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Environmental impact of the meat industry
Did anyone else watch last night's BBC documentary? I thought it was very well done. It scrupulously avoided emotional arguments, and showed us the many ways industrial-scale meat production is damaging the planet. Loss of wilderness, especially rainforest; pollution of earth, inland waterways and seas by livestock faeces and urine; increased greenhouse effect from methane emitted by livestock; loss of insect diversity due to monocultures; loss of marine life by overfishing to provide protein concentrates for cattle feed, and world hunger due to feeding crops to livestock instead of growing crops we can eat ourselves.
It was a bit thin on solutions, but that would have made a longer programme. Pity they didn't make a second programme to look into that.
What did the rest of you think of it? Or about the issues generally, if you didn't see the programme?
It was a bit thin on solutions, but that would have made a longer programme. Pity they didn't make a second programme to look into that.
What did the rest of you think of it? Or about the issues generally, if you didn't see the programme?
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A lot of the land where sheep, deer and reindeer roam in the UK and upland Europe is not arable so lose the animals and lose the habitat. Studies show that free range pigs emit half as much carbon as intensively reared pigs and I expect the same is true of poultry.
I don't want to see a world with all the livestock, rare breed or common, either gone or restricted to a tiny genetic pool in zoo farms. Nor do I want to see all land turned over to monocropping. I enjoy eating meat and poultry and eggs and cheese along with plenty of fruit and veg and occasional cereals.
As with any other aspect of life, reason rather than excess should be the rule and we should be prepared to pay a reasonable price for farm produce and foods and also use it better with less waste. It's the constant drive to lower prices which does a great deal of harm.
It is also a well documented fact that there is more global food supply wasted in bad harvesting, bad storage, bad transport and bad distribution caused by poverty, bad management, bad governance and war and that fixing those would fix a lot of the world food shortage problem faster than waiting for solutions to global warming and would reduce pressure on rainforests.
In my understanding, lots of these problems have solutions...… its just implementing them that's the problem. People don't like to change their ways.
Puts tin hat on and ducks ……..
If land is only able to be used to grow grass, then rearing animals is fine, if land is suitable for arable, then more arable needs to be grown.
I don't think it is acceptable any more, to say I like beef and I will eat it every day.
The small changes I have made personally: 1 vege meal a week, 2 fish meals a week and only 1 red meat meal a week, are I am sure not enough, but they are a start.
When you don't even know who's in the team
S.Yorkshire/Derbyshire border
Perhaps more education and take up of contraception would do the job better and faster.
Gardening in Central Norfolk on improved gritty moraine over chalk ... free-draining.
I had thought that the Brazilian rainforest was mainly destroyed for the timber it yielded. It transpires that huge swathes of the forest (going on memory, I think about 20% reduction) are turned into ranch areas for cattle.
To feed the cattle and other animals around the world, large areas of savannah (never mentioned when referring to Amazonian deforestation) are cleared to grow soy and maize as animal feed. So we clear a habitat, use it for a monoculture to grow specific plants (and the diversity of insects is immediately compromised) which are then fed to animals for humans to eat the meat. Perhaps there is something to be said for using land to grow plants for humans to eat rather than extending the process.
It is true that increasing wealth in developing countries creates further demand for meat. However, it was shocking to see the huge (72 oz steak in one sitting, anyone?) quantities of meat consumed through nothing but gluttony. In this respect, I'm afraid it is the American market that stands guilty in so many ways.
Intensively reared animals with no pasture and a depressing environment did nothing to assure me that most of these practises are acceptable.
I am lucky to live in Devon. There are many farms in the area that produce beef to a high standard (grass fed, low concentrations per acre), upland areas that produce lamb, utilising land that is not fit for arable, pigs from relatively nearby Wiltshire, where many are reared in the open in sustainable and humane ways (as opposed to crated and confined barns).
There isn't a perfect answer, but we can be more careful about the meat we choose to eat and the balance of meat protein to plant protein, for example, that collectively could make a difference.
If you didn't see the programme, it is well worth watching on catch-up imo.