• library_napper@monyet.cc
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    1 year ago

    A 2020 study published in the journal Nature Sustainability highlights the immense environmental potential of changing how we farm and eat. Researchers found that if all high-income countries shifted to a plant-based diet from 2015 to 2050, they’d free up enough land to sequester 32 gigatons of carbon dioxide — the equivalent of removing nine years of all those countries’ fossil fuel emissions from the atmosphere. Globally, if we shifted to plant-based diets over that same time period, the land saved could sequester the equivalent of 16 years of global fossil fuel emissions.

  • lordxakio@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Unless fake or lab meat is cheaper or just as expensive, this won’t change. Except maybe if costs go higher than what is considered profitable.

      • SokathHisEyesOpen@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        There was a video from a rancher floating around in like 2020 where he talks about the meat industry. There are billions of dollars every single day flowing through the meat industry. It goes primarily to the processing facilities and they use it to create surplus and waste to drive the prices down before making huge orders. The process hurts everyone except the ultra-wealthy.

    • library_napper@monyet.cc
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      1 year ago

      Fake meat is already cheaper. We dont need lab meats. Beans, seitan, tofu, tempeh, tvp, etc.

      All we need is to start serving exclusively plant based meals in schools, and almost all of the next generation will adopt it.

      • Rodeo@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        I can usually get ground beef cheaper per pound than I can get tofu. When they both on sale they’re the same price at my store.

    • Rambi@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      It’s considerably cheaper in the UK, like half or a third of the price sometimes.

  • nooneescapesthelaw@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    Most of the US is empty and fertile unlike other parts of the world, land use is not really the biggest issue with meat farming

    • usernamesAreTricky@lemmy.mlOP
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      1 year ago

      Empty… to humans but not to native species that living there. Grazing still affects those ecosystems there. From the article

      As the cattle graze, they tend to disrupt ecosystems and do a lot of damage to the land. They eat or destroy plants consumed by native species, like turtles, which can lead to biodiversity loss. Their manure pollutes rivers and streams, and as they move about, they erode soil.

      […] analyzed decades of BLM data and found that about half of the acreage it oversees that has been assessed fails to meet the agency’s own land health standards (in Nevada, it’s an alarming 83 percent). PEER points to livestock grazing as the primary source of land degradation.

      There’s an opportunity cost in using all that land. If we let land go back to its natural state we can sequester quite large amounts of carbon

      A 2020 study published in the journal Nature Sustainability highlights the immense environmental potential of changing how we farm and eat. Researchers found that if all high-income countries shifted to a plant-based diet from 2015 to 2050, they’d free up enough land to sequester 32 gigatons of carbon dioxide — the equivalent of removing nine years of all those countries’ fossil fuel emissions from the atmosphere. Globally, if we shifted to plant-based diets over that same time period, the land saved could sequester the equivalent of 16 years of global fossil fuel emissions.

      • dubyakay@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        What’s the environmental cost of growing all that soy, corn and oats for an US wide vegetarian diet?

        • Peddlephile@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          A lot less than farming meat which requires all the cost of growing that and ensuring the animals are fed and watered until slaughtering.

        • usernamesAreTricky@lemmy.mlOP
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          1 year ago

          From the article

          But not all agriculture is equally land-intensive. Meat-heavy diets require far more land than low-meat and vegetarian diets.

          But not only that it also requires crop land for plant-based diets. From a different source

          If everyone shifted to a plant-based diet we would reduce global land use for agriculture by 75%.

          […]

          If we would shift towards a more plant-based diet we don’t only need less agricultural land overall, we also need less cropland.

          https://ourworldindata.org/land-use-diets

  • PowerCrazy@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    I agree, the meat industry should be nationalized along with agriculture and the energy sector.

      • PowerCrazy@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        Well when you try to run a service that is by definition unprofitable, “like a business,” the only way to hit the financial metrics is to cut salary and headcount. This obviously leads to shitty service. That said in states like New York and Illinois the DMV is actually pretty well run, though the number of locations and hours of operation leaves something to be desired.

  • AutoTL;DR@lemmings.worldB
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    1 year ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    “The problems are huge, sprawling, and major,” said Erik Molvar, a wildlife biologist and executive director of the Western Watersheds Project (WWP), the group that sued numerous federal agencies for failing to preserve the habitat of the Mojave desert tortoise and 77 other species.

    WWP alleges that for decades, the US Bureau of Land Management (BLM) and other agencies have violated an agreement they signed in 2001 that forbids cattle grazing in a part of Nevada’s Gold Butte National Monument in order to protect the desert tortoise, whose population has plunged since the 1980s.

    The permitting program is costing the federal government tens of millions of dollars annually to administer, all while giving cattle ranchers a deep discount on public lands.

    Even worse, the federal government spends millions annually on its “Wildlife Services” division, which kills wild animals it deems a threat to grazing livestock.

    The programs that subsidize the beef industry represent some of the most striking examples of America’s tradition of “agricultural exceptionalism” — giving farmers and ranchers special treatment, like sweeping exemptions from critical environmental, labor, and animal welfare laws.

    Agribusiness also benefits from getting large swathes of the West to itself, illustrating a simple fact of land use in America: Contrary to the famous Woody Guthrie song, much of it isn’t for you and me — it’s for the meat industry.


    The original article contains 1,123 words, the summary contains 225 words. Saved 80%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!

    • usernamesAreTricky@lemmy.mlOP
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      1 year ago

      The autotldr isn’t great here, focusing on one example and missing quotes about the broader picture like these:

      All told, a staggering 41 percent of land in the continental US is used for meat, dairy, and egg production. Globally, it’s more than one-third of habitable land. Much of it was once forest that’s since been cut down to graze livestock and grow the corn and soy that feeds them.

      not all agriculture is equally land-intensive. Meat-heavy diets require far more land than low-meat and vegetarian diets.

      A 2020 study published in the journal Nature Sustainability highlights the immense environmental potential of changing how we farm and eat. Researchers found that if all high-income countries shifted to a plant-based diet from 2015 to 2050, they’d free up enough land to sequester 32 gigatons of carbon dioxide — the equivalent of removing nine years of all those countries’ fossil fuel emissions from the atmosphere.

  • DunkelLicht@discuss.tchncs.de
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    1 year ago

    What a stupid and annoying title, trying to imply that I am on some team that is not the “meat industry” team. I eat meat and I have nothing against ranching.

  • bioemerl@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    basically everyone eats meat. If it’s making meat it’s broadly serving the people.

    • usernamesAreTricky@lemmy.mlOP
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      1 year ago

      Deforestation is not serving the people

      High GHG emissions is not serving the people

      High cruelty to non-human animals is not serving the people

      Etc.

      • LemmyIsFantastic@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Yes. It is. This meat isn’t going into dumpsters. It’s largely sold and people love the cheap prices and do not care about any of that in mass

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        1 year ago

        Yeah, and neither deforestation nor meat make a dent in that. If you want to end global warming, end the use of fossil fuels.

        The statistics they parrot about nothing emissions are largely bullshit and even if everyone stopped eating meat tomorrow we’d still have all the same problems we do now.

        You can’t offset global warming with forests, what humans are doing is an order of magnitude larger than what nature is equipped to handle.

        Nor is this even relevant at all, because even fossil fuels serve the average person. There’s a reason we keep using them.

        • blazera@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          The statistics they parrot

          That tells me everything i need to know, you cant be convinced with science.

          • bioemerl@kbin.social
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            1 year ago

            People who don’t understand that all methane emitted by cows must come from carbon gathered by plants and as a result contributes near net zero to the long-term global warming trend are the people who don’t understand science.

            • usernamesAreTricky@lemmy.mlOP
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              1 year ago

              CO2 is a much less potent green house gas than methane. Ruminants converting converting CO2 to methane causes quite a great deal of warming because methane and CO2 are not created equal. As long as we have large amounts of cattle, we’ll keep creating higher methane concentrations

              • bioemerl@kbin.social
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                1 year ago

                It’s about a 20x potential over the course of 100 years. The problem is, the sheer size of emissions from fossil fuels dwarfs any contribution cow methane gives to the atmosphere.

                Like, methane in the atmosphere is really high right now, but it’s not because of cows, it’s because of fracking in Canada and the United States, which commits an order of magnitude or methane than cows ever could.

                It would be like standing in a room with a raging inferno and pointing to a matchstick and say look, there’s our problem.

                Cow-warming has a bunch of problems that mean it’s never going to contribute to being a significant factor in global warming.

                It’s self-correcting. Eventually methane is going to reach a certain point of equilibrium where the amount that’s coming back into CO2 is equal to the amount being emitted and now you’re going to be at a steady state again.

                It’s relatively small scale. Cows farting is not really that big of a deal in the grand scheme of things when we have factories producing millions of tons of carbon emissions.

                It’s easily fixed. There’s lots of medications and other things you can do to cows to make them stop emitting methane, if it ever becomes one of our most significant problems it will be easily and quickly solved much like CFCs were.

                Carbon emissions from fossil fuels have a bunch of traits that make it particularly nasty.

                It’s additive. Everything we admitted in 1960 is going to be around and heating the planet for 100 years yet

                It was growing exponentially. Humanity has been emitting an absolutely mind-boggling amount of carbon. We’ve gone from what? 300 parts per million to 400? And the amount of carbon we’re emitting every year now is higher than it’s ever been, and every single year worth of emissions just adds on to the problem pile that’s going to keep on getting worse for the next 100 years.

                It’s not easily undone. That carbon is never going to turn back into oil unless humanity goes out of our way to do it, and it’s incredibly difficult to do. You would need the sum energy usage of humanity from the 1930s to today recreated and wasted on pulling the carbon back out of the atmosphere and sticking it in the ground.

                Emissions from cows undo themselves in 20 years, entirely offset themselves through plant growth, and are easily massively reduced any change in our lifestyle in just a couple of years if we really wanted to as a society, with next to zero change in our lifestyle.

                They aren’t comparable problems and all you’re doing by pointing at cows and acting like they’re causing global warming is distracting from the real problem.

                • usernamesAreTricky@lemmy.mlOP
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                  1 year ago

                  It’s hardly small. It’s enough to make us miss Climate targets even if fossil fuels were eliminated today. We have to tackle both

                  To have any hope of meeting the central goal of the Paris Agreement, which is to limit global warming to 2°C or less, our carbon emissions must be reduced considerably, including those coming from agriculture. Clark et al. show that even if fossil fuel emissions were eliminated immediately, emissions from the global food system alone would make it impossible to limit warming to 1.5°C and difficult even to realize the 2°C target. Thus, major changes in how food is produced are needed if we want to meet the goals of the Paris Agreement.

                  https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.aba7357

                  Further for the bit about feed addatives, those don’t do as much as you’d think because the touted emissions reductions are only looking at feedlot emissions and not overall emissions

                  There, algae feed additives can be churned into the cows’ grain and soy feed. But on feedlots, cattle already belch less methane—only 11 percent of their lifetime output.

                  All told, if we accept the most promising claims of the algae boosters, we’re talking about an 80 percent reduction of methane among only 11 percent of all burps—roughly an 8.8 percent reduction total

                  https://www.wired.com/story/carbon-neutral-cows-algae/

            • blazera@kbin.social
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              1 year ago

              The earth doesnt produce carbon at all, so why do you think things have getting warmer? It matters what form that carbon takes. Carbon in the form of a plant is a solid, and even works to pull carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. Carbon in the form of methane has a much stronger greenhouse gas effect than regular carbon dioxide. Which is where those bullshit statistics you hate come from, it’s carbon that was solid and is now a greenhouse gas. Same shit as fossil fuels, its not new carbon being made, its just solid carbon being turned into gas.

              • bioemerl@kbin.social
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                1 year ago

                The earth doesnt produce carbon at all, so why do you think things have getting warmer? It matters what form that carbon takes. Carbon in the form of a plant is a solid, and even works to pull carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. Carbon in the form of methane has

                Jesus Christ you’re ignorant.

                The carbon in plants comes out of the atmosphere.

                Cows eat those plants and processes in their stomach turn it into methane.

                Methane in the atmosphere turns back to carbon within 20 years.

                Plants then reabsorb that carbon when they grow to feed the cows.

                It’s literally a constrained cycle. You can’t increase the amount of carbon in the atmosphere through cows and plants. You have to actually find carbon that is in a stable solid form and then put it into the atmosphere when it otherwise wouldn’t be.

                In other words, you have to mine coal or pump oil.

                Plants and cows have absolutely nothing to do with it.

              • PowerCrazy@lemmy.ml
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                1 year ago

                The earth doesnt produce carbon at all What?

                There are hundreds of fully natural processes that emit carbon that have nothing to do with Humans. Volcanos, Plant Respiration, other mammal respiration, forest fires, lime stone erosion, natural decomposition of organic matter, meteorites burning up in the atomosphere, lightning strikes, etc etc. Where do you think the carbon in the earth came from? God? Well before humans existed there were ice ages and periods of higher carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, as well as higher oxygen. That statement by itself shows you don’t’ really have a good grasp of what climate change is, nor what is causing it.

                • blazera@kbin.social
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                  1 year ago

                  None of those things create new carbon, its just changing form of existing carbon.

            • rocaverde@todon.nl
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              @bioemerl @usernamesAreTricky @blazera lol. The problem is humans keep artificially up a cow population to satisfy their apetite for meat. One cow’s emissions is fine, 20 billion cows’ emissions is not, regardless of the plants capturing CO². Nature is artificially out of balance.

              • bioemerl@kbin.social
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                1 year ago

                No, nature is out of balance because we are pulling carbon deep out of the Earth and emitting it into the atmosphere.

                No number of cows is going to cause an imbalance in the carbon cycle, because it doesn’t matter how many cows you have, they must be fed by carbon pulled out of the atmosphere.

                • rocaverde@todon.nl
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                  1 year ago

                  @bioemerl @usernamesAreTricky @blazera wrong. The more cows releasing gas, the more saturated becomes the atmosphere. One thing is the carbon they eat and a very different story is capturing it back, or do you think the carbon problem from the oil industry is happening just because we drill the oil out?