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Avoiding Climate Catastrophe: Global Elimination of Meat Production Could Save the Planet
https://scitechdaily.com ^ | February 01, 2022 | By UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA - BERKELEY

Posted on 02/01/2022 11:49:20 AM PST by Red Badger

Eliminating all animal agriculture within the next 15 years would drastically reduce greenhouse gas emissions and also pull carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.

A new study of the climate impacts of raising animals for food concludes that phasing out all animal agriculture has the potential to substantially alter the trajectory of global warming.

The work is a collaboration between Michael Eisen, professor of molecular and cell biology at the University of California, Berkeley, and Patrick Brown, professor emeritus of biochemistry at Stanford University and the CEO of Impossible Foods Inc., a company that sells plant-based meat substitutes.

Eisen, who consults for Impossible Foods, and Brown used a simple climate model to look at the combined impact of eliminating emissions linked to animal agriculture and of restoring native vegetation on the 30% of Earth’s land surface currently used to house and feed livestock.

They found that the resulting drop in methane and nitrous oxide levels, and the conversion of 800 gigatons (800 billion tons) of carbon dioxide to forest, grassland, and soil biomass, would have the same beneficial impact on global warming as cutting annual global CO2 emissions by 68%.

“Our work shows that ending animal agriculture has the unique potential to significantly reduce atmospheric levels of all three major greenhouse gases, which, because we have dithered in responding to the climate crisis, is now necessary to avert climate catastrophe,” said Eisen, who is also a Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI) investigator at UC Berkeley.

A major reason for the large long-term effect Eisen and Brown observe is that its benefits accrue rapidly. Brown argues that this demonstrates that eliminating animal agriculture should be as high a priority as eliminating fossil fuel use.

“Eliminating animal agriculture would have a quicker and greater impact over the next 20 to 50 years, the critical window for avoiding climate catastrophe, and thus should be at the top of the list of potential climate solutions,” Brown said.

“There is,” he added, “an enormous, previously unrecognized opportunity to sharply bend the trajectory of climate change within a couple of decades, with multiple additional environmental and public health benefits, and minimal economic disruption.”

The study will be published today (February 1, 2022) in the journal PLOS Climate.

Not an impossible task Eisen and Brown have discussed the impacts of raising animals for food for years. Both men are vegans. Eisen stopped eating meat after convincing himself of the dire impact animal agriculture has on the world’s climate. Brown founded Impossible Foods in 2011 for similar reasons, began marketing the Impossible Burger in 2016, and recently launched plant-based chicken nuggets and ground pork products.

“My awareness of the potential impact was a major motivation for launching Impossible Foods,” Brown said. “In fact, I’ve been saying for years that replacing livestock in the global food system would turn back the clock on climate change. But although I knew that this conclusion was directionally correct, the environment and policy community would accept it only if we did this rigorous modeling that Mike and I did.”

Most research on the impact of animal agriculture has focused on the impact today of methane emissions from animals and their manure, nitrous oxide from fertilizer used to grow animal feed, and from the carbon dioxide produced raising and transporting animals and meat. Two reports within the past year, however, addressed a different aspect of animal agriculture: the potential that grazing land has for regrowing vegetation and sequestering carbon from the atmosphere.

“Everybody knows that methane is a problem. Everybody knows that livestock contribute to global warming in some way,” Eisen said. “But animal ag contributes to global warming in two ways: It contributes via emissions and contributes because that land would otherwise be holding carbon. Most analyses only look at one of those things.”

Even though the animal industry today is responsible for about 16% of annual greenhouse gas emissions, by some estimates about one-third of all the carbon dioxide humans have added to the atmosphere since the dawn of animal husbandry is a result of land cleared for animal grazing and to grow feed or provide forage for animals used as food.

“What hadn’t been recognized is the much more impactful potential to unlock negative emissions by eliminating that industry,” Brown said.

The two scientists spent the pandemic years researching climate models and climate change literature to quantify the direct and indirect impact of eliminating animal agriculture worldwide. While cows and other bovids, like buffalo, represent about 80% of animal agriculture’s impact, they also considered the impact of pigs, chickens and other domesticated animals used for food, though not the world’s fisheries.

While both researchers would just as soon eliminate animal agriculture today, they chose a more realistic scenario: a phaseout over 15 years.

“A 15-year phaseout is not unrealistic — a lot of things happen on that timeframe,” Eisen said. “We went from having no cellphones to cellphones being ubiquitous in less time than that. It’s not that we’re saying we’re going to get rid of animal ag in the next 15 years, though that’s sort of the mission for Impossible Foods, but that is something we could do.”

Their conclusions are that a 15-year phaseout would immediately eliminate about one-third of all methane emissions globally and two-thirds of all nitrous oxide emissions, allowing the atmosphere to achieve a new equilibrium at lower levels of both.

Better nutrition without animal products While Eisen and Brown acknowledge that animal products are key to nutrition in most countries — they supply about 18% of the calories, 40% of the protein and 45% of the fat in the human food supply — they point out that worldwide, about 400 million people already live on entirely plant-based diets. Existing crops could replace the calories, protein and fat from animals with a vastly reduced land, water, greenhouse gas and biodiversity impact, requiring only minor adjustments to optimize nutrition.

Based on his experience with Impossible Foods, Brown said, “there’s compelling evidence that animal agriculture can be replaced without requiring meat lovers to compromise on nutrition or any of the sensory pleasures they love.”

Both scientists hope that their study will prod policymakers to consider the reduction or elimination of animal agriculture — barely mentioned in the most recent IPCC (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change) report — as an important option for reducing greenhouse gases. They look forward to a robust debate now that their data and analysis are online through the open access journal PLOS Climate.

“What we really did in the paper was try to formalize what it would mean to get rid of animal agriculture without making it too complicated,” Eisen said. “There’s a lot of uncertainty, there are a lot of unknowns, but I think probably the biggest uncertainty is whether people will look at this potential and act on it as a society.”

“I’m hoping that others, including entrepreneurs, scientists, and global policymakers, will recognize that this is the most important opportunity humanity has to reverse the trajectory of climate change, and seize it,” Brown said.

The study was conducted with no outside funding. Eisen worked on the project as an HHMI investigator, alongside his research on gene regulation in fruit flies.

“I think this is a kind of Pearl Harbor moment for science. The climate of the planet is under a bigger threat now than it’s ever been in history, and to the extent that scientists can find ways to contribute, I think it’s really incumbent upon us to do so,” Eisen said.

Reference: “Rapid global phaseout of animal agriculture has the potential to stabilize greenhouse gas levels for 30 years and offset 68 percent of CO2 emissions this century” 1 February 2022, PLOS Climate. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pclm.0000010


TOPICS: Agriculture; Business/Economy; Food; Pets/Animals
KEYWORDS: climatechange; climatechangehoax; globalwarming; globalwarminghoax
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They don't call it Berzerkley for nothing..........................
1 posted on 02/01/2022 11:49:20 AM PST by Red Badger
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To: Red Badger

That’s funny... this aligns with the agenda of the Deep State, the Cabal, Klaus Schwab and the Great Reset - ALL at the same time.


2 posted on 02/01/2022 11:51:05 AM PST by C210N (Everything will be okay in the end. If it’s not okay, it’s not the end.)
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To: Red Badger

Come and take it, hippies. You will end up with unsafe levels of lead in your tofu fed bodies.


3 posted on 02/01/2022 11:51:22 AM PST by Levy78
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Their initial premise is false. Never accept a commie’s initial premise. They always lie.


4 posted on 02/01/2022 11:52:09 AM PST by curious7
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To: Red Badger

Or it could not.


5 posted on 02/01/2022 11:52:27 AM PST by dfwgator (Endut! Hoch Hech!)
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To: Red Badger

Was this study bankrolled by FAKE MEAT BILL GATES?


6 posted on 02/01/2022 11:52:49 AM PST by stars & stripes forever ( Blessed is the nation whose GOD is the LORD. ~ Psalm 33:12)
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To: Red Badger

It would be far more productive to eliminate University Professors


7 posted on 02/01/2022 11:54:03 AM PST by eyeamok (founded in cynicism, wrapped in sarcasm)
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To: Red Badger; All

These morons should take a look at a volcano eruption and then ask themselves how they will control a cubic mile of gas and ash blown up to 30,000 feet.


8 posted on 02/01/2022 11:54:08 AM PST by Cobra64 (Common sense isn’t common anymore.)
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To: Red Badger

Wow. What a YUGE load of bovine excrement.


9 posted on 02/01/2022 11:54:27 AM PST by Allegra
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To: Red Badger
Eliminating all animal agriculture within the next 15 years would drastically reduce greenhouse gas emissions

Eliminating all of the leftists on the planet would drastically reduce stupidity emissions.

10 posted on 02/01/2022 11:54:29 AM PST by Augie
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To: Red Badger

“Patrick Brown...CEO of Impossible Foods Inc., a company that sells plant-based meat substitutes [and] Eisen, who consults for Impossible Foods”

Couldn’t be more convinced if Brittany Spears gave her expert opinion...


11 posted on 02/01/2022 11:54:46 AM PST by Mr Rogers (We're a nation of feelings, not thoughts.)
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To: Cobra64
These morons should take a look at a volcano eruption and then ask themselves how they will control a cubic mile of gas and ash blown up to 30,000 feet.

Mandate scrubbers, really big ones. The only way to afford them would be more taxes I suppose.

12 posted on 02/01/2022 11:55:35 AM PST by 1Old Pro
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To: C210N

Bill Gates, George Soros, Fausti, and all Democrats................................


13 posted on 02/01/2022 11:55:38 AM PST by Red Badger (Homeless veterans camp in the streets while illegal aliens are put up in hotels.....................)
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To: Levy78; All

Apparently these morons never heard of photosynthesis.


14 posted on 02/01/2022 11:55:51 AM PST by Cobra64 (Common sense isn’t common anymore.)
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To: Red Badger

So ... they can solve climate change by eliminating all the animals.

Makes sense, I suppose. Eliminate those things that produce CO2.


15 posted on 02/01/2022 11:56:08 AM PST by Theo (FReeping since 1998 ... drain the swamp.)
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To: Red Badger
and the CEO of Impossible Foods Inc., ...

This is like the CEO of ExxonMobil announcing "Avoiding XYZ Catastrophe: Global Elimination of Electric Vehicle and supporting Power Production and Generation Could Save the Planet"

No conflict of interest here, eh?

16 posted on 02/01/2022 11:56:08 AM PST by epluribus_2
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To: Red Badger

First of all, I thought we were down to under 10 years by now. Secondly, who cares if they stave off global warming, if we all must starve to death to make it happen?

Third: who can actually think this is a good idea (NO ANIMAL PRODUCTS IN THE FOOD SUPPLY)??


17 posted on 02/01/2022 11:56:29 AM PST by NEMDF
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To: Red Badger

A “study” by the CEO of Impossible Foods whose only business is to displace meat, now says by eliminating his competitors the world will be saved!!

They call this news?


18 posted on 02/01/2022 11:56:33 AM PST by datura (Eventually, the Lord and the Truth will win.)
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To: Red Badger

A “study” by the CEO of Impossible Foods whose only business is to displace meat, now says by eliminating his competitors the world will be saved!!

They call this news?


19 posted on 02/01/2022 11:56:34 AM PST by datura (Eventually, the Lord and the Truth will win.)
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To: Red Badger

“Global Elimination of Meat Production could save the Planet” Or it could make a world population too weak to fight back against Communists in our governments.


20 posted on 02/01/2022 11:56:35 AM PST by EvilCapitalist (Merry Christmas Illhan!)
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