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- Subject: Meat and the Environment
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- Subject: Fat of the land (American) by Alan Durning from WorldWatch
- Message-ID: <1992Sep13.130749.14916@abo.fi>
- From: abulsari@abo.fi (Abhay Bulsari VT)
- Date: Sun, 13 Sep 1992 13:07:49 GMT
- Organization: Abo Akademi University
- Lines: 372
-
-
- Thanks to Michael Traub for this article.
-
-
- [The following article is reprinted from the July issue of World Watch
- magazine. It gives an overview of the environmental consequences of a
- meat-centered diet. For a detailed, referenced, account of the global
- picture, see Worldwatch Institute Report #103 entitled "Taking Stock."
- Long post: 350 lines]
-
-
- Fat of the Land
-
- by
-
- Alan B. Durning
- Senior Researcher
- Worldwatch Institute
- 1776 Massachusetts Ave.
- Washington, DC 20036
-
- When most Americans sit down to dinner, they're only a bite away
- from unwittingly worsening the environment. The overlooked offender
- is tonight's steak, pork chop, or chicken breast. The unpaid
- ecological price of that meat is so hefty that Americans could end up
- eating themselves out of planetary house and home.
- Putting half a pound of red meat and poultry on the table each day
- for every American citizen rings up quite a tab. The industry that
- supplies the world's leading nation of meat-eaters is associated with
- environmental ills ranging from depleted and contaminated underground
- water to an atmosphere pumped full of greenhouse gases. Even modern
- egg production participates in the ecological wrongdoing.
- There's nothing anti-ecological about cows, pigs, and chickens
- themselves. Rather American-style animal farms burden nature because
- they have outgrown their niche. In the U.S., livestock stand at the
- center of agriculture, absorbing much of the country's crop harvest
- along with vast quantities of energy and water. Elsewhere, most
- livestock are raised as they've always been: as a sideline to crops.
- In some circumstances, they turn plants people cannot eat into food
- they can.
- Every nation in the world that's wealthy enough, nonetheless, is
- taking notes from the United States and is starting to shower
- resources on raising animals for meat; U.S.-style animal farms seem to
- be the wave of the futrue. If the American diet alone does not pose a
- mortal threat to the natural estate, its adoption around the world
- certainly would. the prospect of 5 billion people eating the way
- Americans do is an ecological impossibility, requiring more grain than
- the world can grow and more energy, water, and land than the world can
- supply.
-
- %% The American diet %%
-
- Some shifts in American dining are already apparent. Fresh fruit
- and vegetable sales are climbing. Many restaurants feature meatless
- selections, and there's a booming trade in vegetarian and low-meat
- cookbooks. Also, airlines report growing numbers of requests for
- vegetarian meals. But Americans are not yet fat-shunning herbivores.
- While beef consumption per person has declined slowly since 1976 and
- per-capita egg consumption peaked decades ago, poultry has more than
- taken up the slack.
- Americans have been jumping from one animal product to another,
- eating fewer burgers and more chicken nuggets, fewer eggs and more
- turkey. Annual consumption of red meat and poultry together is at an
- all-time high of 178 pounds per person, up from about 137 pounds in
- 1955. Last year, Americans each ate about 65 pounds of beef and veal,
- 63 pounds of poultry, and 49 pounds of pork, plus 139 eggs and dairy
- products made from 70 gallons of milk. For a family of four, that
- works out to half a steer, a whole pig, and a hundred chickens a year.
- Churning out those quantities of animal products takes all the
- ingenuity agriculturalists can muster. Consequently, modern meat and
- egg production bears little resemblance to the family farm idyll that
- still colors the imagination of most Americans. In the U.S., animal
- foods are produced in concentrated agroindustries, not cow barns or
- chicken coops.
- In fact, animal farms are as much factories as farms. Of all farm
- animals in industrial countries, only cattle spend most of their lives
- in daylight. Broiler chickens live exclusively in gigantic, darkened
- sheds where thousands of birds are fed carefully measured rations of
- grain. Eggs come from similar installations, where hens are crowded
- into stacked cages, eating from one conveyor belt and laying onto
- another. Pork comes from warehouse-size sheds built over sewage
- canals that sluice away manure.
- Beef cattle graze a year before ranchers truck them to vast outdoor
- feedlots to be "finished" for slaughter. Their last months are spent
- gorging on rich rations of corn, sorghum, and soybean meal that fatten
- them for slaughter. Dairy cows, unlike other farm animals, continue
- to live something not unlike the old-fashioned farm life, often
- grazing outdoors part of each day. However, they, too, are sent to
- slaughter when their milk production falls off, and their male
- offspring -- useless in the milk business, except for a few breeding
- bulls -- usually become veal calves or "baby beef."
- Regardless of animal type, though, modern meat production involves
- intensive use -- and often misuse -- of grain crops, water resources,
- energy, and grazing areas. In addition, animal agriculture produces
- surprisingly large amounts of air and water pollution. Taken as a
- whole, livestock rearing is the most ecologically damaging part of
- American agriculture.
-
- %% Staff of livestock life %%
-
- Animal farms use mountains of grain. Nearly 40 percent of the
- world's total, and more than 70 percent of U.S. production, is fed to
- livestock, according to U.S. Department of Agriculture data. Last
- year, 162 million tons of grain, mostly corn but also sorghum, barley,
- oats, and wheat, were consumed by livestock. Millions of tons of
- protein-rich soybean meal rounded out the diet. No other country in
- the world can afford to feed so much grain to animals.
- Were all of that grain consumed directly by humans, it would
- nourish five times as many people as it does after being converted
- into meat, milk, and eggs, according to the Iowa-based Council for
- Agricultural Science and Technology, a nonprofit research group.
- Such calculations don't mean that if Americans ate less meat,
- hungry people would be fed. Worldwide, 630 million people are hungry
- today -- because they're too poor to buy food, not because food is in
- short supply. Even if feed grains were given as food aid, hunger
- might persist because handouts can flood agricultural markets and
- discourage Third World farmers from planting crops.
- The more immediate problem with raising animals on grain is the
- wate of resources. The effectiveness with which animals turns grains
- such as corn into food products varies enormously. Nearly seven
- pounds of corn and soy are needed to put one pound of boneless,
- trimmed pork on the table in the U.S. Cattle require less -- 4.8
- pounds of grain and soy per pound of meat -- because unlike pigs, they
- eat grass most of their lives. American chickens eat 2.8 pounds of
- feed per pound of meat, and egg layers do better at 2.6 pounds. Dairy
- cows are the most efficient, using just 0.1 pounds of grain and
- soybean meal to provide a pound (about a pint) of milk, because most
- of their nutrition comes from grass.
-
- %% Counting kilocalories %%
-
- American feed takes so much energy to grow -- counting fuel for
- farm machinery and for making fertilizers and pesticides -- that it
- might as well be a petroleum byproduct. Cornell University's David
- Pimentel, a specialist in agricultural energy use, estimated that
- 14,000 kilocalories are required to produce a pound of pork in the
- U.S. -- equivalent to the energy in nearly half a gallon of gasoline.
- Pimentel's data show that energy use, like grain consumption, declines
- from pork to beef, chicken, and eggs. Dairy farms are exceptionally
- frugal with energy, using scarcely the equivalent of one-fortieth of a
- gallon of gasoline per pound of milk.
- Almost half of the energy used in American agriculture goes into
- livestock production, the majority of it for meat. Producing the red
- meat and poultry eaten each year by a typical American takes energy
- equal to 50 gallons of gasoline. Supplying vegetarians with
- nourishment requires one-third less energy on the farm than supplying
- meat-eaters.
- Of course energy used on the farm isn't the whole story in the food
- system. Processing, packaging, transporting, selling, storing, and
- cooking foods uses almost twice as much energy nationwide as
- agriculture does. Yet, meat still leads the league in energy used per
- pound of product served. Pork involves more than 15 times as much
- energy as fresh fruits and vegetables. Milk, by contrast, uses as
- little energy as plant foods.
-
- %% Watering the herd %%
-
- Feed grain guzzles water, too. In California, now the nation's
- leading dairy producer, livestock agriculture takes nearly a third --
- the largest share -- of irrigation water, according to independent
- water analyst Marc Reisner of San Francisco. Animal raising accounts
- for similar shares across the western U.S., including areas irrigated
- with water from dwindling underground aquifers. The beef feedlot
- center of the nation -- Colorado, Kansas, Nebraska, and the Texas
- panhandle -- relies on crops raised with water pumped out of a
- depleting undergound water source called the Ogallala aquifer.
- Jim Oltjen, professor of animal science at the University of
- California at Davis, estimates that half of the grain and hay fed to
- American livestock grows on irrigated land. He calculates that it
- takes about 430 gallons of water to produce a pound of pork, 390
- gallons for a pound of beef, and 375 gallons per pound of chicken.
- Thus the water used by to supply Americans with meat comes to about
- 190 gallons per person per day, or twice what typical Americans use at
- home for all purposes.
-
- %% Land lords %%
-
- The livestock industry uses half the territory of the continental
- U.S. for feed crops, pasture, and range. On the half of U.S. cropland
- growing animal feed and hay, soil continues eroding at a frightful
- pace despite recent progress in conservation. For each pound of red
- meat, poultry, eggs, and milk, farm fields lose about five pounds of
- prime dirt.
- The vast majority of land devoted to livestock is not fertile
- cropland or pasture but arid public range in the west which the
- government leases to ranchers for grazing. Although the 270 million
- acres so used -- an area larger than the 14 eastern seaboard states --
- supply less than 5 percent of the beef Americans consume, damage to
- the land is acute.
- The worst harm was done in the great cattle drives of the last
- century. An Environmental Protection Agency sponsored study describes
- the shameful history: The land was grazed so ruthlessly that "native
- perennial grasses were virtually eliminated from vast areas and
- replaced by sagebrush, rabbitbrush, mesquite, and juniper." The
- exposed soil "was quickly stripped from the land by wind and
- water...Unchecked flood flows eroded unprotected streambanks...Water
- tables lowered. Perennial streams became intermittent or dry during
- most of the year."
- Harold Dregne, professor of soil science at Texas Tech University,
- estimates that 10 percent of the arid west has been turned into desert
- by livestock. The U.S. Bureau of Land Management, which is
- responsible along with the U.S. Forest Service for overseeing public
- rangeland, reported last year that nearly 70 percent of its expansive
- holdings in the west were in unacceptable condition.
- With open rangeland overgrazed, cattle concentrate in the narrow
- streambank, or "riparian," habitats which are the cornerstone of
- arid-land ecology. Trampling and eating vegetation that regulates
- water flow, the herds leave the land unable to absorb cloudbursts.
- Floods then rampage downstream, carrying away soil and accelerating
- the process of ecological decline. Edward Chaney, author of the
- EPA-sponsored assessment of rengeland, says: "I've talked to
- specialists across the west, and everyone agrees that riparian zones
- are in worse shape than ever."
-
- %% South of the border %%
-
- The American appetite for meat has environmental consequences that
- extend beyond our national frontiers. The U.S. imports only 0.5
- percent of its beef from Central America, but the effects of producing
- that meat are startling.
- In Central America, beef exports to the U.S. have played a part in
- the tragedy of forest destruction. Costa Rica, for example, was once
- almost completely cloaked in tropical forest, holding within its small
- confines perhaps 5 percent of all plant and animal species on earth.
- By 1983, after two decades of explosive growth in the cattle industry,
- just 17 percent of the original forest remained. Throughout the
- period, Costa Rica was exporting between one-third and two-thirds of
- its beef, mostly to the U.S., and it continues to export smaller
- quantities today.
- Producing a single Costa Rican hamburger involves the destruction
- of 55 square feet of rain forest -- an area about the size of a small
- kitchen. Such a swath typically contains one tree, 50 saplings and
- seedlings of 20 to 30 species, thousands of insects comprising
- hundreds of species, and an "almost unimaginable diversity and
- abundance of mosses, fungi, and microorganisms," according to
- biologist Christopher Uhl of Pennsylvania State University and
- Geoffrey Parker of the New York Botanical Garden.
- Clearing that single patch of wet, lowland Costa Rican forest would
- also release as much as 165 pounds of the carbon it naturally stores
- into the atmosphere in the form of the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide,
- according to Sandra Brown, professor of forestry at the University of
- Illinois. That's as much carbon as the typical American car releases
- in a 20-day period.
-
- %% Hog wash and hot air %%
-
- With such colossal quantities of food, water, and energy going into
- the livestock industry, other things are bound to come out. The most
- distinctive is animal waste, which after it's dried amounts to 158
- million tons a year. Most of the waste comes from cattle in pastures
- or on the range, where waste management simply means letting natural
- decomposition take its course. But about one-fourth is from
- stockyards, chicken factories, and other feeding facilities. There,
- disposing of the waste is a vexing task. It must be moved, stored,
- and spread without allowing it into water supplies.
- Congress first instructed the EPA to regulate animal wastes in the
- Clean Water Act of 1972, but the effectiveness of that regulation is
- hotly contested. The agricultural industry claims almost no animal
- wastes contaminate water, while critics allege widespread violations
- and lax enforcement. The EPA has begun to look into the matter, but
- so far has little to show. In the one place where the agency has
- solid data, the Chesapeake Bay basin, manure from all livestock
- contribute about one-tenth of nitrogen and phosphorus water pollution
- from all sources. Nitrogen and phosphorus over-fertilize algae, which
- grow rapidly and disturb the balance of aquatic ecosystems.
- Fertilizers and agricultural chemicals running off of feed-crop and
- pasture fields also deserve an entry in animal products' environmental
- ledger. U.S. corn fields alone consume about 40 percent of nitrogen
- fertilizer along with more herbicides and insecticides than any other
- crop.
- Lumping together animal wastes and feed fertilizers, livestock
- agriculture probably accounts for 40 percent of the nitrogen and 35
- percent of phosphorus released into American rivers, lakes, and
- streams, according to a computer model devised by Resources for the
- Future, an environmental research center in Washington, D.C.
- The water woes of animal production run deep too, extending to
- underground water tables. As it percolates through the soil, manure
- or its chemical constituents can cause serious damage, especially in
- the form of health-threatening nitrates. The EPA has found that
- roughly one-fifth of the wells in livestock states such as Iowa,
- Kansas, and Nebraska have nitrate levels that exceed safety standards.
- The EPA can't prove animal farming is the culprit yet, but manure and
- feed-crop fertilizers are leading suspects.
- As animal wastes and feed-growing chemicals pollute the water,
- animals themselves pollute the air. Cattle and other ruminants such
- as goats and sheep emit methane, a potent greenhouse gas, as they
- digest grass and other fibrous plants. Each head of American beef
- cattle belches out about a third of a pound of methane per pound of
- beef yielded. Add the carbon released from fuels burned in animal
- farming, and every pound of steak has the same greenhouse-warming
- effect as a 25-mile drive in a typical American car.
-
- %% Living off the fat of the land %%
-
- The first line of defense against animal agriculture's ecological
- side-effects is individual action: eating less meat, or no meat. The
- health benefits alone are compelling: the saturated fats in animal
- products increase one's risk of heart disease, stroke, and even
- certain types of cancer.
- In fact, results of a recent comprehensive study of diet and health
- in China suggest that the healthiest range for fat consumption is 10
- to 15 percent of calories, about a third of current U.S. fat
- consumption.
- But personal decisions to eat foods lower on the food chain won't
- suffice without corresponding changes in governmental codes that allow
- the livestock industry to deplete and pollute resources without
- bearing the costs. What's needed is enough citizens demanding that
- lawmakers take aim at the ecological side-effects of meat production.
- There is a lot to do. Overgrazing on public land in the western
- U.S. for example, continues largely because the BLM and the Forest
- Service subsidize and mismanage cattle grazing. This fact is readily
- apparent where fences divide public from private land. On the public
- side, where the government charges just $1.90 per head of cattle per
- month, ranchers run as many cattle as they can, and the land is in
- various stages of becoming desert. On the private side, grazing
- charges are typically five times higher, and the land is in far better
- condition, with denser and more diverse vegetation.
- Revenues the government gets from its bargain-basement prices,
- furthermore, cover scarcely one-third the costs of its present
- inadequate management. They are far too meager to support such
- necessary efforts as vigilant monitoring of range conditions, fencing
- off degraded areas, and ensuring that ranchers keep their herds moving
- to lighten the burden on the land. The House recently approved
- increasing grazing fees to $8.70 per head per month by 1994, but
- despite the strong margin of passage, 232-192, the measure faces stiff
- opposition in the Senate. [it did not pass]
- The federal government also takes the blame for some waste of
- irrigation water through what Congress estimates is a $2.2 billion
- annual subsidy to western water projects. Between $500 million and $1
- billion of that amount goes to feed and fodder growers. Fortunately,
- long-term public water contracts are coming up for review across the
- west in the next five years, giving environmentalists a chance to
- challenge the pork barrel politics that have prevailed so far.
- In the rain forests of Central America, the U.S. government could
- exert its influence by pressing local leaders to halt the cattle boom
- in the forest. Up and down the isthmus, governments lavish credit,
- tax-breaks, and extension services on cattle ranchers while neglecting
- small farmers and the landless poor.
- From there, environmental reformers might move on to tighten
- regulation of the water and atmospheric pollution that flows from
- animal and feed farms. Next, they could go after animal farms'
- excessive reliance on fossil fuels. If such efforts succeed, the full
- ecological cost of meat and egg production will show up clearly in the
- price of a pork chop or chicken breast. Then people's pocketbooks
- will guide them down the food chain.
- A diet centered on plant foods may sound bizarre to Americans, but
- for most of the Earth's citizens it's the norm. Worldwide, only about
- one in four people eats a meat-centered diet. But that is changing
- rapidly as incomes in other nations rise. For example, the Japanese
- diet of rice and fish is succumbing to the onslaught of high-fat
- fast-food. Per-capita consumption of red meat in Japan has doubled
- since 1975. Koreans and Taiwanese are following suit.
- The logical extension of this trend -- a world where everyone eats
- as much meat as Americans -- is a recipe for ecological disaster.
- Supporting just the world's current population of 5.3 billion people
- on an American-style diet would require as much energy as the world
- now uses for all purposes, along with two-and-a-half times as much
- grain as all the world's farmers produce. How many planets would it
- take to feed the world's projected future population of 10 billion
- people on the American ration of eight ounces of grain-fed meat a day?
- If the global food system is not to destroy its ecological base,
- the onus will be on rich nations to shift from consumption of
- resource-intensive foodstuffs toward modest fare.
-
-
-
- ---------------------------------------------------
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