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David Sirota
David Sirota
10 May 2013
The Military's 40-Year Experiment

Few probably recall the name Dwight Elliott Stone. But even if that name has faded from the national memory, … Read More.

26 Apr 2013
A Cronkite Moment for the Blowback Era

"The stuff we have done overseas is now brought back into our own front yards. America's chickens are … Read More.

19 Apr 2013
The Value of Silence

Can you hear yourself think? Can you manage more than bursts of confusion and anger? Can you feel your own … Read More.

The Real Obstacle to Halting Climate Change

Comment

In case you missed the news, humanity just spent the Earth Day week reaching another sad milestone in the history of catastrophic climate change: For the first time, measurements of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere surpassed 400 parts per million — aka way above what our current ecosystem can handle.

Actually, you probably did miss the news because most major media outlets didn't cover it in a serious way, if at all. Instead, they and their audiences evidently view such information as far less news-, buzz- and tweet-worthy than (among other things) the opening of George W. Bush's library and President Obama's jokes at the White House Correspondents Dinner.

Such an appetite for distraction, no doubt, comes from both those who deny the problem of climate change and those who acknowledge the crisis but nonetheless look away from what feels like an unsolvable mess.

That sense of hopelessness is understandable. After all, some of the most hyped ways to reduce carbon emissions — electric cars, mass-scale renewable energy power plants, etc. — require the kind of technological transformations that can seem impossibly unrealistic at a time when Congress can't even pass a budget.

Here's the good news, though: The fastest way to reduce climate change shouldn't seem impossible, because it requires no massive new investments, technological breakthroughs or long-term infrastructure projects. According to data compiled by former World Bank advisers Robert Goodland and Jeff Anhang, it just requires us all to eat fewer animal products.

In their report, Goodland and Anhang note that when you account for feed production, deforestation and animal waste, the livestock industry produces between 18 percent and 51 percent of all global greenhouse gas emissions. Add to this the fact that producing animal protein involves up to eight times more fossil fuel than what's needed to produce an equivalent amount of non-animal protein, and you see that climate change isn't intensified only by necessities like transportation and electricity.

It is also driven in large part by subjective food preferences — more precisely, by American consumers' unnecessary desire to eat, on average, 200 pounds of meat every year.

If you find it demoralizing that we are incinerating the planet and dooming future generations simply because too many of us like to eat cheeseburgers, here's that good news I promised: In their report, Goodland and Anhang found that most of what we need to do to mitigate the climate crisis can be achieved "by replacing just one quarter of today's least eco-friendly food products" — read: animal products — "with better alternatives." That's right; essentially, if every fourth time someone craved, say, beef, chicken or cow milk they instead opted for a veggie burger, a bean burrito or water, we have a chance to halt the emergency.

The trouble, of course, is that environmentalism and conservation — like everything else — have been unduly politicized. Consequently, opposing those once-universal values now seems to be viewed by many on the right as a constructive expression of patriotic defiance. Indeed, according to one recent study, many self-described conservatives will refuse to buy a green product once they see it marketed as being environmentally responsible. Similarly, another study shows that conservatives are prone to consume more energy when warned that they are already using a lot.

In light of that, I'm sure some conservatives will read this column and send me email smugly pledging to eat even more meat than they already do, just to make some incoherent point about freedom. What they will really be proving, though, is that no matter how straightforward a climate change solution may be, we will never be able to combat the crisis until everyone is willing to sacrifice just a little bit, and nobody pretends ecological survival is anything other than what is: an apolitical, transpartisan priority.

David Sirota is the best-selling author of the books "Hostile Takeover," "The Uprising" and "Back to Our Future." Email him at ds@davidsirota.com, follow him on Twitter @davidsirota or visit his website at www.davidsirota.com.

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Comments

7 Comments | Post Comment
18 to 51% is a huge margin for any scientific study. And it is hard to take climate change seriously when the congress can't even pass the budget. One huge obstical to combating climate change is the enormous budget. Whatever the solution to climate change is, its going to take money. Money that we don't have. We can't combat this problem while government spends 40% more than what it takes in. In this aspect, liberals are really shooting themselves in the foot. Climate change very well may ruin the planet for future generations, but our budget crisis will ruin them far sooner.
Comment: #1
Posted by: Chris McCoy
Thu May 2, 2013 11:50 AM
The problem there, like with much of climate change rhetoric, is that you assume that the billions of people in third world countries that are just beginning to enjoy the fruits of "civilization", are going to say "you're right, I just can't have that milk or hamburger - climate change, you know". Not that I don't agree it needs to happen but it IS unrealistic - at least until today's "have nots'" standard of living achieves some sort of parity with the "haves".
The key is to reduce the impacts of protein production - a lot. Treat the waste from livestock like we spend billions of dollars to treat our own waste. It can be done, and MUCH more cheaply. Once you deal with the waste issue, you can more strategically locate, integrate, consolidate and improve the efficienies of production so that the tremendous footprint it carries shrinks dramatically. The technology is already here and being used in the Chesapeake Bay Watershed at Kreider Farms in PA as part of the federally-mandated cleanup of the Bay. Nitrogen and Phosphorus captured; greenhouse gases reduced 90%; ammonia emissions, pathogens, antibiotics all but eliminated. Proven technology courtesy of Bion Environmental Technologies www.biontech.com.
Comment: #2
Posted by: Craig Scott
Thu May 2, 2013 2:12 PM
Re: Craig Scott Oh and I forgot to mention, renewable energy and recaptured/recycled nutrients are produced, as well.
Comment: #3
Posted by: Craig Scott
Thu May 2, 2013 2:15 PM
Re: Chris McCoy

Then I guess it's time we put taxes back to the level when we had enough tax money coming in to pay for what we need to do, isn't it.
Comment: #4
Posted by: jean
Fri May 3, 2013 4:24 AM
Actually with horse meat being sold as beef in Europe, attempts to build horse slaughterhouses here, and today's story about rat meat being sold as lamb in China and considering the foreign source of so much of our food, beef consumption could drop drastically here.
Comment: #5
Posted by: jean
Fri May 3, 2013 6:13 AM
Jean its not an issue of raising taxes, its a matter of cutting government spending. Right now, we'd have to take almost all money made from everyone to be able to balance the budget without cutting government spending. Are you familiar with the Laquer Curve? It says that if you double tax rates, you won't double tax reveune. People will change their behavior to avoid paying more taxes. So there is a point where raising tax rates will get you less money. Thats why all this taxing the rich class warfare won't work, and even if it would, taking 100% of all money from all rich people woulden't come close to balancing the budget.
Comment: #6
Posted by: Chris McCoy
Fri May 3, 2013 6:35 AM
Golly, I hope it was a white horse that just got eaten.
Comment: #7
Posted by: Tom
Mon May 6, 2013 11:13 AM
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