practices, and robust urban planning. Agriculture practices have not only severe impacts on the planet due to significant GHG emissions (e.g., ruminants and manure) and loss of carbon sink (i.e., tree cover loss) but also on human health. The overconsumption of animal-derived products is a key driver of increased livestock rearing, and the associated tree cover loss, while also being responsible for a substantial burden of disease from unhealthy diets in Latin America. This underlines the potential for delivering synergistic health and climate interventions, which promote healthier diets, reduce the burden of non-communicable diseases, and reduce deforestation. As the planet grapples with climate change, preserving forests is not only essential for the environment but also pivotal for human health and survival...      Nutritious plant-based diets that are rich in whole grain cereals, legumes, vegetables, and fruits are associated with lower GHG emissions, less land use change due to livestock feeding, a reduced risk of non-communicable diseases, and an increase in life expectancy. On the other hand, excessive consumption of animal-based and processed meat and refined sugars is linked to higher GHG emissions and intensive agricultural practices, as well as higher rates of diseases and premature mortality in human populations. In this sense, a shift from diets intense in animal-based and processed foods to nutritious plant-based diets, would have a double impact: on the planet and human health...
Plant-based meat alternatives are eco-friendlier and mostly healthier https://www.theguardian.com/business/article/2024/aug/28/plant-based-meat-alternatives-environment-nutrition
Plant-based alternatives to meat are better for the planet and mostly healthier than products such as burgers and sausages made from animals… Environmentally the production of meat substitutes involves far fewer greenhouse gas emissions and much less water than that of meat dishes, according to the Food Foundation. Fake meat products also perform well nutritionally in comparison with the real thing. They contain fewer calories, less saturated fat and more fibre… Beans and grains emerged as the healthiest, most eco-friendly and also cheapest of the four types of products analysed. They are “a natural source of protein, deliver the best bang for buck on health and environment, with lower amounts of saturated fat, calories and salt and the highest amount of fibre of all products… They are also the most affordable category.” Underlying report: https://foodfoundation.org.uk/publication/rethinking-plant-based-meat-alternatives
Are Animals Needed for Food Supply, Efficient Resource Use, and Sustainable Cropping Systems? https://doi.org/10.1007/s41055-024-00147-9
It has been argued that livestock farming is necessary to feed a growing population, that it enables efficient use of land and biomass that would otherwise be lost from the food system, that it produces manure that is necessary for crop cultivation, and helps improve the sustainability of cropping systems by inclusion of perennial forage crops in otherwise low-diversity crop rotations. In this paper, we analyze these arguments… based on scientific data, we show that the arguments are either invalid or that their validity is limited to certain circumstances. Without taking into consideration any other potential arguments for livestock farming, or arguments against it, we conclude that the arguments analyzed here cannot in isolation provide justification for more than a small proportion of today’s livestock farming.      Livestock production is a major driver of environmental impacts and is also associated with a number of other sustainability challenges related to working conditions, animal welfare, development of antibiotic resistance, and emergence of zoonoses. Many researchers and influential organizations have called for reductions in livestock production as a crucial strategy to reach environmental targets. At the same time, there are many valuable services provided by livestock farming. For instance, livestock farming creates jobs and livelihoods, it provides financial security for some vulnerable populations, it offers farmers a meaningful life, it supports traditions and cultures, it enhances biodiversity in some places, and so on. Livestock systems however show a wide variety, and the services they bring are highly context specific. Livestock farming varies from intensive land-less poultry production in high-income settings in which the main service is the provisioning of cheap meat to affluent populations, to the keeping of one or a few goats per family in low-income settings providing crucial nutrition, income, financial security and manure for cropping…       In this paper, we have scrutinized three major arguments (with two sub-arguments each) in favor of livestock farming: (1) the nutrition argument; (2) the resource use argument; and (3) the crop production argument. Our analysis shows that all these arguments have limited acceptability and relevance for livestock farming in general, and that their respective scope of applicability is narrow... How much of today’s livestock farming that meets these criteria is unclear... between 9 and 23 g of animal protein per capita and day could be supplied from such resources, which is considerably less than current consumption levels in high-income settings. [Also see the recent study finding that only 800 g of meat per year could be produced sustainably.]      Our aim in this paper has been to identify and scrutinize the conditions under which the considered arguments can justify future livestock farming. There are certainly other (i.e., non-food related) arguments in favor of livestock farming, and other arguments against livestock farming, that should be taken into account. In this paper, we put these to one side for the sake of stringency, and simply note that they must be considered before drawing final conclusions regarding the overall justifiability of livestock farming, its scale and type. It is also worth repeating that we assumed that there are no ethically principled restrictions to the use of animals in food production. If such restrictions apply, they will further limit the moral justifiability of future livestock farming.
Pulse crops: nutrient density, affordability & environmental impact https://doi.org/10.3389/fnut.2024.1438369
Sustainable foods need to be nutrient-rich, affordable, environmentally friendly, and socially acceptable. Pulses, which include beans, lentils, chickpeas, and dried peas are a food group that can fit all those criteria… The present sustainability analyses were based on… nutrient composition and food prices data. Environmental impact data came from life cycle assessments (LCA)… Pulses were among the lowest-cost protein sources (per 100 g and per 100 kcal) and had the lowest greenhouse gas emissions GHG emissions and energy demand. Pulses were among the most sustainable foods when monetary and energy costs were expressed per 50 g of protein. Pulses scored well on the Nutrient Rich Food nutrient profiling system and on the related Affordable Nutrition Index that assessed nutrient density per penny. Pulses are a source of low-cost plant-based protein and [of] a variety of priority vitamins and minerals, have low carbon footprint and energy demand, and are a valued culinary ingredient across diverse regions and cultures. As dietary guidance turns to plant-based diets, pulses need to be integrated into the global sustainability framework…
Methane emissions push the Amazon towards environmental catastrophe https://www.theguardian.com/environment/article/2024/aug/17/methane-climate-crisis-amazon-peat-permafrost-vegan-heat-pumps
Controlling methane provides our best, and perhaps only, lever for shaving peak global temperatures over the next few decades. This is because it’s cleansed from the air naturally only a decade or so after release. Therefore if we could eliminate all methane emissions from human activities, methane’s concentration would quickly return to pre-industrial levels. Essentially, humans have released in excess of 3bn tonnes of methane into the atmosphere in the past 20 years. Quashing those emissions within a decade or two would save us 0.5C of warming. No other greenhouse gas gives us this much power to slow the climate crisis… Our homes are a great place to begin cutting methane emissions – replacing fossil gas with cleaner electric appliances and reducing our personal beef and dairy consumption… Beyond what fuel you cook with, changing what you eat is another way to reduce methane emissions. A typical cow burps a bathtub’s worth of methane a day, around 100kg a year. More than a billion cows worldwide and their manure therefore emits more methane than the global oil and gas industry. Eating less beef and dairy is another smart (and healthy) way for people to cut their methane footprint.
Global meat consumption driver analysis https://doi.org/10.1007/s12571-024-01455-y
... increasing meat consumption has become a major global sustainability issue, with consequences on human health, the environment and global natural resources... Meat consumption has reached a level such that it negatively affects human health in large parts of medium- and high-income countries... excessive animal protein and fat intake can lead to high risk of obesity, cardiovascular diseases, stroke, and several types of cancer. From the environmental standpoint... meat consumption is the largest contributor (31%) to the water footprint of human diet. Over half of the protein biomass of global crop harvests is used to feed livestock. Approximately one quarter of the world's land area is used for grazing. The increase in animal husbandry-related land-use has become one of the main cause for human-generated environmental degradation, including deforestation, land degradation, and greenhouse gas emissions. The dietary transition toward more plant-based diets is necessary...
Effects of Changing Dietary Patterns in the EU http://doi.org/10.53846/goediss-10636
Reducing the consumption of animal-based foods and shifting to a more plant-based diet is seen by many scientists as a contribution to combating climate change and improving the environment and public health… life cycle assessments consistently show higher greenhouse gas emissions from animal-based foods, especially beef, compared to plant-based foods… vegetarian and vegan diets have the potential to reduce diet-related emissions by 60% to 70% and to contribute to a reduction in premature mortality and non-communicable diseases… there is growing evidence of the positive environmental, climate and health effects of a transition to more plant-based diets… In the EU27, the full adoption of the EAT-Lancet diet reduces agricultural greenhouse gas emissions by 29%. Particularly large reductions are possible in methane emissions… Overall… more plant-based diets have the potential to reduce agricultural greenhouse gas emissions in the EU and can contribute to a more sustainable agri-food system… although water, land use, biodiversity and many other environmental dimensions may also be affected…
The potential of meat alternatives for a more sustainable food system https://doi.org/10.31219/osf.io/ze5yt
The steady rise in global meat consumption poses severe sustainability challenges. Livestock and feed crops occupy 77% of the world's agricultural land but provide only 18% of the calories and 37% of the total protein intake of human diets. Global greenhouse gas emissions from food production amount to 35% of total emissions, of which 57% is due to the production of animal-based food. In 2018, negative externalities associated with global food production systems were estimated at US$14.0 trillion. A dietary shift away from animal-sourced foods alone holds the potential to significantly reduce this figure, potentially saving up to US$7.3 trillion due to health and environmental benefits.      … an extensive assessment demands a comparative analysis across the various alternative protein options themselves as backing suboptimal solutions represents an opportunity cost in terms of the potential for meat substitution. Some alternatives may have inherent drawbacks relative to others, such as lower consumer appeal or scalability constraints, despite being environmentally preferable to meat. Insofar as these alternatives might be competing for the same meat consumption segment or funding, these competitive dynamics should be part of the discussion…      Plant-based meats emerge as the most promising option towards a more sustainable food system. Single-cell proteins also show promise, albeit with uncertainties surrounding scalability and acceptability. Cultivated meat could positively contribute if scaled up and capturing consumers reluctant towards plant-based meats or single-cell proteins. Conversely, insect protein appears least promising due to major acceptance and scalability hurdles, limited environmental benefits, and significant ethical concerns surrounding insect farming practices…
State aid scheme to promote a more sustainable and environmentally friendly production https://ec.europa.eu/commission/presscorner/detail/en/mex_24_4261
The European Commission has approved, under EU State aid rules, a €700 million Dutch scheme to compensate farmers for voluntarily closing livestock farming sites... to improve the quality of the environment and promote a more sustainable and environmentally friendly production... The scheme will apply to priority areas... which include peatlands, sandy soils, stream valleys, as well as areas in and next to Natura 2000-areas…
Climate change impacts from the global food system through diet shifts https://doi.org/10.1038/s41558-024-02084-1
How much and what we eat and where it is produced can create huge differences in GHG emissions… consumer groups with higher expenditures generally cause more dietary emissions due to higher red meat and dairy intake. Such inequality is more pronounced in low-income countries. The present global annual dietary emissions would fall by 17% with the worldwide adoption of the EAT-Lancet planetary health diet, primarily attributed to shifts from red meat to legumes and nuts as principal protein sources. More than half (56.9%) of the global population, which is presently overconsuming, would save 32.4% of global emissions through diet shifts, offsetting the 15.4% increase in global emissions from presently underconsuming populations moving towards healthier diets…      Food choices impact both our health and the environment. The food system is responsible for about one-third of global anthropogenic GHG emissions and climate goals become unattainable without efforts to reduce food-related emissions. However, not everyone contributes the same way to food-related emissions because of disparities in lifestyle, food preferences and affordability within and across countries. High levels of food consumption (especially animal-based diets), one of the leading causes of obesity and non-communicable diseases, lead to substantial emission. Simultaneously, >800 million people still suffer from hunger and almost 3.1 billion people cannot afford a healthy diet. Ending hunger and malnutrition while feeding the growing population by extending food production will further exacerbate climate change. Given the notable increase in emissions driven by food consumption despite efficiency gains, changing consumer lifestyles and choices are needed to mitigate climate change. Research shows that widespread shifts towards healthier diets, aligned with the sustainable development goals (SDGs)… offer solutions to this complex problem… 
Biodiversity limits to grazing ruminant milk and meat production  https://doi.org/10.1038/s41893-024-01398-4
The production and consumption of animal-source foods must be transformed to mitigate negative environmental outcomes, including greenhouse gas emissions and land-use change… Previous studies have not yet fully explored sustainability limits to the use of grazing lands for food production in the context of biodiversity. Here we explore ‘biodiversity limits’ to grassland ruminant production by estimating the meat and milk production from domestic ruminants limited to grazing areas and stocking densities where livestock can contribute to the preservation or restoration of biodiversity. With biodiversity-friendly grazing intensities… this… corresponds to... only 2.2 kg of milk and 0.8 kg of meat per capita per year, globally…
Powerful environmental groups help greenwash Big Meat’s climate impact https://www.vox.com/future-perfect/362224/environment-groups-meat-industry-lies-global-warming-climate-change-wwf
Globally, 80 billion land animals and 1 trillion to 2 trillion aquatic animals are slaughtered for food each year, producing greenhouse gas emissions in five main ways: deforestation to graze cattle and grow corn and soy to feed farmed animals; pollution from the fertilizer used to grow those corn and soy crops; manure, which is high in nitrous oxide, a significant greenhouse gas; diesel from fishing vessels and nitrous oxide-rich waste from fish farms; and the largest single source, the world’s 1.5 billion cows who burp out methane, another potent greenhouse gas.      Added up, meat and dairy production account for an estimated 14.5 percent to 19.6 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions, according to researchers at the University of Illinois and the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organization. That squarely makes it a leading driver of global warming, on par with road transport. While it composes a smaller share of emissions in the US, at around 7 percent according to experts’ analysis of Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) data, that’s less a function of how much meat Americans eat — which is a lot — than how much more we pollute through our energy and transportation sectors.      But even that estimate of 7 percent is probably too low, primarily because numerous sources of emissions from farming and food are attributed by the EPA to other sectors, including but not limited to on-farm electricity and combustion, food waste, converting land to agriculture, and the entire seafood industry. And while the US is expected to continue to make progress in reducing its emissions from fossil fuels as the country switches to clean energy and electric vehicles, less progress has been seen in the agricultural sector. In fact, in 2015 the US Department of Agriculture predicted that America’s agricultural greenhouse gas footprint would be roughly the same in 2050 as it is today. (In 2020, the USDA established a goal of halving US agricultural emissions by 2050, but is in no way on a path to meet it.)      There is also something unique about animal agriculture that is often underappreciated in the climate debate: It requires a vast amount of land — far more than any other industry and far more than plant-based foods. If we ate fewer animal products, some of that land could be restored as grasslands and forests, which remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and store it in trees and soil, effectively canceling out some of the emissions that humans generate while providing habitat for wildlife.      It’s what’s called the “carbon opportunity cost” of meat. In rich countries, which eat a lot of meat, that cost is massive. According to a 2020 study led by Matthew Hayek, a New York University environmental studies professor, a shift to plant-based eating in rich countries would free up enough land to sequester an amount of carbon dioxide approximately equal to the past nine years of their fossil fuel emissions.      According to several studies, including an influential 2020 paper in the journal Science, we don’t have much of a choice but to move to a more plant-based food system in order to meet global climate targets. Even if we were to end global fossil fuel use immediately, food consumption trends over the next century — namely rapid growth in meat and dairy consumption — would “make it impossible” to meet the Paris Climate Agreement, as the Science paper puts it. “Plant-rich diets,” it found, hold the most promise for making the global food system compliant with the Paris agreement.      That’s the climate impact of the meat we eat. But animal agriculture is also arguably America’s largest source of water pollution and a leading source of air pollution, linked to more premature deaths than coal power plants. It is the leading cause of global deforestation — a leading cause, in fact, of just about everything the environmental movement fights against...
How Factory Farming Ends https://www.vox.com/future-perfect/364288/how-factory-farming-ends-animal-rights-vegans-climate-ethics
In 2024, it’s hardly a secret that the billions of animals raised for food are treated abysmally. They are, to name just a few standard industry practices, caged, mutilated without pain relief, and intensively bred to the point that they live in chronic pain and even struggle to stand up, before being slaughtered, often painfully. The sheer scale of this system defies comprehension. Every year, humans kill 80 billion land animals — 10 times more than there are people on Earth — and an even larger, poorly tracked number of fish. If the cost to animals wasn’t bad enough, industrial animal agriculture also spells peril for us: It fuels antibiotic resistance and zoonotic disease threats that keep scientists up at night. It’s a massive environmental liability, emitting what researchers estimate is between 14 percent and 20 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions and devouring more than one-third of the planet’s habitable land...
Slaughter-free meat hits the grocery shelf https://doi.org/10.1038/s41587-024-02373-2
As cultivated meat begins to enter grocery stores, governments should promote the field’s development in line with broad public goals of sustainability and accessibility… the sector is poised for commercialization if the technology can be scaled. Enthusiasm for producing meat from animal cells instead of animals is driven by diverse concerns about the harms of meat-eating to the environment, animals and human health... Much depends on continued R&D progress — and on consumers’ dietary choices — but governments should act to shape its future according to public interests in sustainable agriculture and food security.      Worldwide meat consumption in 2022 totaled ~82 billion chickens, ducks, pigs, sheep, goats, turkeys and cows. The toll of meat-eating at this scale is profound. For the environment, it means massive greenhouse gas emissions, land degradation, water use, deforestation, biodiversity loss, soil erosion, and waterway and air pollution; for animals, the suffering of industrial farms and slaughterhouses; for human health, unsafe working conditions, pollution, meat-safety problems, the spread of antibiotic-resistant bacteria from misuse of antibiotics, and exposure to zoonotic diseases with pandemic potential.      The inconvenient conclusion, in study after study, is that intensive animal agriculture is unsustainable in a world facing a population of 10 billion and a ~73% increase in meat demand by 2050. For starters, there is not enough land, as livestock already occupies ~36% of earth’s habitable land. Animal-based food contributes ~57% of the greenhouse gas emissions from the global food system, which amounts to ~20% of total anthropogenic emissions — twice that of plant-based food. Meat therefore presents an enormous opportunity for climate. One analysis found that a transition to plant-based diets could reduce emissions ~56% by 2050. Another showed that phasing out livestock, combined with ecosystem restoration on land formerly used for grazing and feed crops, would provide half the emissions reductions needed to stay below a 2 ˚C temperature rise.      The strategy of cultivated meat stems from the recognition that peoples’ ancient habit of eating animals is not going away anytime soon. Unlike plant-based meat substitutes, fashioned from soy, pea and other plant proteins, cultivated meat is grown from animal cells in sterile bioreactors. The aim is “real meat”, with the same muscle and fat, flavors and textures as chicken, beef or pork, and with the same — or even improved — nutritional qualities… Scaling up supply in the future depends on finding solutions to scientific and engineering challenges. R&D work is focused on improving cost, yield and taste and meeting regulatory requirements. All parts of the process are being explored… In the short term, though, many startups are proceeding stepwise to less ambitious products, such as blended, low-meat foods.      Since large manufacturing plants do not exist, environmental benefits can only be estimated. Cultivated meat involves more processing than plant-based food, but with efficient production systems and renewable energy, emissions may be ~40-fold lower compared with those of beef. A conservative analysis that assumed renewable energy and sustainable feedstocks found a carbon footprint ~12-fold lower for beef, ~2-fold lower for pork, and about the same for chicken, with corresponding land-use reductions of about 10-fold, 3-fold and 2-fold...
German environmental food impacts due to a planetary health diet https://doi.org/10.1007/s11367-024-02352-4
Also in Germany food consumption is responsible for high environmental impacts… the aim of this paper is to analyse the environmental impacts of German food consumption with respect to impacts on climate change, biodiversity and water, and to build three scenarios for a German planetary health diet in order to identify reduction potentials. The analysis has been conducted using life cycle assessment (LCA)… each person in Germany consumes on average about 2650 kcal per person and day… about 25% more than recommended in the German guidelines. This finding correlates with the fact that over 50% of German inhabitants are overweight and almost a fifth (18.5%) is obese… the environmental footprint of the German diet could also be reduced by about another fifth if the recommendations of the EAT-Lancet Commission [of largely plant-based diets] were combined with the daily recommended energy intakes of the German for nutrition…     The results show that greenhouse gas emissions, land use and impacts on terrestrial biodiversity are mainly depending on the consumption of animal products. To reduce these impacts, it is necessary to reduce the consumption of meat and other animal products, mainly beef and processed products like sausages and cheese. The water scarcity footprint assessment on the other hand shows that most of the impact is caused by only a few plant-based products… This does not mean that animal products are generally better than plant-based products regarding the water scarcity footprint. It depends on the product and its origin… it is important to evaluate which products are suited for the substitution of animal-based products… The biodiversity assessment shows that, like for water scarcity, large optimisation potentials exist regarding products and origins due to the ecoregion factor. For example, the ecoregion factor for soy production in Italy is 0.047, while the factor in Brazil is almost 8 times as high… Moreover, the results display that most impacts on biodiversity and water scarcity caused by the German diet are caused outside of Germany… the environmental impacts of the current diet in Germany take place largely at the expense of other countries.     Summing up, it could be clearly shown that with a decreasing share of animal products in the diet, the environmental impacts considered decrease… A look at the foods that cause the high water use and the resulting water scarcity footprint shows that this could also be easily addressed if the consumption of citrus fruits and almonds were reduced and other fruits and nuts from regions less threatened by water scarcity were used instead…  
Sustainable food choices require environmental footprints https://doi.org/10.1016/j.spc.2024.07.002
The current food system is a major driver of global environmental change... In response to increasing consumer demand for product-specific health and sustainability labelling on packaged food products, it is necessary to develop robust environmental footprinting approaches to estimate the environmental impacts of foods and beverages available through retail outlets. This study quantifies the environmental impacts of 63,926 packaged food products in Australian supermarkets across five indicators including greenhouse gas emissions, land use, water use, acidification, and eutrophication potential. We integrated cradle-to-retail environmental estimates from life cycle assessment databases... to measure product-specific impacts. Meat products consistently showed the highest impacts across all environmental indicators, while fruits, vegetables, plant-based meat alternatives, and non-alcoholic beverages had the lowest impacts...
Is There Such a Thing As 'Better' Meat? https://www.wri.org/insights/better-meat-sourcing-climate-environmental-impacts
Meat and dairy are major contributors to climate change. Animal agriculture is responsible for more than three-quarters of agricultural land use, 11%-20% of global greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and more than 30% of global methane emissions. Meat production is also a leading driver of recent tropical deforestation. The good news is that companies and consumers are increasingly looking for more sustainable animal products. But reducing emissions is just one piece of the puzzle. So are addressing water use, water pollution and biodiversity loss driven by animal agriculture; improving animal welfare; supporting local farmers and more. The problem is that there’s no single solution to tackle all these priorities at once. Indeed... options such as organic and grass-fed meat — which can improve animals’ lives and reduce antibiotic usage, among other benefits — often come with higher GHG emissions and environmental impacts than conventional production... Reducing overall meat and dairy consumption is an essential step toward slashing food-related emissions and achieving global climate goals...      “Better” meat can mean different things to different people. For some, it means better performance against environmental, social, ethical or economic attributes. This could include lowering methane emissions, avoiding sourcing from deforestation hotspots, increasing farmers’ incomes or improving animals’ lives. It could mean sourcing meat that consumers think tastes better. It could also mean improving soil health, on-farm biodiversity or productivity... However, these attributes don't always align, which can result in trade-offs between different priorities... When it comes to alternative production systems such as organic, grass-fed and free-range, the trade-offs are more nuanced... they can improve animal welfare by providing more space for cows to graze on pastures or for chickens to roam more freely. Alternative systems also tend to use antibiotics more responsibly. This can help slow the growing crisis of antimicrobial resistance that makes infections in both humans and animals harder to treat. But... these systems often come with higher environmental impacts per gram of protein compared to conventional production methods.      WRI analyzed research... nearly 300 environmental data points from 45 studies... [and] found that alternative systems led to increased environmental impacts in 75% of the data points. This is largely due to the way the animals are raised. For example, in grass-finished (grass-fed) beef systems, cattle grow at a slower pace and emit more methane during their lives than in conventional grain-fed systems... Alternative systems also tend to require more land per gram of protein, whether for pasture, for increased space in confined systems or for feed production. This can lead to trade-offs between environmental impacts. Organic feed crop production, for example, may have lower on-farm GHG emissions than conventional production due to the lack of chemical fertilizer use. But it often has lower crop yields per hectare, too, requiring more land for the same amount of feed. This has important climate implications: Ongoing agricultural land expansion conflicts with urgent goals to end deforestation and restore ecosystems, which will be necessary to reach global climate goals and hold the world to 1.5 or 2 degrees C of warming.      To account for the climate impacts of these land use trade-offs, we estimated the “carbon opportunity costs” of land use under the different meat and dairy production methods. Carbon opportunity costs... translate agricultural land-use requirements into carbon dioxide equivalents. When looking at “total carbon costs,” which include on-farm emissions as well as carbon opportunity costs, alternative meat and dairy production systems like grass-fed, organic and free-range had higher overall climate impacts per gram of protein than conventional systems in more than 90% of cases. This is because the climate impacts of the higher land use requirements ultimately outweighed these systems’ lower on-farm emissions...  One powerful step for any food provider wishing to serve “better” meat is to go beyond just sourcing less meat to sourcing even less meat...  
Analyzing the climate and ecosystem impacts of the Brazilian diet shift https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.172568
Diet shift is an opportunity to mitigate the impacts of food systems, which are responsible for about a third of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions globally and exert various environmental pressures on ecosystems... a life cycle assessment (LCA) was performed to evaluate the environmental impacts of a conventional diet in Brazil and seven alternatives, namely adjusted-EAT-Lancet, pescatarian, vegetarian, entomophagic (insect-based food), mycoprotein (microbial-based food), and synthetic (cell-based food) diets. Results indicate a substantial mitigation potential for GHG emissions (39 % to 86 %) and land use (38 % to 82 %) through a diet shift from a conventional diet to any of the seven alternative diets... This study highlights the considerable potential of dietary changes to mitigate global environmental impacts associated with food systems...
A Life Cycle Assessment of Plant-Based Meats in Tackling Climate Change https://doi.org/10.20944/preprints202404.1262.v1
As the world attempts to decarbonise the food industry and limit greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, plant-based meat analogues have emerged as a sustainable alternative to traditional meat. This study implemented a life cycle assessment (LCA) to rigorously compare the environmental impacts of a beef burger, produced with British beef, against a meat analogue equivalent with a publicly available recipe... the beef burger patty had more than double the total environmental impact than the meat analogue equivalent, as well as possessing a global warming impact that was 62% higher...
Assessing the sustainability of cultured meat in optimized Danish diets https://doi.org/10.1016/j.spc.2024.04.002 
Reducing animal-sourced foods in diets saves a significant share of environmental impacts... large reductions in red meats in particular... In this paper, the inclusion of cultured meat in optimized Danish diets is explored through minimizing climate impact... The greatest Global Warming Potential reductions can be seen in the cultured meat diet (8.0 Mt CO2 eq./yr) and vegan diets (9.8 Mt CO2 eq./yr)... These reductions could represent potential Danish national emissions decrease of 21 % and 25 %, respectively, in 2022 impacts...
Plant-Based Beef Significantly More Sustainable Than Traditional Beef
https://vegconomist.com/sustainability-environment/study-plant-based-beef-significantly-sustainable-beef/
A research team... conducted a comparative study analyzing papers from various countries on the sustainability and nutrition of beef versus plant-based beef... Plant-based beef was found to significantly lower greenhouse gas emissions, with reductions ranging from 86% to 97% in various studies. Plant-based beef also requires less land... Roughly 75 % of global agricultural land is for animal production while animal-based foods provide only 18 % human calories and 25 % protein in global good supply... The new research also shows that plant-based beef, particularly burgers, generally have lower energy and saturated fat content but lower levels of protein compared to beef... different processing methods and ingredients can impact emissions from plant-based meat, but overall, it is significantly more sustainable... One of the technological responses to concerns about the healthiness and sustainability of red meat consumption as well as growing global food insecurity has been the development of plant-based meats... plant-based beef has lower greenhouse gas emissions than animal-based beef and that plant-based burgers have lower total fat and saturated fat than animal-based burgers.
“Climate-friendly” beef... Don’t fall for it https://www.vox.com/future-perfect/2023/9/8/23863100/tyson-climate-friendly-beef-burger-usda
Tyson Foods and the federal government refuse to show their math for a new sustainability label.      One species accounts for around 10 percent of all global greenhouse gas emissions: the cow. Every few months, like clockwork, environmental scientists publish a new report on how we can’t limit planetary warming if people in rich countries don’t eat fewer cows and other animals. But meat giant Tyson Foods, in conjunction with the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), has a different solution: “climate-friendly” beef. Tyson claims that its “Climate-Smart Beef” program, launched last year and supported with taxpayer dollars, has managed to cut 10 percent of the greenhouse gas emissions from a tiny fraction of its cattle herd. Those cattle are then slaughtered and sold under the company’s Brazen Beef brand with a USDA-approved “climate-friendly” label, which is now for sale in limited quantities... It sounds nice — Americans could continue to eat nearly 60 pounds of beef annually while the world burns. But it’s just the latest salvo in the meat industry’s escalating war against climate science, and its campaign to greenwash its way out of the fight for a livable planet...      Matthew Hayek, an assistant professor of environmental studies... told me the methods Tyson is talking about are admirable, but that doesn’t mean the 10 percent reduction claim is justified. Some practices may be good for land stewardship but don’t reduce emissions. For those that can reduce emissions, savings will be marginal. “These are razor-thin distinctions in a country that already produces meat incredibly efficiently, and our tools are not cut out [to measure] these thin margins... You can’t call that [climate-friendly], in any good conscience.” And because emissions from US cattle operations vary widely, “There’s simply no reliable way to estimate a change in greenhouse gas emissions as small as 10 percent on any one farm — let alone a complex network of them”...      Just as important as showing its math is knowing where the starting line for emissions reduction begins. Tyson says it has reduced the carbon footprint of some of its beef by 10 percent, but 10 percent relative to what? What’s the benchmark? Nobody knows. A 2019 study by the USDA’s Agricultural Research Service and the National Cattlemen’s Beef Association found that the average American steer emits 21.3 kilograms of carbon dioxide-equivalent emissions per kilogram of carcass weight. But in 2021, the USDA approved a low-carbon beef program (unrelated to Tyson) that uses a benchmark nearly 25 percent higher than the 2019 study... In September, when asked what benchmark the USDA uses to approve a 10 percent emissions reduction claim, the agency again said I would need to file a FOIA request. In the document it sent to Environmental Working Group, the portion on benchmarks was redacted. But even if we give Tyson and the USDA the benefit of the doubt, there’s a stubborn truth about beef: It’s so high in emissions that it can never really be “climate-friendly”... relative to every other food product, beef remains the coal of the food sector. “Beef is always going to be and always will be the worst [food] choice for the climate”... What Tyson’s done here is equivalent to making a Hummer 10 percent more fuel-efficient and calling it climate-friendly — it’s greenwashing...      Meat and dairy production account for 15 to 20 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions, and leading environmental scientists say we must drastically reduce livestock emissions and eat more plant-based meals. That message, however, hasn’t broken through to the general public, nor to policymakers... However, meat companies could face legal consequences over misleading environmental claims. Earlier this year, New York Attorney General Letitia James sued JBS, the world’s largest meat company, over its claim that it will achieve net zero emissions by 2040. James argued that such a goal was unsubstantiated and unachievable... The USDA and government agencies around the world know what must be done to slash food emissions. Now they just need to follow the science, resist industry greenwashing, and cut back on the burgers.
The case for paying ranchers to raise trees instead of cattle https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2024/apr/02/cattle-trees-climate-change-solution
Reducing cattle populations and restoring native ecosystems is our best chance to tackle global heating. Here’s one way to do it. There is a simple, cost-effective and scientifically sound way to turn back the clock on global warming and reverse the catastrophic collapse of biodiversity: pay ranchers to raise trees instead of cattle. By mass, the world’s 1.7 billion cows are the dominant animal species on Earth, far outweighing the human population, and outweighing all the wild terrestrial mammals, birds, reptiles and amphibians left on Earth by more than 15-fold. More than a third of Earth’s land is used to feed livestock. Winding down the cattle population and restoring the native ecosystems that once thrived on the vast land area now dominated by cows is our best chance to rapidly reduce global heating and begin to reverse the collapse of global biodiversity and wildlife. Although many people are aware that reducing consumption of animal products would help combat the climate crisis, the size of the effect is deeply underappreciated. Our peer-reviewed research estimated the climate impact of reduced emissions from livestock and recovery of plant biomass on the land they occupy. It showed that a global phaseout of animal agriculture over 15 years would unlock “negative emissions” sufficient to bring about an urgently needed 30-year window of “net-zero” greenhouse gas emissions – even if all other emissions continued on their current trajectory...      Restoring native ecosystems on cattle-grazing land would enable essential habitats for threatened plant and animal species to recover and expand. So what is stopping us from turning back the clock on the climate crisis and environmental degradation? We do not need to raise cattle. Beef and milk account for less than 13% of the world’s protein supply. Current global production of just one of the world’s diverse plant crops – soybeans – yields more than twice as much high-quality protein as the entire global meat supply. Beef consumption is already declining; since its peak in the mid-70s, per capita beef consumption has dropped by more than 20% globally and more than 35% in the US. Evidence suggests that this trend will continue – the sharpest declines in the past two decades are among the youngest groups.       Raising cattle is far from lucrative, even in wealthy economies where demand for beef is high. The agriculture department confirmed this month that US beef farmers and ranchers are in dire economic straits. For all their hard, dangerous work, 70% lose money and, excluding government support, their average net income per acre was less than 50 cents. In the European Union, member governments provide more than 100% of beef farmers’ income, even covering losses. And things will only worsen for those farmers, what with rising temperatures, changing weather patterns and water shortages. But farmers and ranchers don’t need to be victims of a changing world; they can instead be the heroes who save us from the two greatest threats facing our planet and our species. All it would take would be to recognize that restoration and stewardship of natural ecosystems that fight the climate crisis and support wildlife is an agricultural occupation essential to our welfare and security, and to adapt agricultural policies toward supporting farmers who choose to ranch carbon instead of cattle...      A... global annual investment of just 1% of the world’s GDP – around $1tn – to pay farmers who choose to transition from cattle husbandry to restoration and management of native forests and grasslands would significantly raise the income of cattle farmers and stimulate rural communities, while rapidly reducing global warming and reversing the global collapse of biodiversity. And that would be a bargain. We could begin with a voluntary pilot program to see what this strategy can deliver for farmers and the environment. Most developed countries have well-established systems for both governmental support of farmers and monitoring of agricultural activity, providing a strong starting point for implementation and validation. Fierce opposition from powerful interests is inevitable; realizing this opportunity will require extraordinary political courage and diplomacy. Our responsibility to future generations demands that we find it.
Global meat demand projection https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jclepro.2023.139460
Meat demand is a crucial part of limiting the rise in global temperature below 1.5 °C or, at least, 2 °C and has an important role in maintaining public health. We... analyze and project meat demand both in history (1961–2019) and future scenarios (2020–2100). Our results revealed the disproportionate climate impacts of meat consumption in the West. The country group, Western Countries, was the biggest consumer in history, consuming 38% of global meat cumulatively but accounting for only 14% of the world population from 1961 to 2019. Our projections show that global total meat demand will decline in this century under most future scenarios. The East Asia & Pacific region is expected to contribute 56%–125% of global meat demand decline... On the contrary, meat demand in Western Countries may be more likely to increase by 15%–71% between 2020 and 2100. However, both the general public and governments in Western Countries seem reluctant to promote lifestyle changing to mitigate climate change. Thus, it is essential to take measures to limit the negative environmental impacts of increasing meat demand. Especially western high-income countries need to take proportional responsibility for international cooperation to reduce meat consumption for climate change mitigation...
Dietary quality and dietary greenhouse gas emissions in the USA https://doi.org/10.1186/s12966-024-01581-y
The Planetary Health Diet Index (PHDI) measures adherence to the dietary pattern presented by the EAT-Lancet Commission, which aligns health and sustainability targets. There is a need to understand how Planetary Health Diet Index scores correlate with dietary greenhouse gas emissions (GHGE) and how this differs from the carbon footprints of scores on established dietary recommendations. The objectives of this study were to compare how the PHDI, Healthy Eating Index-2015 (HEI-2015) and Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension (DASH) relate to (a) dietary GHGE and (b) to examine the influence of Planetary Health Diet Index food components on dietary GHGE. We used life cycle assessment data… We found that higher dietary quality on all three indices was correlated with lower dietary GHGE… When examining Planetary Health Diet Index component scores, we found that diet-related GHGE were driven largely by red and processed meat intake…      … one component—red and processed meat—had a much larger impact on diet-related GHGE than any other Planetary Health Diet Index component. Red and processed meat have high production-associated GHGE, and diets high in this component are consistently found to have higher diet-related GHGE… While red meat is a source of nutrients such iron and vitamin B12, at high intakes such as those observed in the US, it is also correlated with cardiovascular disease, type II diabetes, and certain cancers. Moreover, in the US and other high-income contexts with high intake of animal-sourced foods, substituting red and processed meat in favor of more plant-based foods is estimated to have benefits for nutrient adequacy. For the US context, dietary guidelines that recommend limited intake red and processed meat could reduce diet-related GHGE and improve population health… Better dietary quality is associated with lower diet-related GHGE, with stronger associations for both Planetary Health Diet Index and DASH than for HEI-2015. Red and processed meat—which is a moderation component for both Planetary Health Diet Index and DASH—had the strongest influence on dietary GHGE. Future efforts to promote healthy, sustainable diets should reframe red and processed meat as a moderation component and could look to the established DASH guidelines as well as the new guidance provided by the Planetary Health Diet Index.
Cultivated chicken outperforms most efficient farm animal https://cultivated-x.com/meat/supermeats-cultivated-chicken-outperforms-most-efficient-farm-animal-carbon-footprint-study/
Chicken is considered the most efficient source of land-animal protein compared to beef and pork due to its lower feed conversion ratio and smaller environmental footprint. However, cultivated chicken presents an opportunity for even greater sustainability. A new life cycle analysis (LCA) from the Israeli startup SuperMeat, conducted by independent research consultancy CE Delft about the environmental impact of its 100% cultivated chicken vs. conventional chicken, found a 47% reduction in carbon emissions when the production used renewable energy. The LCA focused on large-scale production anticipated at the start of the next decade in a scenario where SuperMeat’s production integrates renewable energy... Meanwhile, chicken production was based on obtaining soy from deforestation-free supply chains and utilizing renewable electricity during production. The LCA also shows that even using the standard US electricity grid and a non-optimized supply chain, SuperMeat’s production process would still lead to a 27% reduction in carbon footprint compared to the most optimistic benchmarks for conventional chicken...     In addition to the carbon footprint, the LCA shows a 90% reduction in land use compared to chicken production... Other measures include a 64% reduction in fine particulate matter (PM) formation against the projected emissions for conventional chicken... Particulate matter emissions... are a significant health risk due to their link to respiratory diseases. In traditional animal agriculture, using fertilizers and manure management are leading causes of elevated PM emissions. Additionally... cultivated chicken offers an 85% reduction in terrestrial acidification, which can degrade soil quality and disrupt ecosystems through manure application and fertilizer use, and a 68% reduction in feed requirements, demonstrating superior efficiency in transforming feed into meat...
The value and transitional purpose of plant-based meat  https://doi.org/10.1016/j.sftr.2024.100183
The increasing consumption of animal products globally, especially meat, constitutes a major concern. Foremost, the production of vast amounts of livestock has been linked to sustainability challenges such as deforestation, climate change and the loss of biodiversity. In addition, animal-protein and meat-dominated diets have been associated with zoonoses, cardiovascular diseases or cancer. Scholars and high-profile reports have therefore called for curbing meat consumption. This especially applies to the Global North, where meat consumption can be considered excessive...
Why New York is suing the world’s biggest meat company https://www.vox.com/future-perfect/2024/3/8/24093774/big-meat-jbs-lawsuit-greenwashing-climate-new-york
Meat giant JBS said it’ll reach net zero emissions by 2040... Meat, especially beef, is by far the food sector’s biggest greenhouse gas emitter, and no solution to these emissions exists that would offer significant reductions — except scaling down meat production. New York Attorney General Letitia James has deemed JBS’s misleading promises serious enough to take the company to court. A lawsuit filed by her office last week alleges that JBS’s claim about emissions reductions is both unsubstantiated and unachievable — and that it may not only mislead consumers into buying its highly polluting products... Functioning markets depend on giving consumers accurate information to be able to make free choices; corporate duplicity undermines the market’s capacity to provide goods they see as preferable...      Livestock is responsible for 57 percent of food systems emissions, or about 14.5 percent of all global emissions. Much of this comes from cows, which produce methane when they digest food, but it also comes from factory farms where pigs and chickens are raised and from open air manure lagoons where waste from farmed animals is stored. Grazing cattle and growing feed crops for animals, like soy, are also major drivers of deforestation, most notably in Brazil’s Amazon rainforest. Among its many harms, deforestation removes a major carbon sink — meaning that not only does livestock production emit greenhouse gases, but the lands cleared for that production also can no longer capture and store planet-warming emissions anywhere near as efficiently as forests.      Unsurprisingly, JBS’s emissions are gargantuan. In 2021 it reported more than 71 million tons of carbon dioxide equivalent emissions — making JBS, as New York’s lawsuit mentions, a larger emitter than the entire country of Ireland. Outside audits have suggested that its emissions are growing at an unchecked pace, increasing by 51 percent between 2016 and 2021. With global demand for meat rising, the meat industry is a major impediment to meeting climate targets. Without shifting diets in wealthy countries away from meat and dairy, it would be impossible to limit warming to 1.5°C, a target set by the Paris climate agreement.      JBS’s business model conflicts with that reality, and with any possibility of bringing emissions in line with planetary limits. As New York’s lawsuit bluntly states: “scientists point to the need to reduce production of and demand for ruminant meat, including beef … The JBS Group plans to do the opposite.” The case alleges that JBS’s claims — which have appeared on its website and have been repeated in forums including a New York Times event last year — have no basis in fact, and that the company has neither the information nor the means to deliver on its promises because it lacks a complete picture of its own emissions…
US factory farming is even bigger than you realize https://www.vox.com/future-perfect/24079424/factory-farming-facts-meat-usda-agriculture-census
In a few generations, factory farming — the set of economic, genetic, chemical, and pharmaceutical innovations that enabled humanity to raise tens of billions of animals for food every year — has transformed America [and other places]. It has polluted our water and air, ruining quality of life for people who live near animal confinements. It has altered entire landscapes, helping drive the conversion of... grasslands to soy and cornfields growing feed for billions of animals warehoused in industrial sheds. It contributes an outsized share of planet-warming emissions, heightens the risk of another zoonotic pandemic, and causes unfathomable, normalized suffering for the animals themselves... Such high concentrations of animals — and their waste — smell terrible and release hazardous air pollution linked to respiratory problems in the communities in which they’re located, a growing environmental justice issue. These facilities have also exacerbated US avian flu crises over the last decade: Having so many animals in one place means that when a case of bird flu hits one animal, it can quickly spread to hundreds of thousands of others (which also creates more opportunities for the disease to mutate into something potentially dangerous to humans)... As the number of animals farmed for food has exploded, so has their waste, adding up to almost 1 trillion pounds of it each year... The manure isn’t treated at sewage plants like human waste, but rather stored on the farm in piles or vast pits that are prone to leakage. Farmers also over-apply manure on crop fields to dispose of it and much of it washes away during storms into rivers and streams, causing widespread pollution... Even on its own terms, factory farming is still radically inefficient compared to a system with far fewer animals and more plant-based foods, which would require less land and water, emit less pollution and climate-warming gases, and allow the country to free up land for wild ecosystems that benefit the climate. If we’re willing to imagine a different world, one not dependent on slaughtering billions of animals for food, such a system is within reach...
Is oat milk unhealthy? That’s the wrong question https://www.vox.com/future-perfect/24072187/is-oat-milk-bad-for-you-or-healthy-wrong-question
I typically choose to consume oat and soy milks because they taste good enough in coffee and cereal... it’s an easy way to support the welfare of cows and reduce my carbon footprint. That’s another reason why I find the “is it good vs. bad for you” debate over oat milk kind of icky: It distracts from these other important considerations... I like cows, and the treatment they receive at a typical dairy seems, at best, unkind. Farmers repeatedly impregnate cows and take away their calves right after they’re born. If those babies are male, they are usually turned into veal or raised for beef. If they’re female, the calves are typically dehorned and docked, and also eventually slaughtered (when their milk production wanes). I’m having trouble imagining that this is a happy existence. I’m also aware that, globally, a liter of dairy milk produces around three times as much carbon emissions as the same amount of plant-based milk. Cows release methane, a potent greenhouse gas, through their burps and manure... nondairy milks — and especially oat milk — not only release fewer emissions but also require less land and water. They tend to pollute less, too. (Growing feed for cows requires a lot of land, fertilizers, and pesticides.)...
Diet-related environmental impact by substituting meat and dairy https://doi.org/10.18174/649726
This research analyzed the environmental impact of food consumption in the Netherlands... was compared across days with and without meat and dairy consumption. On days when individuals consumed both meat and dairy, their diets had higher greenhouse gas emissions compared with days when they did not... Likewise, their daily diets with meat and dairy consumption showed higher levels of land use, terrestrial acidification, marine eutrophication, and freshwater eutrophication... on days with meat and dairy consumption, their diets showed less blue water use...      If individuals were to replace meat and dairy by plant-based meat and dairy replacers (such as vegan meat analogues, legumes, soy milk, and nuts/seeds) in their daily diets, it could potentially lead to a reduction in greenhouse gas emissions of... 38.5%... land use of... 18.2%... terrestrial acidification of... 61.6%... as well as freshwater eutrophication of... 15.3%... and marine eutrophication of... 47.0%...      Therefore, lowering meat and dairy consumption in the Netherlands has the potential to substantially reduce the environmental impact of food consumption, with the exception of blue water use. By making smart choices for plant-based foods with lower blue water use, this indicator could be improved...
Can beef farming be carbon neutral? A decade-long experiment https://www.euronews.com/green/2024/02/19/can-beef-farming-be-carbon-neutral-a-decade-long-experiment-in-australia-has-mixed-results
A livestock farm in Australia that won plaudits for being carbon neutral is no longer able to offset its emissions. Jigsaw Farms in south-western Victoria was well ahead of the curve at countering the hefty climate impact of cattle farming, boasting its carbon neutral status as early as 2011. But a new report tracking the family farm’s climate impact suggests it tipped into the red in 2017, and has since been emitting more greenhouse gas emissions than it can sequester...    Planting hundreds and thousands of trees while nurturing the soil helped to sequester a significant volume of carbon. This effectively neutralised the annual emissions of wool, lamb and beef production. “In the early 2010s we were pretty cocky that we had conquered this thing”... But a new report... finds this balance was relatively short lived. “Cows and sheep are still there producing the same amount of methane [every year], but the trees grow up and carbon sequestration slows down”...       An agricultural economist... has been studying Jigsaw’s emissions for years... He describes “the law of diminishing returns” behind the carbon flip. Young trees absorb more carbon as they grow, and Jigsaw’s have now passed the point of peak sequestration - meaning they take in less CO2 year-on-year. While the soil, initially boosted by a switch to deep-rooted perennial grasses, is now saturated with carbon so can’t take in any more from the atmosphere... the farm sequestered 70 per cent to 83 per of its annual emissions in 2021. By 2031... Jigsaw will absorb just over half of what it did in 2012, when carbon sequestration peaked... Methane emitted by cows accounts for a whopping 80 per cent of the sector’s emissions, which makes this a key target area for climate-conscious farmers... But the industry is still belching out methane at an unsustainable rate.       Individual studies like those tracking Jigsaw’s emissions are needed to weigh up the claims of animal farms. Agriculture writer and farming critic George Monbiot compares it to banking: there is both the climate current account and climate capital account to consider. The former refers to the gases released by farming animals, while the latter covers the carbon dioxide the land could absorb if it were a wild ecosystem. The issue is that while individual farms like Jigsaw can be exemplary, carbon neutral farming on the scale that meat is currently demanded is simply unworkable. Around 45 per cent of the world’s habitable land is currently used for agriculture... 80 per cent of this land is dedicated to either grazing animals or growing crops used to feed livestock - a surface area equivalent to the Americas. The remaining portion of habitable land is already dominated by forests, so it’s hard to see where the trees needed to offset the world’s farms could go. Much less land can be used for farming... not only to tackle climate change but also biodiversity loss, which food production is the biggest driver of. 
An absolute environmental sustainability assessment of food https://doi.org/10.1002/fft2.371
The food sector is a major user of land and freshwater and a source of considerable greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. This puts pressure on Earth systems and jeopardizes the future of food production. The environmental impact of foods is well understood... we describe a metric that converts the environmental impact of foods into a quantitative environmental sustainability scale (performance-weighted environmental sustainability, PwES). Land use, freshwater use, and GHG emission impacts of common foods have been weighted by their nutritional content and normalized so that values greater than 100% are considered unsustainable.       Our findings concur with the conventional wisdom that the high impact of meat is unsustainable, whereas vegetables are typically produced sustainably... without reductions to the environmental impact of food, it is very difficult to eat sustainably. A high-bread vegan diet could be found that provided minimum nutritional requirements and was environmentally sustainable...       Animal products use unsustainably large areas of land, especially lamb and beef and eggs and dairy. The land use PwES values, even at the 10th percentile, are an order of magnitude greater than what can be considered sustainable. Conversely, the land use required to produce nonleguminous plant-based foods is, on average, considered sustainable. Legumes such as peas and lentils need to be produced with half the current average land use to meet the designated sustainable limit. Sugars and vegetable oils also require unsustainably high areas of land; these foods suffer for their lack of nutritional diversity... The meats of ruminant animals (sheep and cattle) are the least sustainable of the dataset...       The PwES assessment of foods is generally consistent with related studies, emphasizing the high environmental impact of meat and indicating that plant-based foods are more sustainable... For animal products to be considered sustainable, the reduction in GHG emissions needed is far greater than the optimistic 10%–15% range projected by Springmann et al. (2018).     Transportation accounts for an average of 26% of fruit and vegetable GHG emissions, which are often produced sustainably anyway, and the impact of transportation becomes less significant... future reductions to the impact of transport (and other energy-intensive actions such as refrigeration) will only have a small influence on the sustainability of our food supply.       Increased renewable energy in the electricity mix will make a considerable difference to the impact of many foods where the GHG emissions of cooking are the major contributor to the climate change PwES value (generally roasted or baked foods). Nevertheless, the most optimistic reductions in GHG emissions across the food supply chain will only reduce climate change PwES values below the sustainable threshold for those foods with PwES values already only marginally above 100% (e.g., peas)...       Widespread reductions to food waste, overconsumption, and diets with less red meat are needed in combination with technological changes to create a sustainable food supply sector...
Adherence to the EAT-Lancet diet in relation to mortality https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envint.2024.108495
A global transition to healthy and sustainable diets is pivotal to improve population-level health and reduce anthropogenic environmental pressures. In the absence of scientific targets to realise this transition, the EAT-Lancet Diet was developed as a universal reference diet... and focuses primarily on the consumption of plant-based foods with a lower environmental impact compared to animal-based foods. As such, the EAT-diet mainly includes fruit and vegetables, whole grains, legumes, nuts, and unsaturated fats from plant sources... current studies have found both health and environmental benefits of adhering to the EAT-diet...
A protein transition can free up land https://doi.org/10.1016/j.oneear.2023.12.016
Replacing animal products can free up vast pasture and cropland areas... Using freed-up land for biomass production can help unlock a large BECCS [bioenergy with carbon capture and storage] potential... Animal-source foods use resources inefficiently because animals consume more food than they provide, and feeding the animals requires considerable land and water. We show that a protein transition could free up extensive resources... even modest adoption levels of alternative proteins could free up large agricultural areas... other emerging alternative proteins such as cultured meat and mycoprotein could be suitable beef replacements and are estimated to have lower land needs than most meat alternatives. Released areas could help mitigate climate change, as we explored, but they may also provide multiple other benefits. Land-use options, such as natural succession, reforestation, and biochar, could help mitigate climate change with cobenefits for biodiversity and ecosystem services...  
Environmental sustainability of food production and consumption  https://foodandnutritionresearch.net/index.php/fnr/article/view/10539
The overarching advice to all Nordic and Baltic countries, in line with the current body of scientific literature, is to shift to a more plant based dietary pattern and avoid food waste... there is a high potential and necessity to shift food consumption across the countries to minimize its environmental impact. More specifically, a substantial reduction in meat and dairy consumption and increased consumption of legumes/pulses, whole grains, vegetables, fruits, nuts and seeds is suggested as a priority intervention. Reducing the environmental impacts of seafoods is also key...
Sustainability benefits of transitioning from current diets to plant-based  https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-45328-6
[Diets rich in plant-based alternatives] substantially reduce greenhouse gas emissions (30–52%), land use (20–45%), and freshwater use (14–27%), with the vegan diet showing the highest reduction potential. We observe comparable environmental benefits when ASFs [animal-source foods] are replaced with WFs [whole plant foods], underscoring the need to reduce ASF consumption...
Soil Carbon Cannot Offset Livestock Emissions https://www.desmog.com/2024/02/01/climate-change-livestock-methane-carbon-sequestration-claims/
About 30 percent of global methane emissions come from ruminants, which belch large volumes of the potent greenhouse gas as part of their digestive process. Each year, a single cow can burp up more than 200 pounds of methane, which warms the planet about 27 times faster than carbon dioxide. At the same time, the nitrous oxide ruminants emit through their manure has 273 times the warming potential of CO2. Estimates suggest there are 1.5 billion cattle on Earth — to say nothing of sheep, bison, and goats — and these emissions contribute powerfully to global climate change. Studies show that failing to reduce them could break our ability to hit the all-important 2-degree Celsius threshold outlined in the Paris Agreement...
EU Climate Advisory Board: Focus on immediate implementation
https://climate-advisory-board.europa.eu/news/eu-climate-advisory-board-focus-on-immediate-implementation-and-continued-action-to-achieve-eu-climate-goals
In a new report, the European Scientific Advisory Board on Climate Change recommends a series of actions to put the EU on track towards climate neutrality... The Advisory Board found that emissions in agriculture are not decreasing, mainly due to a lack of adequate financial incentives for farmers... To address this, the Advisory Board recommends better aligning the EU’s common agricultural policy with the EU climate ambitions, including by shifting support away from emission-intensive agricultural practices such as livestock production, and towards lower-emitting products and activities.      The EU should shift CAP support away from emission-intensive agricultural practices, including livestock production, and towards lower-emitting products... In parallel, the EU should strengthen measures to encourage healthier, more plant-based diets, and develop a framework for just transition to an agricultural sector consistent with the climate neutrality objective... The Farm to Fork Strategy should be translated into concrete policies for delivering a sustainable food system, reducing food waste and encouraging healthy, plant-based diets... From a broader perspective, there is a need to shift towards healthier diets, reducing the over-consumption of animal products and increasing the consumption of plant products, since these are associated with lower emissions...
Options for reducing a city's global biodiversity footprint https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jclepro.2024.140712
Urban food consumption contributes significantly to global biodiversity loss. To ensure a sustainable food supply for the growing urban population a transformation of food production and consumption patterns is necessary. Here, options for reducing the food-related biodiversity footprint of Vienna... were assessed regarding measures of product substitution, demand reduction through avoidance of waste and caloric overconsumption and a shift from imports to domestic production. The biodiversity footprints of 24 food consumption patterns were calculated with a life-cycle-assessment approach... diets with less animal products could reduce the footprint by 21%–43%, while waste reduction and adhering to the recommended caloric intake could reduce the footprint by 5% and 9%, respectively. Decreasing the demand for primary biomass under alternative diets could also free up domestic cropland and allow for reducing imports and relocating production from abroad to Austria. This could reduce Vienna's biodiversity footprint additionally by 5%–21%, depending on diet and demand level, due to comparatively higher yields and lower native species richness in Austria. Results further indicate that shifting towards a vegetarian diet requires the least product substitution per footprint reduction among the examined alternative diets. Substituting animal products with plant-based alternatives from area-efficient production systems located outside of biodiversity hotspots emerges as a promising strategy for Western cities to reduce their biodiversity footprint...
Meat and dairy industry’s attempt to change how we measure methane emissions  https://theconversation.com/meat-and-dairy-industrys-attempt-to-change-how-we-measure-methane-emissions-would-let-polluters-off-the-hook-219362
Lobbyists from major polluting industries were out in force at the recent UN climate summit, COP28. Groups representing the livestock industry, which is responsible for around 32% of global methane emissions, want to increase their use of a new way of measuring these emissions that lets high polluters evade their responsibility to make big emissions cuts... But ramping down methane emissions rapidly would have a swift and positive effect on global heating.     To understand the climate effects of different activities and develop pathways consistent with limiting warming to 1.5°C, it is often useful to combine the effects of different gases into a single metric. GWP100... However, GWP100 fails to capture the different ways methane and carbon dioxide behave in the atmosphere. It also masks the more intense short-term effect of methane compared to carbon dioxide... So in 2016, scientists... proposed a new method for modelling methane and carbon dioxide together called GWP*. This model is more complex... But, because it relies on changes since the baseline year, GWP* can allow a historically high emitter to look good by making minor cuts to their emissions.     When used at any level other than globally, the use of the baseline year bakes in the current unequal distribution of responsibility for methane emissions and simply projects this situation into the future. The usual baseline year is 20 years before today, and so would imply rich countries’ retaining their high share of global methane emissions, mainly due to their high meat and dairy consumption. This precludes any debate about the equity of responsibility for current and ongoing emissions, and favours today’s high emitters, while not allowing developing countries with low emissions any space to grow in the future.     The tempting narrative that some in the beef and dairy industry have started to promote is that GWP* (“the latest science”) tells us methane emissions are not as serious as we thought they were, and only small reductions are required. Industry-backed statements along the lines of the “UK’s livestock is not contributing to climate heating since numbers have not increased in recent years” may seem correct and convincing when looking at the GWP* results without delving into the nuances. The correct statement, however, is that the “UK’s livestock is not contributing additional warming compared to already high levels”....     This narrative is dangerous. It can be used to shift the burden of responsibility for tackling climate change further away from the agricultural sector. And it conceals the important role that methane reduction can play in keeping temperature rise to within 1.5°C, particularly by enabling near-term reductions of warming... The authors of GWP* cautioned that using it to water down ambitious climate mitigation targets would lead to invalid results... Because of the added complexity of GWP*... it is not a drop-in replacement for existing greenhouse gas accounting metrics like GWP100. To do so is akin to setting a temperature target in celsius but then reporting progress in fahrenheit.     Research has found that such a replacement would imperil the Paris agreement’s goals. The meat and dairy lobby are (correctly) betting on policymakers not understanding these subtle yet vital differences. We must not allow these high emitters to shirk their responsibilities.
The meat and dairy industry is not ‘climate neutral’ https://theconversation.com/the-meat-and-dairy-industry-is-not-climate-neutral-despite-some-eye-catching-claims-219369
Imagine a house is on fire, and someone is actively pouring gas on the fire. They then pour a little less gas and want credit for doing so, despite still feeding the fire. Perhaps they claim they are now “fire neutral”. We’d rightly be very sceptical of such claims. Yet that is more or less what some influential supporters of the livestock industry have done... The claims are especially striking because methane is a potent greenhouse gas that accounts for 0.5°C of global warming so far, and we know that livestock production accounts for about one-third of human-caused emissions... So these claims certainly deserve scrutiny. In a paper now published... I argue that these claims represent a distorted understanding of the science. There’s a risk that they could be used for greenwashing and undermining confidence in this area of climate science. We show how easily subtle shifts in definitions, combined with overlooking key facts, can distort understanding to the point where significant emitters of greenhouse gases are presented as “climate neutral”.     The term “climate neutral” was first coined by policy makers to refer to net-zero emissions of greenhouse gases. These gases were measured using a long-established scale that represents their warming effect over a 100-year period, expressed in CO₂ equivalents – this is the so-called “global warming potential” or GWP100... But GWP100 is still imperfect because while most methane is in the atmosphere for only a couple of decades, carbon dioxide can linger for centuries. That’s why in 2018 some academics introduced a new metric called GWP* to better represent the warming impact over time. But the reports we examine have used GWP* to subtly shift the meaning of the term climate neutral from net-zero emissions to net-zero additional warming, where “additional” refers to warming on top of that already caused by the livestock sector, not warming compared to if the sector stopped entirely. This means a historically high emitter such as the beef industry can get off easily. Using GWP*, a livestock sector with high but declining methane emissions can claim to be climate neutral since it adds less additional methane to the atmosphere – and therefore less additional warming – each year. This is referred to in some of these studies as a “cooling effect”, which is misleading since it’s not cooling the atmosphere, only warming it slightly less. These studies also fail to make clear that, like methane itself, this “cooling” effect of methane reductions is temporary. And the level at which they stabilise will likely still be high enough to cause significant warming... 
Legumes: A Vehicle for Transition to Sustainability https://doi.org/10.3390/nu16010098
Legumes are an excellent source of protein and have been used in the human diet for centuries. Consumption of legumes has been linked to several health benefits, including a lower risk of cardiovascular diseases, type 2 diabetes mellitus, and certain types of cancer, while legumes’ high fiber content promotes digestive health. Aside from the positive health benefits, one of the most significant advantages of legumes is the low environmental footprint of their cultivation. They can be grown in a variety of climates and soil types, and they require less water and fertilizer than other crops, making them a sustainable option for farmers. Thanks to their nutritional and physicochemical properties, they are widely used by the food industry since the growing popularity of plant-based diets and the increasing demand for alternatives to meat offers the opportunity to develop legume-based meat substitutes. As the use of legumes as a source of protein becomes widespread, new market opportunities could be created for farmers and food industries, while the reduction in healthcare costs could have a potential economic impact. Achieving widespread adoption of legumes as a sustainable source of protein requires coordinated efforts by individuals, governments, and the private sector. The objective of this narrative review is to present the benefits coming from legume consumption in terms of health and environmental sustainability, and underline the importance of promoting their inclusion in the daily dietary pattern as well as their use as functional ingredients and plant-based alternatives to animal products...
Environmental Indicators of Vegan and Vegetarian Diets https://doi.org/10.3390/su16010249
... the production of animal-derived foods significantly contributes to the environmental footprint of the agri-food sector, considering, among others, such indicators as land use, greenhouse gas emissions, and the water footprint... The aim of this study was... to assess the environmental indicators of vegetarian, vegan, and meat-containing diets of a selected group of Polish consumers... The study showed the elimination of meat and other animal-derived foods from the respondents’ diet was predominantly motivated by their concerns related to animal welfare issues, which appeared to be a stronger factor than the willingness to reduce the diets’ environmental footprint... [still,] the studied vegetarian and vegan diets were characterized by 47.0% and 64.4% lower carbon footprint, 32.2% and 60.9% lower land use indicators, and 37.1% and 62.9% lower water footprints, respectively, compared to the meat-containing diet. Animal-derived foods, including milk and dairy, appeared to be the main contributors to all three environmental footprint indicators of both the meat-containing and the vegetarian diets... The study confirms moving towards more plant-based diet has a potential to significantly reduce the diet’s environmental footprint...      The environmental impact of food production and consumption is multidimensional and primarily concerns greenhouse gas emissions, land use for agriculture as well as water resources consumption (water footprint). It is estimated approximately 26% of anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions result from processes related to food production, processing, distribution, and consumption, of which agriculture-related emissions account for... 81% when emissions related to the land-use change are included... livestock production, globally, accounts for about 5% of anthropogenic CO2 emissions, 44% of CH4 emissions, and 53% of N2O emissions. Cattle farming accounts for approximately 65% of emissions from this sector... beef is the least efficient source of protein in terms of CO2 eq. emissions generated... The main sources of greenhouse gas emissions from livestock include enteric fermentation of ruminants, cultivation, and production of feeds, land use change related to the expansion of pasture for grazing animals and cropland for growing feed crops, manure management, energy use in the production, and finally all emissions related to processing.      An important aspect of the environmental impact of food production is the use of land... in 2019 land area used by agriculture accounted for 4.8 billion hectares and about one-third of the global land area. Of this, about one-third was cropland, while the remaining two-thirds were covered by meadows and pastures used for livestock. In addition, about one-third of the mentioned cropland was dedicated to forage crops. Such a contribution of the livestock production to the land use is due to the fact that far more energy and protein needs to be provided to livestock compared to the amount of energy and nutrients that can be obtained from their products. The protein conversion factor for none of the animal-based products is higher than 30%, which means at least 70% of the protein consumed by livestock is then not available for human consumption. Beef has the lowest protein and energy conversion factor. On average, only 3.8% of the plant proteins supplied to beef cattle in feeds is then available for human consumption in the final product. This is one of the main reasons why beef is the most disadvantageous product in terms of land use.      A third important indicator of the environmental impact of food production is water footprint... Among all food products, beef is considered to generate the largest water footprint. For the same energy value, it has about 20 times the water footprint of cereal crops... As with the land use rates, the differences in water footprint between various animal products are primarily caused by different feed conversion efficiencies, and consequently different feed requirements. Plant-based foods are generally characterized by significantly smaller water footprints per equal nutritional value than foods of animal origin...
America is draining its precious groundwater https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2023/12/24/climate/groundwater-crisis-chicken-cheese.html
America’s striking dietary shift in recent decades, toward far more chicken and cheese, has not only contributed to concerns about American health but has taken a major, undocumented toll on underground water supplies. The effects are being felt in key agricultural regions nationwide as farmers have drained groundwater to grow animal feed. In Arkansas for example, where cotton was once king, the land is now ruled by fields of soybeans to feed the chickens, a billion or so of them, that have come to dominate the region’s economy. And Idaho, long famous for potatoes, is now America’s largest producer of alfalfa to feed the cows that supply the state’s huge cheese factories. Today alfalfa, a particularly water-intensive crop used largely for animal feed, covers 6 million acres of irrigated land, much of it in the driest parts of the American West. These transformations are tied to the changing American diet. Since the early 1980s, America’s per-person cheese consumption has doubled, largely in the form of mozzarella-covered pizza pies. And last year, for the first time, the average American ate 100 pounds of chicken, twice the amount 40 years ago…     Most of America’s irrigated farmland grows crops that don’t directly feed humans but instead are used to feed animals or to produce ethanol for fuel. And most of that irrigation water comes from aquifers. Those crops have expanded into areas that don’t have enough water to sustain them, affecting some important aquifers across the country by contributing to groundwater overuse. Aquifer depletion for animal feed is occurring in places including Texas, the Central Valley of California, the High Plains in Kansas, Arizona and other areas that lack enough water from rivers and streams to irrigate the crops. Irrigated acreage for corn, about half of which goes toward animal feed, jumped sixfold between 1964 and 2017, federal numbers show. Irrigated acres for soybean, mostly used for animals, has jumped eightfold…     The toll on aquifers, which supply 90 percent of America’s water systems, has been devastating. A Times investigation this year revealed that many of those aquifers are being severely overtaxed by agriculture and industry, and that the federal government has left oversight to the states, where tangles of rules are failing to protect those aquifers. Food choices have long led to debates not only about personal health, but also animal welfare, cultural expectations and the role of government regulations in shaping people’s diets. The damage that animal agriculture is doing to fragile aquifers, while less documented, is particularly important: The decline of the aquifers could affect what Americans eat, and potentially become a threat to America’s food supply… today aquifer levels are far below where they were 50 years ago. And they continue to fall. “We’ve been using more water than we’ve been putting back into the aquifer… Everybody thought, this was such a huge resource, we can’t ever deplete it”…     But each pound of cheese produced requires, on average, 10 pounds of milk. And the cows producing that milk need to eat high-protein foods, including alfalfa… growing alfalfa can consume significantly more water than potatoes, barley or wheat… As the dairy industry has exploded… it’s changed the crop rotation from low-water-use crops to high-water-use crops…     Arkansas is America’s chicken headquarters… As a result, soybean acres have soared over the decades, becoming the state’s largest row crop, nearly all grown on land irrigated with groundwater. Corn acreage has increased as well, also using groundwater. Taken together, corn, soybean, and water for poultry operations account for more than half the state's water use. Then there’s the state’s most famous crop: rice, also grown with groundwater. That has stressed what was once a bountiful aquifer… Almost two-thirds of the state’s aquifer-monitoring wells show a decrease in water levels since 1980, one of the worst rates in the country… It adds up to hundreds of gallons of water used to produce each grocery-store rotisserie bird. Though beef remains the most water intensive meat, the huge increase in consumption of less expensive chicken contributes to the high water intensity of the American diet…
A novel LCA-based indicator for food dishes  https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jclepro.2023.140241
Many studies aimed at estimating the environmental impacts associated with the food sector, but most of the existing developed indicators limited the problem only to the climate change, while it is well-known that the food sector may extend its influence on a wider spectrum of environmental categories. In this work, the Life Cycle Assessment was applied to a list of 1001 recipes for an Italian food canteen, prepared with more than 150 ingredients, with the purpose to develop a comprehensive environmental indicator... includes... global warming potential (GWP), particulate matter formation, land occupation, human non-carcinogenic toxicity and water consumption... meat-based and fish-based recipes resulted the main impacting ones (77% for the former and 73% for the latter), demonstrating to be the two classes mainly responsible for the environmental impacts observed, even if the vegetarian and vegan food dishes represent the 41% in mass… The key findings can be summarized as follows: Meat-based dishes are found to be the most impacting ones... while the remaining 4 are dominated by fish-based dishes...
How sustainable is plant-based meat? Beyond Meat answered https://www.greenqueen.com.hk/beyond-meat-lca-burger-vs-beef-environmental-impact/
In 2018, Beyond Meat commissioned... a life-cycle assessment (LCA) of its original Beyond Burger (launched in 2015), which found that the plant-based product produces 90% fewer greenhouse gas emissions, requires 46% less energy, has over 99% less impact on water scarcity, and 93% less impact on land use, compared to beef. The Beyond Burger has gone through two more iterations since then, culminating in version 3.0, which was released in 2021. Now, it has released a second LCA – conducted by Dutch research firm Blonk Consultants and compliant with ISO standards – comparing this product to a conventional beef patty... the new Beyond Meat LCA focused on global warming impact, land use, water consumption, and non-renewable fossil resource scarcity...     When compared to a standard 80/20 quarter-pound beef patty produced in the US, the LCA found that Beyond Meat’s burger generates 90% fewer GHG emissions, requires 37% non-renewable energy, uses 97% less land, and consumes 97% less water. If incorporating land use change, even with the ingredient production being the main driver for the plant-based patty, the Beyond Burger has 89% less global warming impact. These results are comparable to the 2018 LCA of the first Beyond Meat burger.
Behaviors towards Plant-Rich Dietary Patterns and Practices https://doi.org/10.3390/nu15234990
Expert groups recommend that populations adopt dietary patterns higher in whole, plant-based foods and lower in red and processed meat as a high-impact climate action... The United States’ food system and the average American dietary pattern are not sustainable for supporting long-term human and planetary health and societal well-being. There is growing consensus that sustainable diets support nutrition security and human health, environmental and ecological health, social equity, and economic prosperity... Reducing human consumption of red and processed meats and shifting people toward dietary patterns higher in minimally processed, whole-plant-based foods (i.e., pulses, legumes, whole grains, nuts, seeds, fruits, and vegetables) is a high-impact action that can mitigate the food system’s impact on climate change. This strategy has been recommended by US and international expert bodies to promote human and planetary health... The high US consumer demand for and overconsumption of red meat (i.e., beef, pork, and lamb) and processed meats is of particular concern, as diets rich in these products are linked to an increased risk of type 2 diabetes, heart disease, stroke, and colorectal cancer... The large-scale industrialized agricultural production of beef in the US contributes to environmental degradation, as it requires significant water and land use compared to plant-based foods, and produces substantial greenhouse gas emissions, especially methane, that negatively impact the climate...
Nitrogen pollution reduction targets: a more plant-based diet is key https://joint-research-centre.ec.europa.eu/jrc-news-and-updates/nitrogen-pollution-reduction-targets-more-plant-based-diet-key-2023-12-20_en
Intensive livestock farming and a diet excessively rich in animal products results in substantial amounts of reactive nitrogen losses into the environment. This causes several forms of air, water and soil pollution, contributing to climate change. Depletion of nitrogen in the soil is considered one of the main causes of losses in biodiversity and natural resources. Healthy soils are the basis for our food security and for the work of farmers... Global nitrogen losses pose a serious threat to environmental sustainability. Excess nitrates can lead to water pollution resulting in algal blooms, biodiversity losses and air pollution. These losses also compromise the farming sector’s ability to feed a growing population, which is not sustainably possible with diets high in meat.     This report strengthens the scientific evidence around nitrogen and food systems and calls for more ambitious actions to make the current food system more sustainable. A balanced range of actions, including halved meat and dairy consumption (‘demitarian’ approach) with improved farm and food chain management, and reinforcing a circular economy and the role of livestock in it, could achieve a 49% reduction in nitrogen losses. Encouraging more plant-based diets can promote human health and a healthier planet...     More balanced diets, predominantly plant-based, would have lower nitrogen footprints, less greenhouse gas emissions and would bring positive health outcomes. There are other health considerations too. High nitrate levels in our drinking water and food can increase the risk of non-communicable diseases, including cancer, thyroid disease and cardiovascular disease. Another way to reduce nitrogen losses from the soil, the scientists found, is to reduce food waste and improve wastewater treatment so more nutrients are recovered. The report also found that, in 2015, only 18% of nitrogen in the European food system was used in food and fibre products, while most of the remaining was wasted by loss to the environment, contributing to air, water and soil pollution, which threaten our climate, biodiversity and human health...
The Political Economy of Food System Transformation https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198882121.001.0001
Today’s food production and consumption has large consequences for the environment and human health. With respect to climate change, our food system is now responsible for at least a third of the global anthropogenic greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. In particular, the production of red meat has become the largest source of methane, which is a powerful short-lived GHG. Livestock production is also the single largest driver of habitat loss, and a leading cause of soil erosion, water, and nutrient pollution across the world, which increasingly compound pressures on ecosystems and biodiversity. In addition, scientific evidence suggests strong associations between meat consumption and health risks including total mortality, cardiovascular diseases, colorectal cancer, and type 2 diabetes. This issue of overconsumption is particularly salient for developed countries and large emerging economies where meat consumption is high (i.e., >20–30kg per person per year). Recent systematic reviews suggest that domestic demand in countries with tropical rainforests cause a significant proportion of agriculturally driven tropical deforestation. Hence, rapid dietary changes toward more plant-based diets are a critical component of global food system transformation as they hold the promise to make important contributions to solving health, climate, and ecological crises. Without such changes, achieving the Paris Agreement targets and many Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) is unlikely, even if all other sectors were to achieve rapid transition toward sustainability... 
Sustainability concepts in plant-based and dairy yoghurts
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodqual.2023.105077
It is increasingly clear that the use of animal-based protein for food has unsustainable effects on the environment and human health due to the high demand that it places on land and water use, its heavy resource requirements for feed and housing, its production of greenhouse gases and the impact of animal fat on cardiovascular health. Transition to a plant-based diet is increasingly seen as a key goal for ensuring human health and the sustainability of global food supplies...
Plant-based diets: An analysis of the impact of a CO2 food label https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvp.2023.102216
To reduce greenhouse gas emissions and keep the goals of the 2015 Paris Agreement within reach, ambitious climate action is required... the current global food system is responsible for up to 37 percent of global anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions and contributes, amongst other things, to biodiversity loss, water scarcity, and deforestation, risking global food security in the long term. Further, unsustainable diets – especially the excessive consumption of animal products in industrialized countries – are a significant driver of the food systems’ negative environmental externalities. Although transforming the global food system will require action and changes by multiple actors along the supply chain... a demand-side shift that increases the share of plant-based diets would significantly decrease the carbon footprint of the latter.
Carbon opportunity cost increases footprint of grain-finished beef https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0295035
Beef production accounts for the largest share of global livestock greenhouse gas emissions and is an important target for climate mitigation efforts. Most life-cycle assessments comparing the carbon footprint of beef production systems have been limited to production emissions. None also consider potential carbon sequestration due to grazing and alternate uses of land used for production. We assess the carbon footprint... including... carbon opportunity cost—the potential carbon sequestration that could occur on land if it were not used for production...     We find that pasture-finished operations have 20% higher production emissions and 42% higher carbon footprint than grain-finished systems. We also find that more land-intensive operations generally have higher carbon footprints... The carbon opportunity cost of operations was, on average, 130% larger than production emissions. These results point to the importance of accounting for carbon opportunity cost in assessing the sustainability of beef production systems and developing climate mitigation strategies...     Our conclusion that beef operations with low land-use intensity, including grain-finished operations, have lower carbon footprints than pasture-finished operations and others with high land-use intensity provides important insights for agricultural stakeholders globally such as in Brazil where pasture expansion is a leading driver of forest loss. Accounting for products’ carbon opportunity cost, not just production emissions or soil carbon sequestration, could shift which production systems government programs, corporate procurement, investors, and consumers incentivize.
We raise 18 billion animals a year to die — and don’t even eat them https://www.vox.com/future-perfect/22890292/food-waste-meat-dairy-eggs-milk-animal-welfare
Almost 1 in every 4 animals raised on a factory farm never actually makes it to your plate. Instead, they die for nothing. That’s according to a study... that sheds new light on the global toll of food waste on animals... in 2019, 18 billion of the 75 billion pigs, chickens, turkeys, cows, goats, and sheep raised for food around the world were never eaten. The study counted animals wasted at any point in the supply chain: those who died prematurely on the farm or on the way to the slaughterhouse; wasted in processing; and by restaurants, grocers, and consumers. (The study, however, did not include wasted seafood, which would likely account for hundreds of billions of fish and shrimp.)      Food waste is often thought of as just a food security issue — many people go hungry, and diverting edible food to those in need can prevent hunger and malnutrition. But it’s also a major environmental challenge. Food and agriculture account for around one-third of global greenhouse gas emissions, so every bite of food that’s lost or wasted represents carbon emissions spewed into the atmosphere that didn’t need to be. And when food ends up in landfills, it generates methane, a highly potent greenhouse gas. All told, six percent of global greenhouse gas emissions stem from food waste. Wasting meat is especially bad for the environment, since it has a much higher carbon footprint than plant-based foods. Food waste reduction could be an important tool in mitigating the number of animals churned through the factory farm system — and its immense environmental and ethical toll...
Pledges to slash methane pollution at COP28 leave out one big thing https://www.vox.com/23996919/cop28-climate-methane-pledge-oil-gas-emissions-agriculture
Methane is a mighty greenhouse gas, roughly 30 times more powerful than carbon dioxide when it comes to trapping heat in the atmosphere. About 60 percent of global methane emissions come from human activity, accounting for a quarter of all warming. But unlike carbon dioxide, it doesn’t linger that long in the sky, so cutting humanity’s methane output is one of the fastest ways to reduce the planet’s rate of warming... From tilling soil to planting crops, to fertilizer, livestock, manure, harvesting, shipping, and waste, food systems produce 34 percent of overall greenhouse gas emissions. Agriculture is the single-largest anthropogenic, or human-driven, source of methane, and most of that is from our appetite for meat. Animals raised for food account for 32 percent of human-driven methane. Just one cow can produce anywhere from 154 to 264 pounds of methane annually, so the 1.5 billion cattle raised for beef around the world together burp up 231 billion pounds of this greenhouse gas... According to the FAO, methane emissions from livestock have to fall 25 percent by 2030 compared to 2020 in order to stay on course for the Paris climate agreement goal to limit global warming this century to less than 1.5°C or 2.7°F. Overall emissions of heat-trapping gasses are still slated to increase, putting these goals almost out of reach...
Impacts of selected novel alternatives to conventional animal products https://www.unep.org/news-and-stories/press-release/novel-meat-and-dairy-alternatives-could-help-curb-climate-harming
Emerging novel alternatives to animal products such as meat and dairy may contribute to significantly reducing the environmental footprint of the current global food system, particularly in high- and middle-income countries, provided they use low-carbon energy. This is a key finding of a new UN Environment Programme (UNEP) assessment of such new alternatives to animal agriculture, a sector accounting for up to a fifth of planet-warming emissions... these alternatives not only show significant potential for reducing greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, but they can also contribute to reductions in land degradation and deforestation, water and soil pollution and loss of biodiversity, as well as to reducing the risks of zoonotic diseases and anti-microbial resistance. These novel alternatives could also help to significantly reduce animal welfare concerns, compared to their conventional counterparts... novel alternatives can likely play a role in supporting a more sustainable, healthier and more humane food system, with regional differences... “New food alternatives will offer a broader spectrum of consumer choices... Further, such alternatives can also lessen the pressures on agricultural lands and reduce emissions, thereby helping us address the triple planetary crisis – the crisis of climate change, the crisis of biodiversity and nature loss, the crisis of pollution and waste – as well as address the health and environmental consequences of the animal agriculture industry... The animal agriculture industry is a major driver of climate change: animal GHG emissions, feed production, changes in land use and energy-intensive global supply chains account for almost 60 per cent of food-related GHG emissions and 14-20 per cent of global GHG emissions...  
Why do people accept or reject climate policies? https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodpol.2023.102544
Our food systems are a major driver of global environmental change, accounting for a third of anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions, a third of terrestrial acidification, and almost four-fifths of eutrophication globally. Through agriculture-driven deforestation and overharvesting of marine resources, food systems are also the major driver of biodiversity loss globally, both on land and in the sea. If we are to reach the global environmental targets we have agreed upon internationally—e.g., through the UN conventions on climate change and biological diversity—global systems are in urgent need of a sustainability transition.     For a global transition in food systems to materialize, however, we will need a wide range of policy interventions supporting technical and behavioral changes across food supply chains, from producers to consumers. This is true not least for diet changes—in particular a shift from meat to plant-based food—which, in addition to having substantial health co-benefits, are required for keeping global food systems within environmental limits. The need for a shift to healthy and sustainable diets is also recognized in recent policy documents, like the EU Farm to Fork Strategy, or the new Nordic Nutrition Recommendations that calls for diets with less meat and more plant-based foods...
How food and agriculture contribute to climate change https://www.reuters.com/business/environment/factbox-how-food-agriculture-contribute-climate-change-2023-12-02/
Feeding the world is a big job, and the effort produces billions of mets of emissions of greenhouse gases each year - around a third of the global total. Despite the fact that food is a big climate problem, very little has been done so far to address it... One the biggest contributors is livestock. Global livestock production generates around 14.5% of all anthropogenic GHG emissions... Cattle are responsible for 65% of those emissions, largely as methane... Emissions also come from producing and processing animal feed, including tilling land to grow crops, which releases carbon dioxide stored in the soil... When forests are cleared for agricultural purposes like raising livestock or growing crops [also for feed], stored carbon is released into the atmosphere. Deforestation is responsible for nearly 80% of emissions from food production in Brazil, for instance, the world's largest exporter of beef and soybeans [mostly used for feed]. Peatlands, meanwhile, store massive amounts of carbon - twice as much as the world's forests.Draining or burning peatlands for purposes like growing crops or livestock grazing is responsible for about 5% of all anthropogenic emissions...
Perception of plant-based meat analogues https://doi.org/10.1016/j.appet.2023.107135
Current Western diets with high levels of animal-derived foods, especially meat, are unsustainable, having negative impacts on climate and the environment, human health, animal welfare and global food security. To address these issues and achieve the UN Sustainable Development Goals on a better and more sustainable future for all by 2030, a shift towards diets higher in plant-based foods and lower in animal-derived foods is necessary...
There’s less meat at this year’s climate talks. But there’s plenty of bull https://www.vox.com/future-perfect/2023/11/30/23981529/cop28-meat-livestock-dairy-farming-plant-based-united-nations-dubai-uae
One-third of global greenhouse gas emissions can be attributed to food, with meat and dairy accounting for the lion’s share of it but providing just 18 percent of the world’s calories. Meat and dairy production are also leading causes of other environmental ills, including deforestation, biodiversity loss, pandemic risk, and water pollution. Dairy production alone emits more greenhouse gases than global aviation. Plant-based foods typically have a much smaller carbon footprint, and require far less land and water...
Willingness for more vegetarian meals in school canteens https://doi.org/10.1016/j.appet.2023.107134
The rise of noncommunicable diseases (e.g., obesity, diabetes and cardiovascular diseases) as well as environmental threats (e.g., global warming, atmospheric pollution, water pollution and deforestation) requires the identification of dietary changes that will improve nutritional quality and reduce the environmental impact of diets. One of the dietary changes with the highest potential to help mitigate climate change and biodiversity loss and respond to health challenges is favouring plant-over animal-sourced food products by consuming more vegetables, fruits, whole grains, legumes, nuts, unsaturated oil and less red and processed meat...
Consumers’ perception of plant-based alternatives and changes over time https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodqual.2023.105057
Food produces around 20 to 30% to the total environmental impact caused by humans. The production of animal products (i.e., meat and dairy) significantly contributes to the emission of greenhouse gases and biodiversity loss and animal suffering. As a result of these challenges and aiming to reduce the environmental impact of our diet, consumers have grown more aware of various sustainability issues including environmental protection or animal welfare. One result of this grown awareness is that our current levels of meat consumption have been questioned and that vegetarian and vegan (veg*an) diets have increased significantly in recent years...     ... consumption levels significantly differ across countries and cultures. In the USA, it is relatively high with around 100 kg meat (sheep, pork, beef, and poultry) per capita and year. In Switzerland, it is lower with around 50 kg per capita and year... Current levels of meat consumption, however, come with some major challenges. In terms of health, some types of meat (i.e., processed meat or unprocessed red meat) have been found related to increased risk of non-communicable diseases such as cardiovascular disease, colorectal cancer or type-2 diabetes... Matching meat consumption with dietary guidelines to reduce these health risks at the same time reduces greenhouse gas emissions from meat production and thereby benefits the environment. Another reason not to eat meat are ethical concerns or animal welfare aspects...
Commercial weight-loss diets, greenhouse gas emissions and freshwater https://doi.org/10.1111/jhn.13248
Weight-loss diets had GHGe [greenhouse gas emission] footprints on average 4.4 times the [plant-forward] EAT-Lancet target recommended for planetary health (range: 2.4–8.5 times). Bovine meat was by far the largest contributor of GHGe in most diets that included it... Dietary patterns suggested by marketing materials and guidelines from commercial weight-loss diets can have high GHGe and water footprints...
Environmental imprints of agricultural and livestock produce https://doi.org/10.1111/jhn.13239
In India, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka, the production of livestock (meat/bovine/shrimp and milk) was reported to be harmful to the environment...
Meat versus alternatives: which is better for the environment and health? https://doi.org/10.1111/jhn.13219
... meat alternatives are likely to be better for health according to most parameters, while also being more environmentally friendly, with lower GHGEs [greenhouse gas emissions]...
Simple dietary substitutions can reduce carbon footprints https://doi.org/10.1038/s43016-023-00864-0
Changing what foods we eat could reduce environmental harms and improve human health... If all consumers who ate the high-carbon foods instead consumed a lower-carbon substitute, the total dietary carbon footprint in the United States would be reduced by more than 35%... The foods we eat have major implications for both personal and planetary health. Food production is a key contributor to climate change, accounting for approximately a third of total human-caused greenhouse gas emissions. Poor dietary quality is also a leading cause of morbidity and mortality, increasing the risk of obesity, type 2 diabetes, heart disease and some cancers and contributing to an estimated 11 million deaths worldwide every year. Experts agree that substantial changes to food systems are needed to meet the goals of the Paris Agreement on climate change and curb rising rates of diet-related diseases. Adopting diets high in fruits, vegetables and legumes and lower in red and processed meats (and in particular, meats from ruminant animals) is one strategy for individuals to reduce both their personal carbon footprints from food production and their risk of diet-related diseases... 
The effect of restaurant meal names on affective appeal https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodqual.2023.105042
Reducing meat consumption could materially reduce global greenhouse gas emissions... With food contributing nearly 25% to global emissions, changing meal choices for even the smallest of market segments can make a meaningful contribution to climate change mitigation...
Climate-Friendly, Health-Promoting, and Culturally Acceptable Diets https://doi.org/10.3390/proceedings2023091003
Many countries have committed themselves to substantially reducing greenhouse gas emissions (GHGEs) to address climate change. Due to the large share of emissions coming from food production, shifting to a more plant-based diet is desirable... Compared to the observed diet, the climate-friendly omnivorous diet contained less red meat, dairy products, and sweetened beverages but more bread, vegetables, and fruits...
Effective communication of plant-based foods https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/B9780323988285000152
Meat overproduction and overconsumption are at the centre of the debate concerning the protection of the planetary natural resources and the strategies that can be enacted to limit the negative consequences of current industry and consumption practices. While the food industry is responsible for almost 30% of total consumption’s environmental burdens, animal-based products, in particular, have a considerably more negative effect on the environment (e.g., green-house emission) than most nutritionally equivalent plant-based foods. As a result, calls have been put out for the broader adoption of diets incorporating more plant-based foods...
Farmers use more water from the Colorado River than some States https://projects.propublica.org/california-farmers-colorado-river/
As the Colorado River snakes through the deserts of the Southwest United States, its water is diverted to cities, states, tribes and farmers along its course. Drought, climate change and growth have taxed the river in recent decades, and the federal government has called for cuts in usage. But the water still flows... no group is owed more of the river than an irrigation district in the Imperial Valley, one of the driest stretches of California desert... a majority of the water consumed by farms in the valley goes to members of just 20 extended families. The district — and by extension, the farmers it serves — has access to enormous amounts of cheap water from the shrinking river... Farmers in one family... used an estimated 260,000 acre-feet, more water than the entire Las Vegas metropolitan area uses... only a few families used a majority of the water they got to grow food that people eat. Instead... most use the bulk of their water growing hay to feed livestock... Some of it is used to feed nearly 400,000 cows that are raised here in the scorching desert. Significant quantities are shipped out of the valley — both domestically and overseas... shipping alfalfa overseas to feed other nations’ livestock is akin to exporting water that’s desperately needed back home... While agriculture consumes the vast majority of the water used here, most of the crops are eaten by livestock... Ultimately... solutions like convincing American consumers to give up meat just one day a week might be the best way to save enough water to prop up the river. Until then, a small group of farmers will continue using more water than many cities.
Consumer values as shapers of meat alternative interest https://doi.org/10.1016/j.appet.2023.107114
The current food system is largely based on animals as the main protein source causing a burden on the environment. Worldwide, meat production is responsible for 57 % of food production greenhouse gas emissions, contributing also to water usage and loss of biodiversity. Considering that the global population tend to grow, the burden of meat consumption is expected to increase. To avoid this, a shift towards plant-based diets is required...
Designing climate labels for green food choices   https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jclepro.2023.139490
The food we eat plays a large role in greenhouse gas emissions... Certain diets are associated with greater footprints. Dietary shifts, especially in wealthier nations with affluent diets, can substantially reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. The reductions that can be achieved by technology is limited, therefore modifying consumption behavior is necessary...      The food supply chain contributes to 26% of global anthropogenic GHG emissions. Agriculture produces the most emissions followed by food processing and logistics and the end-of-life phase. Farming accounts for 61% of food’s GHG emissions – 81% when taking deforestation into account... Rearing ruminants as a source of meat and milk contributes to high methane emissions and releases large quantities of GHG emissions through the clearing of forests for pasture and agricultural land. Raising meat is largely inefficient in that less than 10% of animal feed becomes edible meat and only 38 kg of plant-based animal feed is converted to 1 kg of edible beef. Other agricultural aspects associated with GHG emissions include enteric fermentation, manure management, and field burning among others...      Although food producers can improve their impact by technically optimizing processes, agricultural emissions cannot be completely eliminated due to emissions from natural processes. Adopting a sustainable diet can achieve greater GHG reductions than can be achieved by producers. Compared to omnivorous diets (4.16 kg CO2e per day), vegan diets are associated with the lowest impacts (1.02 kg CO2e per day), followed by vegetarian (1.59 kg CO2e per day) and pesco-vegetarian (1.74 kg CO2e per day) diets. A plant-based diet reduces emissions by up to 49%, of which 73% are achieved by choosing lower impact alternatives and halving animal product consumption... Emissions from the production of organic or local foods as well as different types of food are also underestimated (e.g., meat and cheese) attribute this to the perceived lack of transparency of production and distribution processes of food and their associated impacts. Informing consumers of their impact can enable them to change their consumption patterns and ultimately achieve significant benefits for the environment... 
The potential of CO2-based production cycles in biotechnology https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-42790-6
Currently, food production is accountable for 25–30% of annual CO2 emissions, thereby constituting a major driver of the climate crisis. Additionally, we are using 38% of the global land surface for agriculture, of which approximately two-thirds are used as pasture land and one-third as crop land... the demand for food is growing - and so is the demand for land, a finite resource. Livestock husbandry... contributes significantly to agricultural CO2 emissions. In fact, worldwide meat production has exceeded 350 million tons per year and is accountable together with dairy production for 14.5% of annual greenhouse gas emissions, while delivering only 18% of the daily calorie intake consumed by humans. Producing and consuming meat, dairy, and other protein products in a way that has less of an impact on the environment is one of the most urgent global concerns...
“I'll take the easiest option please”. Carbon reduction preferences https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jclepro.2023.139398
The depth and breadth of the climate crisis is well known, all sectors, industry, government and the individual have the potential to reduce emissions to slow or stop catastrophic climate change... Results showed the public were unwilling to make large-scale lifestyle changes, even if they would cause large emission reductions. There was a clear preference for making relatively easy, convenient changes to behaviour rather than making more difficult personal lifestyle changes involving diet and transportation.       The climate crisis is the biggest challenge of the modern age; our changing climate impacts all facets of human life and our behaviour directly influences the severity of the issues at hand. Since we have caused global climate change, human behaviour has a fundamental role in countering it. A large percentage of emissions are generated by households in developed countries through their consumption of goods and services. The United Kingdom (alongside America, Europe and other nations) far exceeds the limit of greenhouse gas emissions that would facilitate keeping the global temperature rise to 1.5°C...      The scope of individual behaviours that need to change to limit global temperature rise to the 1.5°C value recommended by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change is vast. Whilst many policy interventions must target industrial polluters directly, the demand of individuals must also be addressed. Identifying and ranking which behaviours the public are willing to change in terms of their emission generation can aid in prioritising which carbon emission generation areas to target, and if the actions the public would prefer could yield significant reductions in carbon emissions...       The most potent behavioural changes would be to areas such as personal transportation and diet that typically contribute a high percentage of an individual's carbon emissions. However, policies that require large scale lifestyle choices may spark considerable resistance when the public are expected to change in order to reduce emissions...      However, this awareness does not translate into action, the preferences demonstrated across demographics and attitudes clearly show the public are unwilling to make the more difficult changes to their lifestyles, such as changing their diet – a daily challenge but one with a considerable potential for carbon reduction. The desire to consume, to carry on life as normal with its excess of carbon emissions and their detrimental effects outweighs the public's self-reported concerns and attitudes towards climate change.
Impacts of a Shift to Plant Proteins https://profundo.nl/en/projects/impacts-of-a-shift-to-plant-proteins
To restrict global warming to 1.5°C and avoid a further increase in catastrophic weather events, greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions must be significantly cut by 2030. Agriculture, particularly unsustainably high livestock production, is one significant contributor to human made GHG emissions. This role is caused by direct emissions, including the release of the highly potent GHG methane from enteric fermentation processes of ruminants and manure management, as well as indirect emissions due to high feed consumption. Moreover, meat production is linked to a significantly larger land and water footprint than plant products.      Beef, pork, and chicken are responsible for the largest share of GHG emissions, land use and water pollution from livestock. Their consumption has reached unprecedented volumes and is forecast to further increase... As a blanket reduction worldwide would further enshrine inequalities for low-income geographies, this research focusses global reduction scenarios on regions with exceedingly high animal protein intake in the Global North and some high-consuming nations in Latin America and Asia. A 30%-reduction of conventional meat production by 2030 against a 2021 baseline and substitution with a mix of alternative protein products are estimated to lead to net savings of more than 700 million tons of CO2-equivalent (CO2e) emissions, or the annual emissions of Saudi Arabia. It would also reduce land requirements by more than 3 million km2 or the entire area of India. Moreover, almost 19 km3 of surface and groundwater could be saved...      Europe (EU+UK) has a much higher per capita consumption of meat than the global average. If Europeans would substitute meat with alternative products on two days per week, this would mean a reduction in their meat consumption by about 40%. Next to significant savings in land and water use, the estimated net GHG emission savings from such a cut equal about 2% of the annual global emissions from meat production.      With beef having the largest environmental footprint among livestock, the estimates find that a 30% reduction in beef production in key regions would make 1.9 million km2 of land with potential for food crop production available, an area equal to Mexico. Growing a mix of protein crops on the freed land could increase the global availability of plant proteins by more than 50 million tons. This additional protein volume could fulfil the protein needs of more than 20% of the world population in 2030.       The prominent actors in the global meat supply chain – slaughterhouses, retailers, and food service companies – account for a considerable share of meat sales and related profits. This gives them a responsibility for the associated GHG emissions and land and water footprint and to contribute to their reduction. Looking at 20 leading meat producers, a 30% cut in their annual beef, pork and chicken meat output and replacement with alternative protein products could reduce GHG emissions by a volume similar to the annual emissions of the Netherlands.       Based on different protein substitution scenarios, a replacement of half the beef, pork, and chicken meat sales of five leading international retailers and one food service companies could save more than 30 million tons of GHG emissions, similar to the annual emissions of Norway... Fast-food chain McDonald’s with its worldwide restaurant network is alone responsible for sourcing around 1.5% of the global beef production... a 50% cut in beef sales by the chain and replacement with alternative products could save more than 15 million tons of GHG emissions, free a land area the size of Austria, and save the equivalent blue water volume of 80,000 swimming pools...
Grain legume production in Europe for food, feed and meat-substitution https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gfs.2023.100723
Partial shifts from animal-based to plant-based proteins in human diets could reduce environmental pressure from food systems and serve human health. Grain legumes can play an important role here... we assessed area expansion and yield increases needed for European self-sufficiency of faba bean, pea and soybean. We show that such production could use substantially less cropland (4–8%) and reduce GHG emissions (7–22% [from] current meat production) when substituting for animal-derived food proteins... It is widely understood that global food systems need to be transformed to reduce their substantial adverse environmental impacts, e.g., methane emission from livestock and N2O emissions from fertilizer use at crops. The production of meat-sourced proteins is of particular concern, as their environmental impact is around ten times greater on a mass basis and has CO2 emissions around 30 times more than those of plant-based proteins. At the same time, there is currently increased interest in plant-based proteins, due to awareness that a protein transition from animal-to plant-based would enhance healthy and sustainable diets... At the same time, area expansion of legumes will lead to more diverse cropping systems, which is advocated by many... The effect of biological N fixation, and delivery of ecosystem services by enhanced crop protection against pests and diseases thanks to a more diverse cropping system and consequent yield enhancement of subsequent crops in the rotation, are often underestimated by farmers. This is likely to become more important now that fertilizer prices have increased and European policies target the reduction of external inputs and emissions… The substitution of mineral nitrogen fertilisers through biologically fixed nitrogen by grain legumes will also lower GHG emission in agriculture. Substantial extra environmental benefits can be achieved when legumes are directly used for human consumption, instead of indirectly by conversion through feed into livestock. We estimated the GHG savings to be ca. 25–74 Tg CO2 eqv. (7–22% reduction in emissions from meat production), and land savings ca. 6–11 M ha (4–8% of current cropland) depending on the production scenario chosen. Such dietary changes require significant changes in the food system, human nutrition and associated behaviour, which will require substantial time and incentives.
Impact of pictorial warning labels on meat meal selection https://doi.org/10.1016/j.appet.2023.107026
Meat consumption has been linked to adverse health consequences, worsening climate change, and the risk of pandemics... meat consumption has been linked to poorer health outcomes, worsening climate change, and more recently as a contributor to pandemic infections. For example, excessive meat consumption is associated with increased risk of obesity, cardiovascular disease, infertility, diabetes, and cancer... Meat consumption also contributes heavily to deaths from pollution and climate change with meat production in China being linked to 90,000 pollution related deaths and in the United States being linked to nearly 13,000 pollution related deaths. Between 12 and 18% of anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions can be attributed to the livestock industry... meat-free diets can reduce greenhouse gas emissions, land use, and biodiversity loss relative to standard diets. To help combat climate change consuming at least 20% less meat is recommended...
The effects of dietary changes in Europe on greenhouse gas emissions https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/ad0681
Livestock farming is one of the main sources of greenhouse gas emissions. In Europe, the agricultural sectors of Ireland and Denmark are the most livestock-intensive. Based on a scenario analysis using the CGE model MAGNET, this study estimates the effects of dietary changes toward the recommendations of the EAT-Lancet Commission in Europe on the agricultural sector of Ireland and Denmark. Results show that full adoption of the [plant-forward] diet leads to significant reductions in agricultural emissions, particularly methane, with potential emission savings of 26.4%... in Ireland and 21.7%... in Denmark... Policymakers should promote plant-based diets and monitor export dynamics to achieve effective emission reductions. Additionally, methane mitigation strategies should be integrated into climate plans...
Health and sustainability impacts of scenarios of replacement of beef https://doi.org/10.1093/eurpub/ckad160.347
High consumption of red meat is an important cause of burden of disease and environmental degradation globally. To motivate changes in food consumption and production, policymakers need evidence on the overall impact of such changes on the health of citizens, and on all aspects of sustainability: environment, socioeconomics, and culture... we compared the impact of four scenarios of replacement of beef consumption with pulses (a well-established plant protein source) in two EU countries, Portugal and Denmark. First, health impacts were quantified in disability-adjusted life years (DALY); second, sustainability impact was measured using various social, economic and environmental indicators. Finally, we used... an interactive, iterative, multicriteria decision analysis approach, to create a quantitative value model.       We estimated positive health impacts for all substitution scenarios in the two populations... The two countries had positive economic impacts... Environmental and social impacts of beef production were consistently higher [= worse] than pulses... each approach allowed us to compare health, sustainability and integrated impacts of different options for food substitutions relevant to the sustainability agenda... Different possible scenarios of substitution of beef consumption by pulses, an alternative plant-based protein source, will lead to overall positive health and sustainability impacts...
A rebalanced discussion of the roles of livestock in society https://doi.org/10.1038/s43016-023-00866-y
The many roles of animals in modern agriculture and food systems have come under considerable scrutiny in the context of sustainability. A recent Correspondence presented The Dublin Declaration... the Correspondence contains unsubstantiated generalizations and statements that go beyond the focus of the Declaration, particularly regarding the expansion of livestock production.      The authors... overlooked or downplayed research demonstrating the incompatibility of current and projected levels of consumption of animal products with the imperatives of bringing humanity’s economy within the planetary biophysical limits, that is, making it sustainable. If humanity accepts the use of other sentient beings for food and other purposes, meat as such is neither good nor bad. Yet, the current production and consumption of meat and other animal-derived foods in current quantities and qualities compromise the state of the environment, societal prosperity and stability, human and animal health and welfare, and epidemiological safety, thereby reducing overall societal well-being through accumulated negative externalities      Global adoption of the so-called modern, Western diets, to which the world is rapidly transitioning, is both quantifiably unachievable within the planetary resource base and unnecessary to meet human dietary requirements. The biggest issue in modern research on the role of livestock in human diets and livelihoods is not about accumulating more evidence to support the above, but about the best pathways to just transitions to sustainable food systems. This means food systems that take full account of people without sufficient access to adequate food or resources to provide for it, as well as actors whose livelihoods are currently dependent on livestock.       Shifting diets in high-income countries away from meat and dairy towards more diverse sources of protein and micronutrients, while amending socio-demographic differences in animal food consumption, is consistently identified as a key aspect of these pathways. It is also fully in line with the Declaration’s concerns.      The focus of the Declaration is on livestock production according to agroecological principles... However, research clearly shows that it is not possible to produce the amounts of meat corresponding to current or projected consumption levels under such principles while avoiding further deforestation and meeting environmental targets. That is, a transition to agroecological practices requires reductions in livestock consumption. Highly intensive production systems suffer from many environmental and social challenges, but at present they supply the most cost-effective and affordable animal products that enable Western diets. Only through downsizing global livestock production, internalizing its externalities and, consequently, making meat into a high-value food can agroecological systems be mainstreamed...      Finally, a comprehensive ethical analysis does not endorse favouring economic or socio-cultural factors over the obligation to uphold the interests of morally significant beings. To include only humans in the latter group is now widely regarded as speciesism or human chauvinism. Economic needs depend on socio-political arrangements and are by no means immutable conditions determining the ‘necessity’ for livestock, especially in numbers beyond health requirements...
Healthiness and sustainability of food service in healthcare settings https://doi.org/10.1093/eurpub/ckad160.008
Current dietary patterns threaten individual and planetary health. Healthcare settings can set a positive example for dietary change, but data on the quality of food they offer is scarce. Preliminary analysis... showed that animal-source foods (ASF) accounted for 70% of overall GHG emissions and land use and 76% of water use, primarily from beef, pork, milk, and cheese. Among plant-based foods, coffee disproportionately contributed to the environmental footprint. Red meat accounted for 30-45% of lunch calories consumed (13-25% of weight) and potatoes accounted for 20-24% of calories (31-35% of weight), whereas vegetables and legumes combined accounted for 11-15% of calories (33-35% of weight)... Healthcare institutions in Germany have poor adherence to the PHD [Planetary Health Diet], with up to two-thirds of calories derived from red meat and potatoes. Unsurprisingly, ASF account for the majority of the institutions’ environmental food footprint...
Eat plants and go electric: how to break food TV’s bad climate habits https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2023/oct/27/tv-cooking-shows-climate-change-sustainability
From product placement for unnecessary gadgets to meat-centred cooking, TV can make us think unsustainable is normal. When you... pull up a cooking show, chances are you’re just looking for a bit of entertainment... But if what you’re watching is constantly exposing you to images of sizzling steaks, roaring gas flames and all the fanciest new appliances, it might be reinforcing habits or norms that aren’t exactly climate friendly...    Unfortunately, what we’re shown on TV is rarely a great guide for how we might begin reducing the climate impacts of food, which accounts for somewhere between 25% and 33% of the planet’s greenhouse gas emissions. “Food systems are a vital piece of the climate puzzle... Even if we got rid of fossil fuels today, we would still have to change the way we’re eating.” So how do we change the way we eat?... Eat more plants... switching to a vegan or even just a “climatarian” diet (which excludes beef, lamb and goat, and limits poultry, pork and fish) is one of the most impactful climate actions a person can take...
Psychological biases deter consumers from taking effective action https://doi.org/10.1007/s11747-023-00981-z
 ... lay person sample seemed to underestimate the potential climate benefits of reducing red meat consumption, while experts noted this as one of the most impactful activities, consistent with prior research. This difference points to a knowledge gap and suggests that the general... population might not be aware that a shift to a more plant-based diet is one of the most impactful activities they can engage in at the household level. Estimates suggest that adopting a vegetarian diet could reduce annual per capita emissions by close to 1t of CO2e...
Industry figures behind ‘declaration of scientists’ backing meat eating https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2023/oct/27/revealed-industry-figures-declaration-scientists-backing-meat-eating
The scientific consensus is that we need rapid meat reduction in the regions that can afford that choice.” Studies in the highest-ranking scientific journals have concluded that cutting meat and dairy consumption in rich countries is the single best way to reduce a person’s impact on the environment and that the climate crisis cannot be beaten without such cuts. People already eat more meat than health guidelines recommend in most developed nations...
Brazil food sector accounts for 74% of emissions https://www.reuters.com/sustainability/cop/brazil-food-sector-accounts-74-emissions-study-2023-10-24/
Food production in Brazil, the world's biggest beef and [feed] soybean exporter, accounted for 74% of the country's greenhouse gas emissions in 2021... Most emissions do not come directly from food production, but deforestation to convert native vegetation into farms and pastures is the main source of carbon released from Brazil into the atmosphere... Of the 1.8 billion tons of greenhouse gases emitted from Brazil in 2021 to make food, nearly 78% was associated with beef production, including emissions linked with deforestation for livestock farming and pollution from beef packing plants... Ranked alongside countries, Brazil's beef industry alone would be the world's seventh-largest greenhouse gas emitter, ahead of major economies such as Japan.
The nature of protein intake as a discriminating factor of diet sustainability https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-44872-3
... animal food production is responsible for 56–58% of the emissions generated by food production while providing only 37% of the protein supply. In that regard, the IPCC has strongly recommended to reduce meat consumption by two-thirds, as red meat and processed meat production have been shown to have the highest impact on all dimensions (GHG emissions, land use, water use, acidification and eutrophication). Note that these emissions are double those generated by plant-based foods. Although it has been proven that there is no longer protein gap in Western countries, as protein intake exceeding needs... That being said, the individuals’ dietary patterns seem to be strongly influenced by this debate. Indeed, it has been shown that the overall diet of meat eaters is less healthy than the one of plant-based foods eaters...
Meat taxes can avoid overburdening low-income consumers https://doi.org/10.1038/s43016-023-00849-z
Stringent environmental regulation of livestock farming and meat products is notably lacking, despite their contribution to climate change, biodiversity loss, deforestation and nitrogen pollution. Recent assessments suggest that the 1.5 °C climate target set out in the Paris Agreement cannot be attained without rapid and ambitious changes to global food systems... 
Effect of an app-based dietary intervention on GHG emissions https://doi.org/10.1186/s12966-023-01523-0
Dietary change towards a diet low in greenhouse gas emissions (GHGEs) can reduce climate impact and improve individual-level health. However, there is a lack of understanding if diet interventions can achieve low-GHGE diets... future interventions that target reducing meat consumption specifically may have the potential to result in a reduction of individual-level diet-related GHGEs...     Greenhouse gas emissions (GHGEs) related to the global food system constitute one third of all anthropogenic emissions, and thus contribute substantially to climate change. Typical Western diets (common across Europe and North America) are characterized by a high intake of animal-based foods, and – due to the large environmental impact of rearing livestock – high diet-related GHGEs. Dietary change has therefore been recognized as an important factor to reduce GHGEs.     At the same time, an improvement in diet can also protect against non-communicable diseases and potentially prevent one in every five deaths globally. In recognition of the association between a high intake of red and processed meat with both adverse health and environmental outcomes, the World Health Organization recommends a predominantly plant-based diet as part of a healthy and sustainable lifestyle. Therefore, dietary change towards a low-GHGE diet can contribute to both improved health and environmental outcomes.     Diets rich in plant-based foods are suggested not only to reduce GHGEs and to prevent disease, but also to be effective in disease management. For instance, plant-based diets have been found to contribute to effective management of Type 2 diabetes... reduced body weight, and improvements in quality of life and wellbeing... As an additional benefit, a reduction in diet-related GHGEs could also be achieved: since plant-based foods are comparably lower in GHGEs than animal-based foods, a healthy diet that focuses primarily on plant-based foods can be low in GHGEs...
Proposed solutions to anthropogenic climate change https://doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e20544
Humanity is now facing what may be the biggest challenge to its existence: irreversible climate change brought about by human activity... This review highlights one of the most important but overlooked pieces in the puzzle of solving the climate change problem – the gradual shift to a plant-based diet and global phaseout of factory (industrialized animal) farming, the most damaging and prolific form of animal agriculture. The gradual global phaseout of industrialized animal farming can be achieved by increasingly replacing animal meat and other animal products with plant-based products, ending government subsidies for animal-based meat, dairy, and eggs, and initiating taxes on such products. Failure to act will ultimately result in a scenario of irreversible climate change with widespread famine and disease...
Development phases of mainstreaming plant-based in the food sector https://doi.org/10.1016/j.techfore.2023.122906
Circa 30–35 % of the human-related greenhouse gas emissions (GHG) are emitted in the agriculture and food sector. Production of meat and dairy plays a particularly large role; the climate footprint of these products is typically higher than of plant-based products. Agriculture withdraws 70 % of freshwater and covers 38 % of the land, and as much as 75 % of the agricultural land is used for either growing feed or grazing livestock. Thus, a dietary shift that entails reduction of dairy and meat and increasing the plant-based share of the diet is regarded as one of the most impactful demand-side actions that consumers can take...
Masculinity and veganism https://doi.org/10.3389/fcomm.2023.1244471
Aside from the health aspect, high consumption of meat and animal products is a burden on the environment. For example, globally, 83% of agricultural land is used for animal agriculture, which accounts for around 56-58% of dietary greenhouse gas emissions but only for 37% of the protein and 18% of the caloric requirements...
The global and regional air quality impacts of dietary change https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-41789-3
Air pollution increases cardiovascular and respiratory-disease risk, and reduces cognitive and physical performance. Food production, especially of animal products, is a major source of methane and ammonia emissions which contribute to air pollution through the formation of particulate matter and ground-level ozone... dietary changes towards more plant-based flexitarian, vegetarian, and vegan diets could lead to meaningful reductions in air pollution with health and economic benefits... we estimated reductions in premature mortality of 108,000-236,000 (3-6%) globally, including 20,000-44,000 (9-21%) in Europe, 14,000-21,000 (12-18%) in North America, and 49,000-121,000 (4-10%) in Eastern Asia. We also estimated greater productivity, increasing economic output by USD 0.6-1.3 trillion (0.5-1.1%)... incentivising dietary changes towards more plant-based diets could be a valuable mitigation strategy for reducing ambient air pollution and the associated health and economic impacts...      ... livestock production was responsible for the majority (80–84%) of all food-related ammonia and methane emissions, with animal source foods having 10 to up to 1000 times the emissions footprints of plant-based foods. Dietary changes towards lower consumption of animal source foods therefore substantially reduced agricultural emissions—by 84–86% globally for the adoption of vegan diets...
Carbon literacy and pro-environmental actions https://doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e20634
Lifestyle choices and consumption play a large role in contributing to per capita greenhouse gas emissions. Certain activities, like... diets with animal products... contribute significantly to per capita emissions...
The relative benefits for environmental sustainability of vegan diets https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0291791
Environmental impacts of the livestock sector are proportional to consumption levels. To assess the relative consumption of livestock animals within the diets of dogs, cats and people, this study examined their dietary energy needs... Full transition to nutritionally-sound vegan diets would spare from slaughter the following numbers of terrestrial livestock animals annually (billions)... globally: dogs – 6.0, cats – 0.9, humans – 71.3, as well as billions of aquatic animals in all dietary groups.       Very large impact reductions were also associated with land and water use, emissions of greenhouse gases (GHGs), acidifying and eutrophifying gases, and biocide use... If implemented globally, nutritionally-sound vegan diets would free up land larger than the following nations: dogs – Saudi Arabia or Mexico, cats – Japan or Germany, humans – Russia... combined with India. Such diets would save freshwater volumes greater than all renewable freshwater in the following nations: dogs – Denmark, cats – Jordan, humans – Cuba. Such diets would reduce GHGs by amounts greater than all GHG emissions from following nations: dogs – South Africa or the UK, cats – Israel or New Zealand, humans – India or the entire EU.      The numbers of additional people who could be fed using food energy savings associated with vegan diets exceeded the 2018 human populations of the following nations: dogs – the entire European Union, cats – France or the UK, humans – every single nation or collective region on Earth... All of these estimates are conservative...
Perspective of a more sustainable meat consumption in Brazil https://doi.org/10.1007/s10668-023-03941-3
Meat products are considered the foods with the greatest environmental impact because the whole process (farm(er)s, slaughterhouses and manufacturing processors, customers and consumers) needs plenty of natural resources resulting in severe environmental impact. The livestock sector needs more land, water, and energy resources than the agricultural sector, mainly because cattle are also fed with agricultural products. The slaughtering and meat processing sector impacts the environment either from emissions or consumption of natural resources... meat products refrigeration in customers sector contribute to ozone emissions and global warming. Finally, consumers impact the environment  when they cook meats, contributing to GHGE in addition to energy consumption...
Climate goals may be achieved by dietary change https://doi.org/10.1038/s44222-023-00125-6
The production of animal source food, such as meat and dairy, is responsible for the majority of the negative environmental impacts of the global food system... substitution of animal-based food greatly reduces agricultural input use, greenhouse gas emissions and biodiversity loss. Animal source food production is linked to global warming, biodiversity loss and wildlife-origin diseases, in addition to concerns about animal welfare... By replacing our meat and dairy consumption with plant-based alternatives, even just partially, we can significantly reduce the environmental  impact of the food system, from reduction of agricultural input use, such as water and nitrogen fertilization, to reducing greenhouse gas emissions and saving forests and natural ecosystems... In particular, the substantial reduction in methane emissions, achieved by reducing animal source food production, leads to a decline in agriculture and land use emissions — a key climate change mitigation target...
Consumer views on plant-based foods: Australian sample http://hdl.handle.net/10072/421785
There is abundant evidence demonstrating the harmful impacts of animal agriculture on planetary health. At the same time, plant-forward diets have well-established benefits for both environmental sustainability and human health. There is thus a critical role for both producers and consumers in shifting diets to ensure a healthy and sustainable food future..
School meals: focusing on animal- vs. plant-based protein foods https://doi.org/10.4162/nrp.2023.17.5.1028
In response to climate change, worldwide efforts are being made to reduce carbon emissions... A considerable portion of these GHG emissions, in particular, is related to livestock farming and consumption... globally, agriculture-related GHG emissions are dominated by livestock, which is a primary source of methane and nitrous oxide... there are concerns that such a diet, which is primarily animal-based and low in fruits and vegetables, is consistently identified as a major contributor to GHG emissions and an increased risk of obesity and chronic diseases..
Higher N2O emissions from organic compared to synthetic N fertilisers https://doi.org/10.1016/j.agee.2023.108718
Agriculture contributed around 52% to global anthropogenic emissions of nitrous oxide (N2O) during 2007–2016 [a greenhouse gas that also depletes the ozone layer], and the annual emission... currently increases... Most of this increase originates from the use of synthetic fertilisers and recycling of livestock manure as organic fertiliser... [But] N2O emissions were significantly higher from organic [slurries, digestates] compared to synthetic fertilisers...
Sustainability of plant-based diets for human and planetary health https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpubh.2023.1285161
... animal-based food emits more GHG than plant-based food. Hence, from an environmental perspective, a shift from animal-based to plantbased diets has the potential to contribute significantly to ameliorating the effects of climate change. From a human health perspective, such a shift would align with current dietary guidelines which recommend increased intake of fruits and vegetables, whole grains, legumes and nuts and decreased intake of red meat, sugar and refined grains...
Consumer acceptance of precision fermentation made egg https://doi.org/10.3389/fsufs.2023.1209533
Having risen by nearly 70% since the 1960s, humanity’s consumption of animal protein is becoming an increasingly destabilizing force acting on the planet’s climate, and itself a victim of mounting instability. The impacts of rising temperatures and extreme weather events are already impacting the productivity of the agri-food sector, with economic volatility, exposed global supply chains and the proliferation of animal-borne diseases providing further threats to the stable supply of animal protein. The livestock industry itself drives much of this instability... It is also a leading cause of air and water pollution, deforestation, and water scarcity. Furthermore, the livestock industry is the leading cause of emerging zoonotic diseases... as well as being the leading risk factor for future antibiotic resistance... Though public awareness of the severity of the livestock industry’s negative aspects has grown recently, the critique of our relationship with animals is longstanding, especially from an animal-welfare perspective... As the tools of industrialized, globalized economies blend with humanity’s rapidly growing appetite for animal-based protein, increasingly productive, albeit increasingly demeaning conditions for animals have become the global norm. Hence, there arises a compelling argument for reconsidering our relationship with livestock, diversifying our global protein supply, and heavily reducing our consumption of animal-based proteins...
Scenarios for achieving net negative emissions in the food system https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pclm.0000181
GHG emissions can be reduced by ~50–70% via worldwide adoption of diets with smaller contributions of animal sourced foods... Our model suggests a similar magnitude of global GHG emissions abatement via the adoption of a flexitarian diet, which is higher in fruits, vegetables, legumes, whole grains, and nuts, and lower in red meat, eggs, and starchy vegetables (potatoes) than the current average global diet... if the entire human population adopted a flexitarian diet by 2050, we estimate a reduction in gross GHG emissions of 8.2 Gt CO2eq...
Replacing Animal-Based Products with Plant-Based Alternatives https://hdl.handle.net/11250/3088967
... animal products generally have higher carbon footprints than their vegan counterparts... The overall effect on dietary carbon emissions shows significant reductions, particularly in the meat and meat products category... 
Environmental and land use consequences of replacing milk and beef  https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jclepro.2023.138826
The consumption of meat and dairy products raise enormous environmental concerns. Circa 80% of global greenhouse gas emissions (GHG) from the livestock industry originate from beef, milk and pork production. Changing the production and consumption of meat and dairy products is considered to offer an important contribution to achieving the Paris Agreement climate targets, and could reduce the import of soybean meal [for feed] to Europe from countries where it is linked with deforestation... This study confirms that legumes can play an important role in diet transitions towards climate neutrality, especially via substitution of meat (as opposed to dairy) products...
Optimizing sustainable, affordable and healthy diets https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jclepro.2023.138775
The global food system is failing to appropriately nourish the population and has been identified as a driving force for environmental degradation. Changing current diets to healthier and more sustainable ones is key to decrease the incidence of non-communicable diseases and force changes at the production stage that will release environmental pressure... Compared to current consumption, a SHD [sustainable and healthy diet] in Spain can be more nutritious and reduce cost, GHGe [GHG emissions] , land and blue-water use by 32%, 46%, 27%, and 41%, respectively... From the environmental perspective, the greatest improvements were observed when replacing 100% of meat: 43% decrease in GHGe; 13% decrease in land use; 13% decrease in blue-water use... animal-based products (meat, dairy, and seafood) were the main contributors [to the carbon footprint] and their reduction was key to minimize environmental impact... 
The challenges for plant-based meat companies  https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jclepro.2023.138705
An extensive body of literature has recently discussed how the transition from animal-based meat to alternative sources of proteins could help to reduce the environmental impacts of livestock chains, such as greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. Alternative proteins are broadly characterized as being made with ingredients that replace traditional protein sources and have a lower environmental impact... Plant-based meats are produced with vegetable proteins such as soy, pea or wheat to mimic the characteristics of animal meat products. These plant-based products can have 50% less GHG emissions than animal-based food. Moreover, the dietary, nutritional, and health benefits of plant-based meats have also drawn the interest of consumers seeking meat substitutes... plant-based meat consumption may be associated with a lower risk of developing chronic diseases (e.g., heart diseases) and can contribute to greater general well-being among consumers...
Feeding climate and biodiversity goals with novel plant-based alternatives https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-40899-2
Despite accounting for less than 20% of the global food energy supply, animal source foods (ASFs) are responsible for the majority of negative impacts on land-use, water use, biodiversity, and greenhouse gas emissions in global food systems... it is becoming clear that encouraging the adoption of low-ASF diets will be an important component in meeting climate change mitigation targets, achieving health and food security objectives worldwide, and keeping natural resource use within planetary boundaries...
What would happen if the world cut meat and milk consumption in half? https://grist.org/agriculture/what-if-the-world-cut-meat-and-milk-consumption-half/
Cows are often described as climate change criminals because of how much planet-warming methane they burp. But there’s another problem with livestock farming that’s even worse for the climate and easier to overlook: To feed the world’s growing appetite for meat, corporations and ranchers are chopping down more forests and trampling more carbon-sequestering grasslands to make room for pastures and fields of hay. Ruminants, like cattle, sheep, and goats, need space to graze, and animal feed needs space to grow. The greenhouse gases unleashed by this deforestation and land degradation mean food systems account for one-third of the world’s human-generated climate pollution.     Environmental advocates have long argued that there’s a straightforward solution to this mess: Eat less meat. Convincing more people to become vegetarians is a very effective way to limit emissions... Swapping 50 percent of the world’s beef, chicken, pork, and milk consumption with plant-based alternatives by mid-century could effectively halt the ecological destruction associated with farming...
Towards Sustainable Diets and Food Systems https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-24663-0_27
Food systems impact both human and planetary health by providing nutrition but also emitting pollution and using natural resources. The global food system, including agriculture, storage, transportation, processing, packaging, retail, and consumption, has a very large impact on global warming and biodiversity loss. Diets become both healthier and more sustainable as they emphasize plant-based, whole, and seasonal foods, and reduce food waste. Actions for improved sustainability include advising a healthy whole food plant-centric diet and calling for an end to subsidies of foods that are damaging to health and the environment...       There are significant challenges facing the sustainability of the food system that threaten both human and planetary health, but they are not insurmountable. There are actionable recommendations that can support a more sustainable food system in the future. Following the food determinants of sustainable diets, consumers should drastically reduce or eliminate meat consumption, eat more seasonal, whole plant foods, and reduce their food waste. If there is any ambiguity regarding what is the more sustainable food choice between alternatives, researchers should use life cycle assessment and complementary methodologies to evaluate them. Price is a major deciding factor for many consumers when choosing food, so eliminating subsidies for unhealthy and unsustainable foods and shifting that to supporting better options would help reduce demand and therefore production of such foods.
The Climate Crisis Could Mean the Twilight of the American West https://www.rollingstone.com/politics/politics-features/historic-draught-colorado-river-california-nevada-arizona-water-crisis-1234816087/ 
... anthropologist Wade Davis recalls how the taming of the Colorado River in the 1960s... helped shape the nation. But now facing a historic drought, all that could be lost in a generation... “God created both Nature and Man. Man serves God, but Nature serves Man. To have a deep blue lake, where no lake was before, seems to bring Man a little closer to God”... Like so many of his generation... Dominy believed that any natural resource not used was wealth wasted...     Fully 80 percent of the water drawn from the Colorado goes to irrigating some 5.5 million acres, most of which is used to grow alfalfa and grass to feed cattle, and not only in the United States. Alfalfa grown in Arizona is exported by the ton to fatten cattle in Asia and the Middle East... as household wells were running dry with the falling water table, a Saudi agricultural giant was permitted to use deep industrial wells to extract unlimited amounts of groundwater, allowing it to grow alfalfa in one desert to feed dairy cows eight thousand miles away in another desert, in a water-stressed nation that has, for all the right reasons, banned the cultivation of the crop within its own borders.     Utah dedicates fully 68 percent of its available water to growing alfalfa, even though livestock generate an insignificant 0.2 percent of the state’s income. In California, it takes 3.2 gallons of water to produce a single almond... If Americans eliminated meat from their diet for just one day each week, it would save a volume of water equivalent to the entire annual flow of the Colorado, which on paper would go a long way to alleviating the crisis. But it would also imply economic losses in the millions, with annual meat consumption nationwide dropping by over 10 billion pounds...
Soil carbon plays a role in the climate impact of diet https://doi.org/10.3389/fsufs.2023.904570
Diet has a significant impact on the consumer’s climate impact, and a radical global change in the food system is necessary... the more products of animal origin, the more reduction opportunities in the diet...
Disproportionate Beef Consumption among US Adults in an Age of Global Warming https://doi.org/10.3390/nu15173795
In addition to health concerns, excess meat consumption has serious environmental impacts. Numerous studies have documented our collective impact on climate change, with the food sector playing a big role; recent estimates indicate that about one-third of greenhouse gas emissions (GHGE) are due to human food systems. Meat, particularly from ruminant animals, is at the top of the list of impactful foods. Livestock alone accounts for 14% of global GHGE...
Public policies and vested interests preserve the animal farming status https://doi.org/10.1016/j.oneear.2023.07.013
A transformation of the food system is required to reduce its impact on climate, deforestation, and biodiversity. Greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions of the food system, especially livestock production, which is the largest emitter of methane of agricultural origin, must be greatly reduced to avoid the most extreme impacts of climate change. The high warming potential of methane and its short atmospheric lifetime make the reduction of methane emissions an effective climate action with immediate benefits. Livestock production is also the main direct cause of tropical deforestation, mainly due to pasture expansion but also feed crop production, with major impacts on carbon emissions and biodiversity.Diets in affluent countries are rich in animal-derived products. The growing demand for animal products associated with higher incomes in emerging economies poses an additional challenge for the environmental sustainability of the global food system. Numerous studies have demonstrated that dietary changes hold great potential to reduce humanity’s ecological footprint, especially a reduction in red meat consumption...
3D-printed vegan seafood could someday be what’s for dinner https://www.acs.org/pressroom/newsreleases/2023/august/3d-printed-vegan-seafood-could-someday-be-whats-for-dinner-video.html
People around the world eat a lot of seafood, but the oceans are not an infinite resource. Overfishing has depleted many wild fish populations. That lack of sustainability, combined with heavy-metal and microplastic contamination, as well as ethical concerns, have pushed some consumers toward plant-based mimics...
Associations of food motives with red meat and legume consumption https://doi.org/10.1007/s00394-023-03231-8
Climate change and global warming are serious threats to people and environment. The whole food system and especially red meat production is a considerable strain on the environment. Consequently, many positive effects on the environment may be achieved by replacing animal-based protein with plant-based protein, such as legumes, in diets. In addition, high red and processed meat consumption has been associated with many adverse health outcomes, whereas legume consumption with positive health outcomes. Sustainable diets have become an important theme in the recently published nutrition recommendations and food-based dietary guidelines...
Towards plantification: contesting and re-placing meaty routines https://doi.org/10.1332/WPKF9257
There is widespread scholarly agreement on the environmental benefits of plant-rich diets... Much attention is now also given to the sustainability and health impacts of meat in public discourse in many countries, and consumers are frequently called upon by environmental organisations, scientists and a range of businesses to reduce their meat consumption to help save the planet... despite the contestation of meat’s sustainability, articulated motivations become entangled with systems of provision and habitual and normalised aspects of food in everyday meat consumption...
Who will encourage a sustainable diet? https://doi.org/10.1007/s11625-023-01390-5
Reducing food waste and switching to low-carbon diets are widely recognized as meaningful climate actions. Beyond its climate benefits, a global shift from meat-forward to plant-forward diets can help reduce the negative ecological impacts of land conversion for intensive animal agriculture and reduce the harm to animals and humans associated with meat supply chain… More and more attention is being given to the role of food in combating climate change, with a focus on the benefits of meat reduction and more plant-based diets...
Nitrogen Fluxes in an Agro-Livestock System under Land Use Change https://doi.org/10.3390/agriculture13081524
In recent decades, significant changes have driven the advancement of agricultural production systems in Brazil. The objective of this study is to analyze the efficiency and transformation of the agricultural production system... through nitrogen input and output flows... between 2010, 2015, and 2020, the use of synthetic fertilizers in the pasture area (natural and cultivated) increased from 2.08 kg N/ha/year to 5.81 kg N/ha/year due to the increase in the area of cultivated pasture and the intensification of synthetic fertilization in this area, aiming for greater pasture productivity for cattle... the need to intensify beef cattle farming... brought an increase in N inputs into the system...
Chickens are taking over the planet https://www.vox.com/future-perfect/2023/8/4/23818952/chicken-meat-forecast-predictions-beef-pork-oecd-fao
... we’ve learned what comes with abundant cheap meat and dairy: air and water pollution, mass deforestation, biodiversity collapse, chronic diseases of affluence, acceleration of climate change, increased pandemic risk, and animal cruelty on an immense scale. If the OECD and FAO are right, the industrial meat machine will continue churning out ever-increasing supplies at precisely the moment when climate authorities say we have to rapidly scale back livestock production to keep the planet habitable...
Plant-Based Drinks and Yogurt Alternatives in Europe https://doi.org/10.3390/nu15153415
Concerns for human and planetary health have led to a shift towards healthier plant-based diets. Plant-based dairy alternatives (PBDA) have experienced exponential market growth due to their lower environmental impact compared to dairy products... The impact of our current food system on human health, the environment, and animal welfare is a significant concern globally. The negative consequences of the current food system include the continued growth of non-communicable and zoonotic diseases, global warming, land use change, biodiversity loss, eutrophication, and excessive withdrawals of freshwater resources for agriculture. To address these issues, the international community is actively working towards creating a more sustainable food system. A key aspect of this effort involves shifting away from the current reliance on beef and dairy cattle agriculture, which is the largest contributor to our diet-related environmental burden. The consensus is to promote diets that include more plant-based foods and less animal-based foods, especially meat and dairy... fortified PBDA can help shift consumers towards more sustainable eating patterns, and their macronutrient profile... is conducive to improved health outcomes…
Can we produce more food with less farming? https://www.washingtonpost.com/food/2023/07/31/regenesis-book-farming-environment-george-monbiot/
... arguably the most important and underappreciated aspect of food’s effect on climate: land use. “The climate costs of farming mirror its land costs”... and our central challenge is “to produce more food with less farming.” Greenhouse gases from food are somewhere between a quarter and a third of our annual total, and a quarter of that comes from land-use changes. Historically... the conversion of land in the industrial age has been responsible for 190 billion tons of carbon being released into the atmosphere, compared to 490 billion tons for fossil fuels. Our biggest opportunity to reduce food-related greenhouse gases is to find ways to feed a growing population without expanding food’s land footprint and, ideally, to free up some land to return to its pre-agricultural, carbon-storing state. The biggest user of land, by a country mile, is cattle (with an assist from sheep and goats). Right now, about half of the world’s habitable land is used to feed us, and three-quarters of that is for livestock. Worldwide, 8.2 billion acres are used for grazing, compared to 3.5 billion for crops... re-wilding that land, and switching from animals to plant protein, would be the best way to reduce the carbon impact of our diet. ([For]... managed grazing to sequester carbon... the numbers don’t pan out.) The land-use issue doesn’t end with grazing, though.     Cropland doesn’t get a pass. As industrialized agriculture depletes soils and harms the environment, and climate change threatens our ability to grow food, the challenge is to improve environmental outcomes and adapt to changing conditions — without sacrificing yields... But a funny thing happens when you go out in the world talking about the importance of crop yields. You run into people who associate the very idea of yield with the excesses of industrial ag, and who are committed to nonindustrial systems even in the face of a yield penalty... The nonindustrial system discussed most often is, of course, organic. While Monbiot acknowledges its advantages (the farms tend to be more diverse, they use fewer pesticides and antibiotics), the yield penalty is... a dealbreaker. “The global average gap between organic and conventional yields is, according to different estimates, somewhere between 20 percent and 36 percent.” That means you need between 25 and 50 percent more land to grow the same amount of food. Okay, so if organic isn’t the answer, what is? That’s the hard part. Monbiot is absolutely right that a plant-based diet… is a climate win, but “Regenesis” also has supply-side suggestions...
All Hat and No Cattle https://www.monbiot.com/2023/08/02/all-hat-and-no-cattle/
Every industry has its apparatus of justification. The more damaging  the industry, the greater the effort spent constructing it. Few if any industries are as damaging as meat production, especially meat production from ruminant animals, such as cattle and sheep. The principal reason is their vast hunger for land.  Every hectare of land used for an extractive industry is a hectare than cannot be occupied by wild ecosystems. Cattle and sheep ranching has destroyed more habitat and seized more indigenous people’s land than any other enterprise – and continues to do so. Rainforests, dry forests, wetlands, natural grasslands and savannahs have all been converted on a massive scale to ranchland. Allied to this is the sector’s massive contribution to global heating. This has two main components: the opportunity cost of replacing carbon-rich habitats with carbon-poor ones and the daily emissions of methane, nitrous oxide and carbon dioxide from the animals and the business of keeping, feeding, transporting, slaughtering and  processing them. If we were to ensure that our food system was compatible with a habitable and thriving planet, the first sector we would phase out would  be cattle and sheep ranching. Forget the excitable claims of celebrity chefs and food writers: the most damaging of all farm products is pasture-fed meat...
Climate Change at the White House Conference on Hunger https://ajph.aphapublications.org/doi/full/10.2105/AJPH.2023.307312
The link between climate change and the food system is undeniable. By some estimates, food system activities, including food production, distribution, and disposal, produce a third of global GHG emissions caused by humans. As a driver of climate change, the food system contributes to numerous public health threats, including severe weather events, heat-related illness and death, pollution and poor air quality, vector-borne diseases, and water-related illness. At the same time, climate change threatens our ability to provide safe, good-quality food to all. The food system is vulnerable to the short- and long-term effects of climate change, such as severe weather events that cause disruptions to food supply chains. Such disruptions also threaten access to safe drinking water, contributing to water insecurity, which is closely associated with food insecurity. Climate change contributes to undernutrition and diet-related diseases as well. For instance, increased GHG emissions reduce crop yields and the micronutrient content of crops, both of which contribute to food and nutrition insecurity and undernutrition. The disparate effects of diet-related chronic disease, food and nutrition insecurity, and adverse climate events suggest an immediate urgency to promote both sustainable and equitable food and nutrition policies...     Agriculture, particularly the production of ruminant meats such as beef, is a major contributor to global GHG emissions; research suggests that we will not meet the goals of the Paris Climate Agreement without shifting our diets toward lower emission foods. For this reason, the administration’s strategies for healthy food access should incorporate climate considerations. Such policies would be mutually reinforcing because strong evidence indicates that a more sustainable diet is a healthier one. The current Dietary Guidelines for Americans (DGA) encourage diversifying protein intake, increasing fiber intake, and limiting consumption of red and processed meats, all of which are more consistent with a plant-forward (and lower-emission) diet. Most notably, decreasing consumption of red meat, the most carbon-intensive food, while increasing consumption of plant-based foods will prevent and mitigate diet-related chronic diseases and decrease GHG emissions...
True cost accounting of organic and conventional food production https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jclepro.2023.137134
Agriculture is one of the world's biggest polluters. Consumers are misled towards demand of unsustainable and inadequately priced food products by an insufficient internalization of externalities. Shifting demand towards more sustainable dietary choices can lead to a sustainable transition of agri-food networks. This study assesses environmental damage economically: in a True Cost Accounting case study on 22 agricultural products in Germany, we combine the LCA-based environmental assessment of organically and conventionally produced food products with the internalization of their monetary impacts. We find that on average, crop production generates externalities of about €0.79 per kg for conventional and about €0.42 for organic products. Conventional milk and eggs cause additional costs of about €1.29 per kg on average in organic systems and about €1.10 in organic ones. Conventional and organic meat (beef, pork, poultry) generate externalities of €4.42 and €4.22 per kg, respectively, with beef generating the highest costs of all... [But] the “true prices” (market price + external costs) of organic products are not lower than those of conventional products. The lower agricultural yields in organic systems also contribute to this assessment, as they partially offset the environmental benefits that organic produces have over their conventional counterparts... [However, there is] a strong influence of dietary behavior. Meat- and dairy-based foods lead to considerably higher externalities than plant-based foods, regardless of the production method...
PAN International’s position paper on plant-based meat products https://pan-int.org/plant-based-meat-position-paper/
Plant-based dietary patterns offer the ideal strategy to simultaneously prevent non-communicable diseases (NCDs) and mitigate the effects of the current climate crisis. Plant-based diets include vitamin-rich foods such as fruit and vegetables and protein-rich ones such as legumes, pulses, nuts, and whole grains. It has been estimated that NCDs such as cardiovascular disease and cancer are responsible for 71% of all premature deaths globally. Low consumption of fruit, whole grains, nuts and seeds and vegetables has been identified as the leading dietary risk factor for premature deaths related to NCDs. Therefore, increasing the consumption of these foods is a valuable strategy to improve the population's health.      Further, consuming more plant-based foods is a significant strategy in addressing climate change. A large body of evidence shows that, compared to meat and other animal-based products, the production of plant-based foods requires less fresh water and land, emits fewer greenhouse gases and has a reduced impact on biodiversity and the natural environment. For example, the production of 1 kg of beef burgers emits more than 50 times more greenhouse gases than 1 kg of plant-based foods rich in protein such as tofu, beans or peanuts. The greenhouse gas emissions released by the production of fruit, vegetables and grains are also extremely low when compared to animal-based foods. The situation is similar for other indicators of environmental degradation such as land and water use, eutrophication, and biodiversity loss.      Encouraging people to choose more plant-based foods and changing food environments so that more healthy plant-based foods become accessible are key actions to effectively improve population health, address climate change, reduce water stress and pollution, restore forests and protect the world’s wildlife. Tackling climate change is particularly important for low and middle-income countries as these are more vulnerable to extreme weather events such as droughts and floods, have fewer resources to invest in adaptation measures, and are heavily dependent on agriculture for their livelihoods.
Insights into the Nitrogen Footprint of food consumption https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.165792
The main food contributors to the overall food NF [Nitrogen Footprint] in Spain were cereals, beef, and pork, while the food products oilseeds and oil, fruits, and legumes presented a lower contribution...     Intensive agricultural practices deplete the nitrogen (N) available in the soil for the next crop production leading to soil degradation. The application of N mineral fertilizers partially recovers soil fertility. However, the production of N fertilizers requires a large amount of fossil fuel, which increases the N released into the environment... This reactive N can cause an enhanced greenhouse effect, stratospheric ozone depletion, biodiversity loss, smog, and acid rain. Fertilizer production, the combustion of fossil fuels by agricultural activities, and the high energy demands in food production are some causes of the increase in reactive N released into the environment...     For animal-based products, the food category eggs and poultry exhibit the lowest VNFs [Virtual Nitrogen Factors]... On the other hand, beef products present the highest VNF, being 75 % higher than the poultry's VNF... the major contributors to the NF… in all the age groups is the food category beef… A common aspect found in all age groups is that animal-source protein (meat) generates the highest N emissions...     Special attention should also be paid to food waste in those food products with high N emissions or consumed in high quantities. For example, a small reduction in wasted meat equals a large reduction in wasted N. Finally, it has been seen how diet also plays an important role in food NF… vegan, lacto-ovo vegetarian, pesco-vegetarian, and semi-vegetarian diets achieve a reduction in N released… The studied advantages... concerning carbon footprint and water footprint should also be highlighted… diets in which animal-based products are reduced are beneficial for the environment... Additionally, reducing meat consumption... could result in cost savings for consumers...
Understanding consumption of plant-based alternatives to dairy products https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodqual.2023.104947
The current diet with high proportions of animal products contributes significantly to harmful greenhouse gas emissions and ultimately to climate change. A more plant-based diet could counteract this.Thus, a large range of plant-based alternatives to milk and dairy are being developed, and the consumption of these products is increasing. Here, we characterised consumers and non-consumers of plant-based alternatives to milk, yoghurt, and cream, and investigated reasons for and against consumption of these products... These observations have important implications for research and practice, offering a better understanding of the growing group of consumers who use plant-based alternatives for a more sustainable diet...
Climate Change, Industrial Animal Agriculture, and the Role of Physicians  https://doi.org/10.1016/j.joclim.2023.100260
Global food production is responsible for 35% of all greenhouse gas emissions (GHGE) with the use of animals as a source for food, as well  as livestock feed, responsible for almost 60% of all food production emissions. Consumption of a high-resource diet based on animal products without a reciprocal nutritional value while degrading the environment and animal and human health is unethical and no longer sustainable. Without a major and urgent transformation in global meat consumption, and even if zero GHGE in all other sectors are achieved, agriculture alone will consume the entire world's carbon budget needed to keep global temperature rise under 2°C by 2050. In this viewpoint, we illustrate the impact our current food-production system has on resource utilization and human and animal health. There is an urgent need to shift to a predominantly plant-based diet to arrest and potentially revert the negative environmental, animal, and human health impact of industrial animal agriculture. Healthcare professionals have the ethical responsibility to provide evidence-based information to patients and their families for their health benefits...
Plant based meat alternative, from cradle to company-gate https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jclepro.2023.138173
 Pulse proteins represent a valuable option in reducing society's dependency on animal meat production and consumption, representing a potential pivot towards sustainable production systems that simultaneously may benefit global health, as pulses are a good source of amino acids, fibres, and minerals. One hundred grams of beef meat can be, in fact, equal to up to 50 kg CO2-equivalents and 164 m2 of land used... Besides the environmental impact, excessive meat consumption has been associated with adverse health effects in Western populations. A change in dietary habits at the population level is then necessary to improve both planetary and, consequently, human well-being and health. Legumes or pulses... can offer a viable alternative in terms of environmental and health benefits. As pulses biologically fix nitrogen through a symbiotic relationship with certain types of rhizobia, they naturally improve the soil structure and fertility, increasing its biomass and, consequently, its biodiversity while at the same time providing valuable protein and micronutrients…
Climate Change Mitigation Potential in Dietary Guidelines https://doi.org/10.1016/j.spc.2023.07.015 
Food systems generate a third (range 25 % to 42 %) of the total human-induced greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions that accelerate global warming. It is estimated that even in scenarios where all fossil fuel or non-food emissions were net zero, food system emissions alone, if unchanged, would still contribute to exceeding the 1.5 °C limit target of The Paris Agreement. To limit the increase in global temperature to
Vegans, vegetarians, fish-eaters and meat-eaters in the UK https://doi.org/10.1038/s43016-023-00795-w
All environmental indicators showed a positive association with amounts of animal-based food consumed. Dietary impacts of vegans were 25.1% of high meat-eaters (≥100 g total meat consumed per day) for greenhouse gas emissions, 25.1% for land use, 46.4% for water use, 27.0% for eutrophication and 34.3% for biodiversity. At least 30% differences were found between low and high meat-eaters for most indicators. Despite substantial variation due to where and how food is produced, the relationship between environmental impact and animal-based food consumption is clear and should prompt the reduction of the latter...     To feed a growing global population while remaining within proposed safe environmental boundaries for GHG emissions, land use, water use, water pollution and biodiversity loss, we will need changes in diets. Other means to reduce the environmental impact of the food system (for example, technological advances, closing yield gaps, reducing food waste) will not be enough without major dietary change. The environmental impact of animal-based foods is generally higher than for plant-based foods because of both direct processes related to livestock management (for example, methane (CH4) production by ruminants) and indirect processes through the inefficiency of using crops for animal feed rather than directly for human consumption. For this reason, proposed diets for global sustainable food production require most high-income countries to radically reduce consumption of animal-based foods and converge on levels that are higher than currently consumed in many low-income countries.     Systematic reviews of modelled dietary scenarios have shown that vegan and vegetarian diets have substantially lower GHG emissions, land use and water use requirements than meat-containing diets and that diets with reduced animal-based foods tend to be healthier and have lower environmental impact… There is a strong relationship between the amount of animal-based foods in a diet and its environmental impact, including GHG emissions, land use, water use, eutrophication and biodiversity. Dietary shifts away from animal-based foods can make a substantial contribution to reduction of the UK environmental footprint. Uncertainty due to region of origin and methods of food production do not obscure these differences between diet groups and should not be a barrier to policy action aimed at reducing animal-based food consumption.
Less meat, more plant-based: The Nordic Nutrition Recommendations https://www.norden.org/en/news/less-meat-more-plant-based-here-are-nordic-nutrition-recommendations-2023
The Nordic Nutrition Recommendations 2023... contain scientific recommendations not just for our health but also for the environment, advocating a more plant-based diet...
A Meatless Diet Is Better for You—And the Planet https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/a-meatless-diet-is-better-for-you-and-the-planet/
Vegetarian and especially vegan diets can promote better health, help mitigate climate change and reduce inhumane factory farming... meat consumption contributes to climate change though deforestation and methane emissions... animal-based foods contribute twice the emissions of plant-based foods. Switching from the typical Western diet to a vegetarian diet can reduce one’s personal dietary carbon emissions by 30  percent; a strict vegan diet can reduce them by as much as 85 percent...
Personal and Planetary Health—The Connection With Dietary Choices https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.2023.6118
Globally, humanity is confronting the chronic disease burden of poor nutrition while also experiencing the loss of life and property because of climate change. Now is the time to focus on the health benefits of dietary changes. Increasing consumption of animal protein is driving animal agriculture growth. The world now produces more than 3 times the meat and more than double the milk as it did 50 years ago. This has well-established negative effects on the environment, including the destruction of native ecosystems to support livestock grazing and increased cultivation of animal feedstocks. Livestock and its supply chain also contribute to greenhouse gas emissions, such as carbon dioxide, methane, and nitrous oxide. Livestock farming accounts for 50% of methane and 60% of nitrous oxide emissions, which respectively have 25 and 298 times the global warming potential of carbon dioxide on a mass basis. Additionally, most nitrogen pollution in wastewater is due to animal-based protein sources and inefficient agricultural practices, which lead to acid rain and toxic algal blooms that cause dead zones of aquatic life...
Removal of processed and unprocessed red meats from menus https://doi.org/10.1002/lim2.87
Processed and unprocessed red meat consumption has a negative impact on both individual and planetary health. Processed meat is classified as a group 1 carcinogen and red meat a group 2a carcinogen by the World Health Organisation. In addition, their consumption is associated with an increased risk of several chronic conditions, including overweight and obesity, type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease and dementia... Healthcare globally contributes around 4%–5% of total greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions... The global food system is also a major contributor to the climate crisis, producing at least a third of GHG emissions, with animal agriculture responsible for more than half these emissions. In addition, animal agriculture is a leading driver of biodiversity loss, land and water pollution, antibiotic resistance and increases the risk of future pandemic infections. A shift to a plant-based food system is now considered essential to meet both climate and nature commitments.
Climate impact of ultra-processed foods https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/19231/
The climate impact associated with food consumption is large. The size of the impact depend on the type of food and how it is produced... the largest contribution of GHG emissions from the Swedish diet comes from foods categorised as unprocessed or minimally processed. The food groups that contributed most to climate impact were ‘Meat & Eggs’ and ‘Dairy’ in unprocessed or minimally processed foods and ‘Meat & Eggs’ and ‘Discretionary foods ’ in ultra-processed foods... the least processed foods contribute more to the climate impact of the Swedish diet than the foods categorised as ultra-processed foods. The NOVA classification [of processed food] is not well aligned with a food science view of what food processing is and not suitable for analysis of climate impact of diets...
The negative impact of vegetarian and vegan labels https://doi.org/10.1016/j.appet.2023.106767
Food systems have an important impact on environmental resources and are globally responsible for a third of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. Researchers have shown that given current trends, even if fossil fuel emissions were immediately eliminated the global food system alone would make it impossible to reach the climate goals set in the Paris Agreement. The negative impacts of current food production go beyond GHG emissions, including depletion of freshwater resources, decreasing fertility of land and soil, chemical pollution, and reducing biodiversity. Furthermore, these negative impacts are expected to increase with population growth and a growing appetite for resource-intensive foods—such as meats and dairy. In addition, researchers have projected that improving efficiency will not be enough to reduce the environmental burden of agriculture systems and keep pace with human demand, unless there is a transition to less impactful diets. Similarly, researchers modeling the impact of shifting a city's food system to entirely local production found that changes in diet had far greater impact.      The necessary dietary changes... are centered around reducing consumption of meat and other animal products, which are typically more resource-intensive and environmentally impactful to produce than plant-based foods. For example, nearly half of all agricultural production emissions are from ruminant livestock (cattle, sheep, and goats) and a leading driver of deforestation is pastureland expansion. Overall, the production of animal-based foods uses more than 75% of global farmland and contributes more than 56% of food-related emissions, while only contributing 37% of the protein and 18% of the calories in the global food supply. Due to the unsustainable nature of current food systems, the EAT-Lancet Commission proposed shifting diets to reduce consumption of animal-based foods and increase the proportion of plant-based foods consumed. There is growing consensus that such a shift, particularly in affluent societies, would have important environmental benefits, as well as improve food security, animal welfare, and public health...
Land-use-driven biodiversity impacts of diets https://doi.org/10.1007/s11367-023-02201-w
Biodiversity impacts and land use for diets decreased with reduced consumption of animal-derived foods, being highest for the current diet and clearly lowest for the vegan diet. The decrease in biodiversity impact was emphasized compared with land use—the impact of the vegan diet was only 30% of the biodiversity impacts of the current diet, while for land use it was about 50%. In the current diet, meats and dairy products made the greatest contribution to land use and dietary biodiversity impact regardless of the assessment method... 
Tumblr media
 .
We are gambling with the future of our planet for the sake of hamburgers https://theconversation.com/we-are-gambling-with-the-future-of-our-planet-for-the-sake-of-hamburgers-peter-singer-on-climate-change-207605
Today... the fact that eating plants will reduce your greenhouse gas emissions is one of the most important and influential reasons for cutting down on animal products and, for those willing to go all the way, becoming vegan...      With beef, for example, transport is only 0.5% of total emissions. So if you eat local beef you will still be responsible for 99.5% of the greenhouse gas emissions your food would have caused if you had eaten beef transported a long distance. On the other hand, if you choose peas you will be responsible for only about 2% of the greenhouse gas emissions... And although beef is the worst food for emitting greenhouse gases, a broader study of the carbon footprints of food across the European Union showed that meat, dairy and eggs accounted for 83% of emissions, and transport for only 6%.      More generally, plant foods typically have far lower greenhouse gas emissions than any animal foods, whether we are comparing equivalent quantities of calories or of protein. Beef, for example, emits 192 times as much carbon dioxide equivalent per gram of protein as nuts, and while these are at the extremes of the protein foods, eggs, the animal food with the lowest emissions per gram of protein, still has, per gram of protein, more than twice the emissions of tofu. Animal foods do even more poorly when compared with plant foods in terms of calories produced. Beef emits 520 times as much per calorie as nuts, and eggs, again the best-performing animal product, emit five times as much per calorie as potatoes.      Favourable as these figures are to plant foods, they leave out something that tilts the balance even more strongly against animal foods in the effort to avoid catastrophic climate change: the “carbon opportunity cost” of the vast area of land used for grazing animals and the smaller, but still very large, area used to grow crops that are then fed — wastefully, as we have seen — to confined animals. Because we use this land for animals we eat, it cannot be used to restore native ecosystems, including forests, which would safely remove huge amounts of carbon from the atmosphere. One study has found that a shift to plant-based eating would free up so much land for this purpose that seizing the opportunity would give us a 66% probability of achieving something that most observers believe we have missed our chance of achieving: limiting warming to 1.5℃. Another study has suggested that a rapid phaseout of animal agriculture would enable us to stabilise greenhouse gases for the next 30 years and offset more than two-thirds of all carbon dioxide emissions this century...      Climate change is undoubtedly the biggest environmental issue facing us today, but it is not the only one. If we look at environmental issues more broadly, we find further reasons for preferring a plant-based diet. The clearing and burning of the Amazon rainforest means not only the release of carbon from the trees and other vegetation into the atmosphere, but also the likely extinction of many plant and animal species that are still unrecorded. This destruction is driven largely by the prodigious appetite of the affluent nations for meat, which makes it more profitable to clear the forest than to preserve it for the indigenous people living there, establish an ecotourism industry, protect the area’s biodiversity, or keep the carbon locked up in the forest...      A vegan diet is probably the single biggest way to reduce your impact on planet Earth, not just greenhouse gases, but global acidification, eutrophication, land use and water use. It is far bigger than cutting down on your flights or buying an electric car, as these only cut greenhouse gas emissions... Really it is animal products that are responsible for so much of this. Avoiding consumption of animal products delivers far better environmental benefits than trying to purchase sustainable meat and dairy. Those who claim to care about the wellbeing of human beings and the preservation of our climate and our environment should become vegans for those reasons alone. Doing so would reduce greenhouse gas emissions and other forms of pollution, save water and energy, free vast tracts of land for reforestation, and eliminate the most significant incentive for clearing the Amazon and other forests.
Appeals to Encourage Sustainable Food Choice https://doi.org/10.31234/osf.io/eqkpv
Livestock production contributes to climate change, environmental degradation, and freshwater scarcity. Excessive consumption of animal-sourced foods (ASF; broadly categorized as meat, fish, eggs, and dairy) in developed countries is also associated with a variety of health and ethical concerns. Shifting ASF-heavy diets to include moreplant-sourced foods (PSF; mainly whole grains, legumes, fruits and vegetables, and nuts and seeds) has been identified as an important lever to address these issues...
How to best reshape diets to be healthier https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jclepro.2023.137600
A reduction of environmental pressures and the revision of food systems is essential in our response to climate change. Livestock farming, particularly of ruminants, is a well-documented and significant contributor to food-related greenhouse gas emissions (GHGe). Furthermore, food products associated with marked increases in disease risks – red and processed meats – are often associated with the most damaging environmental impacts that go beyond the potential ecosystem services offered by some livestock systems. Consistent evidence in the scientific literature, including systematic reviews, has indicated that a dietary pattern containing more plant-based foods (e.g., fruits and vegetables, legumes, nuts, whole grain products) and less animal-based foods (especially red meat and dairy products) and total energy is both healthier and associated with lower pressures on the environment and natural resources.
Relational climate and openness to plant-forward diets https://doi.org/10.1016/j.appet.2023.106617
There is a growing concern that modern-day animal agriculture bears health and ecological costs that cannot be sustained. The production and consumption of industrially reared animal foods has been linked to a number of personal and public health consequences (e.g., the emergence and spread of zoonotic diseases), and a disproportionate share of food-related environmental impacts. In contrast, plant-forward diets offer a potential solution to many of the health and ecological crises that society faces, and that we can expect to face in the near future. Nonetheless, the consumption of animal foods remains a socially normative practice. It is estimated that approximately 73% of the global population maintain an omnivorous diet, consuming on average 43 kg of meat each year...
Low-carbon diets can reduce global ecological and health costs https://doi.org/10.1038/s43016-023-00749-2
Potential external cost savings associated with the reduction of animal-sourced foods remain poorly understood. Here we combine life cycle assessment principles and monetarization factors to estimate the monetary worth of damage to human health and ecosystems caused by the environmental impacts of food production. We find that, globally, approximately US$2 of production-related external costs were embedded in every dollar of food expenditure in 2018—corresponding to US$14.0 trillion of externalities. A dietary shift away from animal-sourced foods could greatly reduce these ‘hidden’ costs, saving up to US$7.3 trillion worth of production-related health burden and ecosystem degradation while curbing carbon emissions. By comparing the health effects of dietary change from the consumption versus the production of food, we also show that omitting the latter means underestimating the benefits of more plant-based diets. Our analysis reveals the substantial potential of dietary change, particularly in high and upper-middle-income countries, to deliver socio-economic benefits while mitigating climate change.
Continued from: Avoiding meat and dairy in one’s diet is indeed the biggest way to reduce one’s impact on the environment https://ajstein.tumblr.com/post/174828704325/
Compilation of the scientific literature since June 2018 (and before).
3 notes · View notes
holethoa2010 · 28 days
Video
youtube
Harvest Duck Eggs Goes To The Market Sell Grow Corn Build Farm Animals
Every early morning, when the sun has just appeared, we begin the work of harvesting duck eggs from the cage. Ducks are raised in a natural environment, eat clean food from corn and rice bran, so the eggs are of very good quality. After harvesting, the eggs are carefully inspected to remove damaged fruits, and then placed in baskets to be prepared to be brought to the market.
When coming to the market, the sale of eggs usually takes place very quickly. People in the region always love duck eggs from the farm because of the sweetness and freshness. Selling eggs not only helps the family earn more income but also is an opportunity for us to interact with people in the region, learn more experiences in raising ducks and taking care of the farm.
Corn Cultivation and Farm Development
After finishing the morning work at the market, we return to the farm and start the work of planting corn. Corn is one of the main crops at the farm, not only providing feed for the poultry flock but also an important source of income when the harvest season arrives.
Work on planting corn begins with the preparation of the soil: the soil is thoroughly plowed and fertilized with organic fertilizers to create the best conditions for the growth of corn plants. After that, corn kernels are sown evenly in the earthen beds, and watered regularly to ensure moisture for the plants. The process of caring for corn plants requires meticulousness, from checking for pests to fertilizing and watering regularly.
Poultry Farming Development
Besides farming, the rearing and development of poultry is also an important part of the farm. Chickens, ducks, and geese are raised in a natural environment, carefully cared for with a scientific diet, helping them grow healthy.
In order for the farm to develop sustainably, we are constantly learning and applying new breeding methods, from selecting good breeds, adequate vaccinations, to managing the habitat of the poultry flock. Each stage is carried out carefully, in order to ensure the quality of products and the health of the poultry flock.
Conclude
Although the work on the farm is hard, it brings joy and satisfaction when seeing the fruits of their own hands. From harvesting duck eggs, selling them to the market, growing corn to developing poultry flocks, all of them are geared towards the goal of building a sustainable and sustainable farm.
0 notes
Text
Growing Dinner
“I farm the soil which yields my food, I share creation. Kings can do no more.” Chinese Proverb
Last week I hosted “Nonie Camp” for my granddaughter. We spent four days and nights of uninterrupted, farm-inspired outdoor time together, chez moi. First thing every morning she happily began her chores: feeding the animals, watering the patio plants, and filling the fountains. After multiple activities including climbing trees, building forts, shooting hoops, skipping rope, swinging, swimming, and playing, our stomachs growled with hunger. Into the potager, we trekked. As we tended the garden and picked fruits and vegetables, she exclaimed. “This is amazing, Nonie. We are growing dinner!”
As an advocate for sustainability and cultivating our food, I was thrilled that she recognized the wonder of being able to step just beyond our doorstep into nature to harvest a healthy meal. With the hot weather and lengthened daylight, tomatoes, peppers, zucchini, corn, and a multitude of other crops are ripe and ready for consumption. I wait all year to eat fresh tomatoes, make tomato sandwiches, and toss up salads of tomato, cucumber, onions, and basil.
Our warm and sunny summer also offers numerous delicious herbs to be clipped for our cookouts.
Basil: Harvest the leaves of basil regularly to encourage new growth. Mixed with olive oil and garlic, basil makes a scrumptious pesto.
Cilantro: Cilantro can also be made into a pesto sauce, and is an essential ingredient in Mexican, Indian, and many Asian dishes. It bolts when it gets hot. Use the seeds, known as coriander, as a spice.
Dill: The leaves, flowers, and seeds add flavor to pickles, salads, seafood, dips, and sauces.
Basil, cilantro, and dill are summer-season herbs in Northern California.
Perennial herbs that can be snipped year-round include:
Society Garlic: Many people aren’t aware that the deer-resistant flowers and leaves of society garlic are edible. I use them as garnish on baked potatoes as well as in sandwiches.
Chives: To keep the plant producing, snip this onion-flavored herb regularly.
Mint: Mint adds an energizing flavor to iced beverages, and of course, is delectable with lamb and many desserts. Grow mint in a container as it is an aggressive spreader.
Thyme: For the best flavor, harvest thyme before flowering and use the fresh leaves in soups, stews, roasts, and marinades. Thyme is a key component in bouquet garni and herbes de Provence.
Rosemary: Rosemary is a favorite of mine to add flavor to BBQ. Use the woody stems as a skewer for grilling. One plant of rosemary is all you need.
Oregano and Sage: Both are essential in Mediterranean cuisines and as garnishes for savory dishes. Use the leaves as needed and avoid cutting back more than a third of the plant at a time.
At the end of June every year, I harvest my cherry plums. This year a strange thing transpired with one of my trees. My twenty-year-old plum tree no longer bore purple plums, but large orange plums that ripened in August. We picked a basket, which had a sweet apricot taste. Since I grow so many roses and continue to deadhead the spent blooms every few days, I have spectacular roses constantly in bloom. For a special summer salad, try scattering a few rose petals on a platter of peaches, plums, and melon dressed with a homemade lemon and herb vinaigrette. Cool, refreshing, and delectable.
The benefits of growing our dinners are immense. Fresh, organic produce is nutritious. When we are cognizant of the composition of our soil, growing our food is the healthier option. We save money on buying groceries, with homegrown being more economical. We can be more sustainable and reduce our carbon footprint by minimizing packaging. One of my favorite reasons is the satisfaction of connecting to the earth and watching the growing process.
Every day of “Nonie Camp” my granddaughter collected the chicken eggs and then went into the garden to pull a few weeds and gather our dinner. She reaped the rewards of organic homegrown and delighted me with her words, “Hmmm, this is so yummy!” Hopefully, she will pass on her love of nature to a future generation and host her version of “Nonie Camp”.
Kings and Queens can do no more!
Read Lamorinda Weekly https://lamorindaweekly.com/archive/issue1813/Digging-Deep-with-Goddess-Gardener-Cynthia-Brian-Growing-Dinner.html
For more gardening advice for all seasons, check out Growing with the Goddess Gardenerat https://www.CynthiaBrian.com/books. Raised in the vineyards of Napa County, Cynthia Brian is a New York Times best-selling author, actor, radio personality, speaker, media and writing coach as well as the Founder and Executive Director of Be the Star You Are!® 501 c3 which was just honored as the 2024 Nonprofit of the Year by the Moraga Chamber of Commerce. Tune into Cynthia’s StarStyle® Radio Broadcast at www.StarStyleRadio.com. Her newest children’s picture book, Books in the Barnyard: Oh Deer!, from the series, Stella Bella’s Barnyard Adventures is available for discounted pre-sales at https://www.CynthiaBrian.com/online-store. Hire Cynthia for writing projects, garden consults, and inspirational lectures. [email protected]  
Thanks for reading StarStyle® Empowerment! This post is public so feel free to share it.
Growing Dinner: https://lamorindaweekly.com/archive/issue1813/Digging-Deep-with-Goddess-Gardener-Cynthia-Brian-Growing-Dinner.html
Substack: https://cynthiabrian.substack.com/p/growing-dinner?
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
0 notes
ananya5400 · 1 month
Text
Agriculture Adjuvants Market Size, Share, Trends, Leading Players, Industry Outlook, and Forecast
The agriculture adjuvants industry is projected to grow from USD 3.8 billion in 2023 to USD 4.8 billion by 2028, growing at a CAGR of 4.7% during the forecast period. The agricultural adjuvants industry is growing because of the growing demand for sustainable pest management of farming operations. Additionally, the increased focus on food security is projected to fuel the development of agricultural adjuvants.
Agriculture Adjuvants Market Trends
The agriculture adjuvants market is expected to see continued growth in the coming years, driven by several key trends:
Increasing demand for food: A growing global population with rising incomes will put pressure on food production. Adjuvants can help farmers improve crop yields to meet this demand.
Focus on sustainable agriculture: There’s a growing emphasis on environmentally friendly farming practices. Adjuvants can help by increasing the effectiveness of pesticides, allowing farmers to use less of them.
Precision agriculture: Advancements in agricultural technologies like precision farming are creating a need for more targeted and efficient crop protection strategies. Adjuvants can play a role here by improving the application and efficacy of crop protection products.
Agriculture Adjuvants Market Opportunities: Precision farming techniques to boost the application of adjuvants
Precision farming techniques, including aerial spraying, smart irrigation, and variable rate application, are becoming increasingly popular worldwide. Agriculture adjuvants enhance the effectiveness of these methods by improving the coverage, absorption, and penetration of agrochemicals. This optimization creates significant opportunities for adjuvant manufacturers.
Based on application, the herbicides segment accounted for the largest share of the agriculture adjuvants market.
Herbicides are widely used in agriculture for weed control. Weeds compete with crops for resources such as nutrients, sunlight, and water, leading to reduced crop yields. The rise of herbicide-resistant weeds is a significant concern in agriculture. Herbicide-resistant weed populations have been increasing globally, making weed control more challenging. To manage these challenges, agricultural adjuvants are increasingly being used.
Based on crop type, cereal & grain accounted for the fastest market share of the agriculture adjuvants market.
Cereal and grain crops, such as wheat, corn, rice, barley, and oats, are staple food crops cultivated extensively worldwide. Cereal and grain crops have high commercial value due to their widespread consumption as food, animal feed, and raw materials for various industries. The large-scale cultivation of these crops leads to significant demand for crop protection products, including adjuvants, to ensure optimal yield and quality.
Download PDF Brochure:  https://www.marketsandmarkets.com/pdfdownloadNew.asp?id=1240
The North American market is projected to contribute the largest share of the agricultural adjuvants market.
The demand for agriculture adjuvants in North America is experiencing notable growth due to the increasing use of precision farming in the region. This creates a favorable business environment for adjuvants manufacturers and consumers in the region. North America has the presence of major agricultural adjuvants companies, that offer a wide range of products catering to different crop types and application requirements.
Agriculture Adjuvants Companies
The key players in the agriculture adjuvants market include Corteva Agriscience (US), Evonik Industries AG (Germany), Croda International Plc (UK), Nufarm Limited (Australia), Solvay SA (Belgium), BASF SE (Germany), Huntsman International LLC. (US), Clariant AG (Switzerland), Helena Agri-Enterprises, LLC (US), WILBUR-ELLIS AGRIBUSINESS (US), Precision Laboratories, LLC (US), and CHS Inc. (US). A primary focus was given to new product development to meet the growing demand from farmers. Additionally, acquisitions and deals were other key strategies adopted by these players to expand their presence in the agricultural adjuvants space.
0 notes
palmoilnews · 2 months
Text
GRAINS-Soybeans rise as bargain-buying supports; corn, wheat edge higher SINGAPORE, Aug 8 (Reuters) - Chicago soybeans rose for the first time in three sessions on Thursday, as bargain-buying supported the market, which has been under pressure from favourable U.S. crop conditions and slow demand. Corn and wheat futures edged higher. "Prices of agricultural products, including corn and soybeans have dropped a lot, and we don't see a big downside from the current levels," said one trader in Singapore. The most-active soybean contract on the Chicago Board of Trade (CBOT) Sv1 was up 0.4% at $10.23-1/4 a bushel, as of 0530 GMT. Corn Cv1 rose 0.2% to $4.01-1/2 a bushel and wheat Wv1 added 0.8% to 5.42-3/4 a bushel. The soybean market has faced headwinds amid favourable growing conditions in the Midwest at a time when China has reduced its purchases from the United States. China's soybean imports rose 2.9% in July from a year earlier, spurred by lower prices and fears of heightened trade tensions between Beijing and the U.S. if Donald Trump returns as president. The country has bought larger volumes from Brazil and it is now facing an oversupply of beans amid subdued animal feed demand. A labour strike launched by oilseed industry unions in Argentina, a major soyoil and soymeal exporter, has halted shipments from ports that host processing plants. Cooler-than-expected temperatures in Argentina next week could trigger frosts and damage crops, the Buenos Aires Grains Exchange said on Wednesday. Chicago wheat edged lower on Wednesday as U.S. export demand showed signs of easing, though uncertainty about the size and quality of the global crop helped keep a floor under prices. This year's soft wheat crop in France, the European Union's biggest producer, is expected to shrink to its lowest level in 41 years at 25.17 million metric tons after heavy rain slashed both the crop area and yields, Argus Media said on Tuesday. Market participants also said they were closely following news from Egypt's state grains buyer, the General Authority for Supply Commodities, which announced a massive international tender for 3.8 million metric tons, the largest on record. Egypt typically imports most of its grain from Russia, which made up nearly 70% of all its wheat imports in 2023. Commodity funds were net sellers of CBOT corn, wheat, soybean and soymeal futures contracts on Wednesday, traders said. Funds were net buyers of CBOT soyoil futures, they said.
0 notes
chemanalystdata · 2 months
Text
Lysine Hydrochloride Prices | Pricing | News| Database | Index | Chart | Forecast
 Lysine Hydrochloride Prices, a vital amino acid used extensively in animal feed and human nutrition, has experienced a range of price fluctuations due to various market dynamics. The prices of Lysine Hydrochloride are influenced by factors such as raw material costs, production processes, supply and demand, and geopolitical events. As a key ingredient in the production of balanced animal feeds, Lysine Hydrochloride plays a crucial role in promoting healthy growth and optimal feed efficiency. Its importance in the agricultural and livestock industries contributes to its high demand, which in turn affects its market pricing. Additionally, the cost of raw materials used in the synthesis of Lysine Hydrochloride, such as corn and other agricultural products, directly impacts its price. Fluctuations in the prices of these raw materials, driven by weather conditions, crop yields, and global trade policies, can lead to significant changes in the cost of Lysine Hydrochloride.
Another aspect influencing Lysine Hydrochloride prices is the production capacity of manufacturers. Companies that produce this amino acid must invest in specialized equipment and adhere to stringent quality control standards, which can affect their operational costs. In periods of increased demand or limited production capacity, prices may rise as suppliers adjust to market conditions. Conversely, if production exceeds demand, prices may decrease to maintain competitive positioning in the market. The global supply chain for Lysine Hydrochloride also plays a significant role in its pricing. Transportation costs, import/export regulations, and trade tariffs can all impact the final price of this amino acid. For instance, disruptions in supply chains or changes in trade policies can lead to increased costs, which are often passed on to consumers and businesses.
Get Real Time Prices for Lysine Hydrochloride: https://www.chemanalyst.com/Pricing-data/lysine-hydrochloride-1497In recent years, Lysine Hydrochloride prices have also been influenced by global economic conditions and industrial trends. Economic downturns or fluctuations in the global economy can lead to reduced demand for animal products, which in turn affects the demand for Lysine Hydrochloride. Additionally, advancements in technology and production methods may lead to more efficient manufacturing processes, potentially lowering production costs and influencing market prices. The competitive landscape of the Lysine Hydrochloride market is another crucial factor in price determination. As more companies enter the market and competition intensifies, prices may be driven down as manufacturers strive to capture a larger share of the market. Conversely, in markets with limited competition, prices may remain higher due to fewer available options for consumers and businesses.
Furthermore, regulatory changes and environmental considerations can impact the pricing of Lysine Hydrochloride. Stricter environmental regulations or changes in industry standards may lead to increased production costs, which can be reflected in the price of the final product. Conversely, improvements in regulatory practices or the adoption of more sustainable production methods may lead to cost reductions and influence market pricing. The interplay of these various factors creates a complex pricing environment for Lysine Hydrochloride. Businesses and consumers must stay informed about market trends, raw material costs, and global economic conditions to make informed decisions regarding their purchases and investments in this essential amino acid.
Overall, the pricing of Lysine Hydrochloride is a multifaceted issue influenced by a combination of factors including raw material costs, production capacity, global supply chains, economic conditions, competitive dynamics, and regulatory changes. As the demand for Lysine Hydrochloride continues to evolve with advancements in agriculture and nutrition, it is essential for stakeholders in the industry to remain vigilant and adaptable to the shifting market landscape.
Get Real Time Prices for Lysine Hydrochloride: https://www.chemanalyst.com/Pricing-data/lysine-hydrochloride-1497
Contact Us:
ChemAnalyst
GmbH - S-01, 2.floor, Subbelrather Straße,
15a Cologne, 50823, Germany
Call: +49-221-6505-8833
Website: https://www.chemanalyst.com
0 notes
downtoearthmarkets · 2 months
Text
Tumblr media
The American continent is home to a rich biodiversity of plant and animal species that help fill our plates and bellies every day. In fact, around sixty percent of the world’s diet is derived from foods that originated in the Americas thousands of years ago. Many of these foods were key to the survival of ancient pre-Columbian civilizations and native tribes that thrived here long before the arrival of European explorers. Here are a few such indigenous American foods that you can find in the farmers market that are not only locally produced but have evolved on this continent over millennia.  
Pecans Pecans are the seeds, or edible nuts, of pecan trees, a species of hickory tree (Carya illinoinensis) native to the southern United States and northern Mexico. The word pecan is derived from the Algonquin word “pacane” which translates to “nuts requiring a stone to crack”. Pecans grew wild across the American South and Midwest before they were commercially cultivated in the 1880s, making them one of the country’s most recently domesticated major crops. Nutritious and plentiful, wild pecans were an essential part of both native and colonial Americans’ diet for many centuries.
Though not grown in the New York area, given their North American provenance and status as the only nut native to the U.S., pecans are often featured in a variety of farmers market baked goods from scones to pies and more. These coveted tree nuts are rich in nutrition thanks to their monounsaturated fats, high fiber and vitamin and mineral content and can play a healthy part in any well-balanced diet.
Tomatillos Also known as Mexican husk tomatoes or husk cherries, tomatillos are native to Mexico where they feature prominently in traditional cuisine. Evidence of tomatillo consumption dates back to 900 BCE in the Tehuacán Valley when they were a significant food crop for both the Aztecs and Mayans and were considered more important to these cultures than tomatoes.
Tomatillos are grown on many of our small farms and are just coming into season now. They sport a papery husk that is removed to reveal the small, tart green fruit inside. Tomatillos are a key ingredient in many Mexican salsas and sauces, and they are also used in dishes such as chile verde, pozole verde and chicken tomatillo soup.
Corn Corn, also known as maize, is perhaps the most well-known food of the Americas given its global popularity and commoditization. It is thought to be one of the world’s most ancient domesticated crops and was first propagated in southern Mexico around 9,000 years ago by indigenous peoples who often grew corn alongside beans and squash. This method of companion planting, known as the Three Sisters, was so successful that it spread as far as the northeast where it was used by the Iroquois and is still practiced by growers today.
Tender, sugar-rich varieties of corn called sweet corn or corn on the cob are grown specifically for human consumption. While a lot of American corn is grown to feed livestock and make corn syrup, plastics and fuel, the sweet corn grown by our small farms is raised with minimal inputs as part of a diverse variety of crops, resulting in farming practices that are very different from what is seen on enormous industrial-style farms. This year sweet corn has come into season a couple of weeks early and is already available at many of our farmstalls.
Amaranth Amaranth has been a staple food for indigenous peoples in the Americas for thousands of years. Dozens of amaranth species have been cultivated from Canada to Chile, where the seeds are used as a protein-rich grain and the leaves consumed for their many nutritional benefits. Amaranth leaves are a beautiful deep green that is sometimes streaked with red and purple. They can be eaten raw when young and tender but are more commonly used as a cooking green that is similar to spinach or Swiss chard.
Chocolate Chocolate is used by our baked goods vendors in a variety of their artisanal treats including breakfast pastries, cookies, brownies, cakes and other goodies. The cacao tree, the plant from which chocolate is made, originated in the Amazon basin of South America around 7,500 years ago, and eventually spread north to Central America and Southern Mexico. Chocolate's origins can be traced back thousands of years to the ancient cultures of Mesoamerica when the Olmec people began using cacao seeds to make warm drinks around 1800 BCE.
While we relish the bounty of the summer season, it’s interesting to consider just how much of our weekly, locally produced farmers market haul has its roots deep in the history of the American continent. The origin of these diverse foods and how they’ve sustained humankind throughout millennia always offers some good food for thought.
1 note · View note