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Eating As If the Climate Mattered

Posted: 01/24/08 02:32 PM ET

Last week in our nation's capital, the National Council for Science and the Environment (NCSE) held a climate change conference focused on solutions to the problem of human-induced climate change. And in Paris the head of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), which is sharing the Nobel Peace Prize with Al Gore, held a press conference to discuss to discuss "the importance of lifestyle choices" in combating global warming.

Notably, all food at the NCSE conference was vegan, and there were table-top brochures with quotes from the U.N. report on the meat industry, discussed more below. And the IPCC head, Dr. Rajendra Pachauri declared, as the AFP sums it up, "Don't eat meat, ride a bike, and be a frugal shopper."

The New York Times, also, seems to be jumping on the anti-consumption bandwagon. First they ran an editorial on New Year's Day stating that global warming is "the overriding environmental issue of these times" and that Americans are "going to have to change [our] lifestyles..." The next day, they ran a superb opinion piece by Professor Jared Diamond about the fact that those of us in the developed world consume 32 times as many resources as people in the developing world and 11 times as much as China.

Diamond ends optimistically, stating that "whether we get there willingly or not, we shall soon have lower consumption rates, because our present rates are unsustainable."

It is reasonable for all of us to review our lives and to ask where we can cut down on our consumption -- because it's necessary, and because living according to our values is what people of integrity do.

Last November, United Nations environmental researchers released a report that everyone who cares about the environment should review. Called " Livestock's Long Shadow," this 408-page thoroughly researched scientific report indicts the consumption of chickens, pigs, and other meats, concluding that the meat industry is "one of the... most significant contributors to the most serious environmental problems, at every scale from local to global" and that eating meat contributes to "problems of land degradation, climate change and air pollution, water shortage and water pollution, and loss of biodiversity."

The environmental problems of meat fill books, but the intuitive argument can be put more succinctly into two points:

1) A 135-pound woman will burn off at least 1,200 calories a day even if she never gets out of bed. She uses most of what she consumes simply to power her body. Similarly, it requires exponentially more resources to eat chickens, pigs, and other animals, because most of what we feed to them is required to keep them alive, and much of the rest is turned into bones and other bits we don't eat; only a fraction of those crops is turned into meat. So you have to grow all the crops required to raise the animals to eat the animals, which is vastly wasteful relative to eating the crops directly.

2) It also requires many extra stages of polluting and energy-intensive production to get chicken, pork, and other meats to the table, including feed mills, factory farms, and slaughterhouses, all of which are not used in the production of vegetarian foods. And then there are the additional stages of gas-guzzling, pollution-spewing transportation of moving crops, feed, animals, and meat--relative to simply growing the crops and processing them into vegetarian foods.

So when the U.N. added it all up, what they found is that eating chickens, pigs, and other animals contributes to "problems of land degradation, climate change and air pollution, water shortage and water pollution, and loss of biodiversity," and that meat-eating is "one of the... most significant contributors to the most serious environmental problems, at every scale from local to global."

And on the issue of global warming, the issue the New York Times deems critical enough to demand that we "change [our] lifestyles" and for which Al Gore and the IPCC received the Nobel peace prize, the United Nations' scientists conclude that eating animals causes 40 percent more global warming than all planes, cars, trucks, and other forms of transport combined, which is why the Live Earth Global Warming Survival Handbook says that "refusing meat" is "the single most effective thing you can do to reduce your carbon footprint" [emphasis in original].

There is a lot of important attention paid to population, and that's a critical issue too, but if we're consuming 11 times as much as people in China and 32 times as much as people in the third world, then it's not just about population; it's also about consumption.

NCSE, IPPC, and the U.N. deserve accolades for calling on people to stop supporting the inefficient, fossil fuel intensive, and polluting meat industry. The head of the IPCC, who received the Nobel Prize with Mr. Gore and who held last week's press conference in Paris, puts his money where his mouth is: He's a vegetarian.

The NCSE's all-vegan 3,000-person conference last week, also, sends positive signal that other environmentalists would be wise to listen to. Thus far, among the large environmental organizations only Greenpeace ensures that all official functions are vegetarian. Other environmental groups should follow suit.

It's empowering really, when you think about it: By choosing vegetarian foods, we're making compassionate choices that are good for our bodies, and we're living our environmental values at every meal

Find out more at www.GoVeg.com/eco, and find recipe tips, meal plans, and more at www.VegCooking.com .

 
 
 

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01:20 PM on 01/27/2008
How about we elevate this debate and drop the whole liberal/conservative construct? What about grass-fed beef? A new Cornell University study concluded that two ounces of locally produced, grass-fed meat and eggs daily would require less energy to produce than an all vegetarian/vegan diet. How many of you vegans live up north and eat fresh tomatoes in January? The per calorie carbon footprint of those tomatoes is higher than that of locally produced grass-fed beef. Plus, the beef can be raised on land that is not suitable for crops (ie. hills) and, as long as grazing is managed correctly, can actually put carbon back in the soil at a rate of 2% per year! Carbon sequestration!?!? Yup. Not only that, but what are you going to fertilize your crops with? Chemical fertilizers derived from oil? Animal manure, correctly applied and managed, more completely fertilizes the soil than any chemical. Anyone up for intelligent debate??
10:34 AM on 01/25/2008
"liberals once again telling everyone how they should live!"

Oh, that's funny. The pot calling the kettle black. It's pretty hard to know whether to call me liberal or conservative, but I certainly don't mind telling people they shouldn't kill animals and trash the earth at the same time, if they haven't already figured it out for themselves.
10:26 PM on 01/24/2008
If you don't want to eat meat due to some moral reason I can understand that. If you are planning on cutting out meat due to enviromental reasons then you are wasting your time.
China is expected to build 500 new dirty coal fired power plants over the next 5 years. There is nothing you can do to offset the amount of pollution generated by China's dirty power plants. California is seeing more pollution then they have in years do to smog being carried accross the Pacific by the jetstream. Everyone needs electricity but the Chinese are not even attempting to make their power plants clean as those in America must do.
Eat meat and enjoy yourself.
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SweetJudith
05:20 PM on 01/24/2008
I gave up eating meat and poultry over 15 years ago for ethical reasons alone.
How little did I know that I would be helping the Enviroment
Don't look for Al Gore to be giving up eating meat anytime soon, he enjoys it too much.
Judith

I love your articles.
05:03 PM on 01/24/2008
My husband and I became vegan three years ago, after seeing the eye-opening film, Peaceable Kingdom, and reading Will Tuttle’s life-changing book, The World Peace Diet: Eating for Spiritual Health and Social Harmony. We are compassionate people who love animals and desire to live in non-harmful, nonviolent ways towards our fellow beings. Once we became aware of our ignorance about our contribution to the lives of agony endured by sensitive animals whose body parts and secretions are used for food, the only choice that had integrity for us – that enabled us to live according to our values -- was to become vegan. We thought we’d be giving up a number of foods we enjoyed, but once we’d purchased some vegan cookbooks and made a few changes in our habits, we found that we are eating food that tastes better, digests better and is even more delicious than anything we ever ate before. What’s so wonderful is that the vegan lifestyle has the added benefits of being by far the most powerful action one can take on behalf of the environment, as well as the most positive and preventative behavior one can engage in on behalf of our own health (www.pcrm.org).
photo
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Economike
03:47 PM on 01/24/2008
"Don't eat meat, ride a bike, and be a frugal shopper."

Yeah! Harley Davidson
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Wilson33
03:22 PM on 01/24/2008
Here we go, liberals once again telling everyone how they should live! I love meat, will continue to eat meat and will not feel at all guilty about it because I know that this whole thing is a hoax and it just keeps getting creepier and creepier each day you liberals open your mouth.

So Algore today says that the ice sheets will be gone faster than previously thought, now in 5 years. So if that is true, that means that most of the ice sheets are already melted and guess what, no floods, Florida and Indonesia are still around and the sea level hasn't risen at all. It's a hoax!

And how did all of those people attending the conference where there was no meat to be found get there? Did they ride their bikes? Did they walk? Did they carpool? Did they at least all use the same plane to get there?

NO, they didn't! So all of the vegies in that place were for nought since all of the carbon that was sent into the atmosphere from their planes cancelled it out.

What a COMPLETE waste of time!!!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Wilson33
03:11 PM on 01/24/2008
Here we go, liberals once again telling everyone how they should live! I love meat, will continue to eat meat and will not feel at all guilty about it because I know that this whole thing is a hoax and it just keeps getting creepier and creepier each day you liberals open your mouth.

So Algore today says that the ice sheets will be gone faster than previously thought, now in 5 years. So if that is true, that means that most of the ice sheets are already melted and guess what, no floods, Florida and Indonesia are still around and the sea level hasn't risen at all. It's a hoax!

And how did all of those people attending the conference where there was no meat to be found get there? Did they ride their bikes? Did they walk? Did they carpool? Did they at least all use the same plane to get there?

NO, they didn't! So all of the vegies in that place were for nought since all of the carbon that was sent into the atmosphere from their planes cancelled it out.

What a COMPLETE waste of time!!!