L
lynnvinc
Guest
That’s a good point. I think some cattle in the U.S. (like in Wisconsin) are almost totally corn-fed, while in Texas and Florida they are partly grass-fed ((corn-fed tastes better)).There might be health benefits in reducing the consumption of meat from what most people eat. But consider this.
1/3 of the planet’s habitable surface is suitable for nothing but grassland. You can’t grow crops on it. The only way to derive food from it is to run that grass through a cow, goat or sheep. Ranching uses very little energy compared to crop growing. Massively less. But the energy utilization climbs when cattle are grain fed (“finished”) at the very end, for 80-120 days, though it still doesn’t compare with the crop-growing for human consumption. That’s to get more fat into the meat, and it’s called “marbling”. Aussies don’t do that. They eat totally grass-fed beef, mutton, etc, and prefer it. Vegans would actually REDUCE energy consumption if they backed up on the vegan diet and ate more meat…so long as it is grass-fed.
But it’s not just the crops they eat that contributes GHGs, but also their digestive system and CH4, so that might make them more GHG/unit of protein or calorie intensive than vegetarian diets (but I’m not sure). That is the problem with rice – the CH4 releases from paddy fields.
Chickens, by contrast, are totally grain fed, and some of that is from soy fields in Brazil that multinationals strong-armed away from the peasants who used to own them and are now destitute without a subsistence base. There are hidden social justice issues involved.
I think pigs are also grain-fed in horrid conditions that cause a lot of pollution.
Also the farmers, ranchers, and fed-lot businesses could (and a few do) turn the manure into biogas energy and fertilizer (which is actually a better soil amendment once the CH4 is extracted), instead of polluting their vicinities.
I think another issue is the cruelty involved in livestock raising, and esp slaughtering. I remember seeing a video of a Chicago slaughterhouse where they chain the legs of the cows, hoist them up and cut them up alive. They showed a “downed” (sick, frothing at the mouth) cow that couldn’t walk from the train to the slaughterhouse, so they chained the leg and dragged it all the way, hoisted and cut it up…feces and all falling all over the meat, etc. If you thought the “pink slime” series on ABC News was disgusting, it was nothing compared to that video I saw.
Not that I’ve totally given up all meat & dairy, maybe about a 80-90% reduction…like once a week or once in two weeks I’ll have some pizza with pepperoni, or an egg roll or hot & sour soup with a bit of meat, or occasionally some fish plate at Red Lobster (my husband’s favorite restaurant, which doesn’t have much by way of vegetarian selections).