Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach
Buoyed by the equal parts of derision and support I received for writing in “I am So Tired Of Malthus” about how humans are better fed than at any time in history, I am foolishly but bravely venturing once again into the question of how we feed ourselves.
In a book excerpt in the February 2002 Scientific American entitled “The Bottleneck”, the noted ant entomologist Professor Edward O. Wilson put forward the familiar Malthusian argument that humans are about to run out of food. He said that we are currently getting wedged into a “bottleneck” of population versus resources. He warned of the dangers of “exponential growth” in population, and he averred that we will be squeezed mightily before the population levels off.
His solution? In part his solution was that everyone should become a vegivore.
Wilson: “If everyone agreed to become vegetarian, the present 1.4 billion hectares of arable land would support about 10 billion people.
Figure 1. Vegans are not aliens from the star Vega. They are humans who are strict vegivores, as the food chart above shows. They are known for their barbaric habit of boiling and eating the unborn fetuses of rice and wheat. And don’t get me started on what they do to the poor baby carrots, with their so-called … but I digress …
Is this correct? Would we have a net gain in carrying capacity if all the human carnetarians agreed to become vegivores?
Wilson gets his figure of 10 billion people by taking the total amount of the grain that is being fed to animals, and then figuring how many people that grain would feed. In 1999, about 655 billion tons of grain were fed to animals. That’s a lot of grain. At the world average of about 150 kg of grain per person per year, he’s right, that’s an increase of 4 billion more people who would have enough grain. There were 6 billion on the planet in the year 2000, so that makes a total of about 10 billion people.
So up to there, he is correct. But wait. Although he stops the calculation at that point, there’s a few things he is leaving out of the calculation.
First, that’s just grain, which is not enough to keep a person alive. The extra 4 billion people would need additional nuts, seafood, fruits, vegetables, cotton, root crops, and all the other varieties of food and fiber. So the increase would have to be less than 4 billion people.
Second, people have a number of misunderstandings about where animals fit in on the farm. They believe that animals eat lots and lots of food that could be eaten by humans. Their claim is that if we just ate what the animals eat, we could eliminate the inefficiency, and feed many more people than we are feeding now. In other words, their claim is that having animals on the farms reduces the amount of food coming from the farm.
This is what Wilson is repeating here (although he has gone further than others by claiming that this would increase the carrying capacity of the earth by 2/3 again as much as the current population).
I grew up on a ranch where we had both animals (cattle, pigs, chickens) and field crops (hay, alfalfa). I can assure you that anyone who thinks animals reduce available food on the farm is what in my youth we would call a “city slicker”. Farmers around the planet keep animals for meat and milk. What, are farmers all stupid around the planet and only E. O. Wilson and his fellow vegetactivists are smart? Farmers would not keep animals if it were not a net gain.
While in some industrialized countries the cattle get up to 15% of their lifetime nutrition from grain, the vast majority of animals on farms worldwide live on a variety of things that will not or cannot be eaten by humans. Pigs eat garbage, hens eat bugs and grass and kitchen scraps, goats eat leaves, and cows have four stomachs, so they can turn cellulose, which humans cannot eat, into nutritious milk and meat.
If we got rid of all of our chickens worldwide, would we have more food available for humans? Not unless you like bugs and kitchen scraps better than you like eggs. Chickens are the poor woman’s Rumplestiltskin, spinning insects and weeds and melon rinds into golden eggs and tasty meat … I’ll let E. O. Wilson tell her she’s ruining the planet, not me.
If we call the goats down off the steep hillsides where they are grazing around the world, will we be able to put vegetable farms up there? Not unless you can farm sideways without water.
Cattle in the US eat thousands and thousands of tons of cottonseed meal annually, turning it into meat and milk. Would you prefer to eat the cottonseed meal yourself? Sorry, you can’t, it’s mostly cellulose.
The presence of livestock in a mixed farming economy does not decrease the amount of food that a farm can produce. That is a city slicker’s professorial fantasy. Animals increase the amount of food the farm can produce, otherwise farmers wouldn’t have them. Millions of tons of agricultural and processing leftovers, which would otherwise be wasted, are fed to animals. The animals in turn produce milk and eggs and meat, and then go on to enrich the soil through their urine and manure, just like they were perfected to do on the plains of Africa so long ago … what an amazing planet.
Which is why farmers everywhere around the world keep animals — farmers are not dumb, and they haven’t had the benefit of a college education, so they haven’t forgotten that goats eat leaves, pigs eat garbage, cows eat cellulose, and chickens eat bugs. They know the value of chicken manure and pig manure.
With that introduction, let’s see how we might best estimate the change if everyone became vegetarian. We can do it by looking at the land involved. Here’s the numbers: according to the FAO, out of all the land cultivated by humans, about a quarter of the land is used to grow food for animal consumption. This can be further broken down by the type of animal feed grown:
Figure 2. Area of arable land used for human crops, and for animal crops. Image is Van Gogh, “Ploughed Fields”.
Now if we all became vegivores tomorrow, and we converted all that quarter of the cultivated land to growing food and fiber for human use, what is the possible increase in the number of humans?
Looking at the chart, you would think that humans could increase by about a third of the current number. The land used for animals is about a third of the land used for humans. That would be about two billion more people, not the increase of four billion claimed by Wilson. However, the number cannot even be that large, because we have only looked at one side of the equation. We also have to consider the losses involved. By becoming vegivores, we have freed up the 23% of our cropland used to produce animal food, but we have lost the food coming from the animals. Now how much do we have to give back just to maintain the status quo, to make up for our dietary and other losses? These losses include:
• We would have to replace the loss of the dietary protein provided by the 200 million tons of meat we eat each year, along with 275 million tons of milk, 7 million tons of butter and 47 million tons of eggs. Vegetarians say, “You don’t need animals, you can get enough protein from a vegetarian diet”, which is certainly true.
However, to do it, you need to eat more grains to get this protein, and in a twist of fate, to replace the total amount of meat protein in our diet with protein from grains would require about 50% more grain than we are currently feeding to animals. This is because animals eat many things other than grain, and we need to replace all that lost other-source protein with grain-source protein as well.
So immediately we have to devote about 18% of the total land to replacing lost protein for the existing world population. Subtracting this 18% from our original 23% of freed up land leaves us with only a 5% possible gain. Remember, this is all just to keep the world even, to maintain the world food status quo. We’re not talking at this point of feeding anyone extra. We’re just maintaining the current nutritional supplies of protein for the current population.
• We would also need to replace the amount of fat provided by the aforementioned animal products. While too much fat is a bad thing, dietary fat is an essential necessity of human nutrition.
The weight of dietary fat provided by animals is about a third of the weight of protein provided by animals. In addition, it takes much less land to produce vegetable replacements for the animal fat than for the animal protein. This is because there are vegetable products (oils) which are pure fat, while vegetable products are generally low in protein.
In the event, in order grow the oils to replace animal fat in our diet, we’d have to plant about 3% more of our arable land to sunflowers or the equivalent. Deducting that from our 5% gain in available land, we are down to a 2% gain.
• Next, the land worldwide would be less productive because in many areas, animal manure and urine is the only fertilizer. We could easily lose more than a couple of percent that way, especially in developing nations. And once we do so, we are at zero gain, meaning we couldn’t add one single person to the world by voluntarily becoming vegivores. But there are several further losses yet.
• There is also a giant hidden loss of food in the change to vegevorianism, as tens of millions of tons of agricultural waste would have to be disposed of, instead of being converted by animals into millions of tons of human food. In many cases (e.g. oilseed residue meal) these wastes are not directly consumable by humans.
• In addition to losing the food animals make from waste, without animals to eat the waste we add the resulting problem of disposal of the agricultural waste, which is expensive in terms of time, energy, and money.
• We’d have to do without leather, hide, hair, horn, wool, and feathers. Especially in the developing world, these products are often extremely important to the health, warmth, clothing, and well-being of the local people, and there often are no local substitutes. This would be a huge cost of foregoing animals. In places where jackets are made of local sheepskins to keep out the frozen wind, explaining to some poor shepherd why he should go vegivore and trade his sheep for soybeans could be a tough sell …
• Finally, about half the land currently used for growing animal food is being used to grow grasses for animals. In practice, this land will mainly be the poorest and steepest of each country’s croplands (or else it would be planted to a field crop), and thus is not likely to be suitable for growing much more than grasses.
All up?
You’d lose by not having animals in the world’s farmyards. I don’t think you’d even come near breaking even — and neither do the farmers all around the world. They know what the numbers have just shown — we can support more people in a planet, a region, a country, or a farm if animals are part of our agricultural and dietary mix.
[UPDATE] Twelve years after I wrote this, science is finally catching up with what every kid on a cattle ranch knows … see “Going Vegan Isn’t the Most Sustainable Option for Humanity“.
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But using “waste heat” from “winter climate” power plants is an old idea. If we were to come up with a “food crunch”, I’m rather certain we could utilize such artifices and generate a sizable amount of EXTRA food. Again, Malthus must yield to the Engineer. Only FOG HEADED ACADEMICS need “worry” about “shortages”. (But they can go back to their 19th century “perfection” and I’ll gladly let them perish in their own “utopian” limitations!)
http://books.google.com/books?id=mQAAAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA68&lpg=PA68&dq=waste+heat+hothouse&source=bl&ots=jiuAPsyTzs&sig=Y8YSv9wWXql5o_ppSCuTde1W6bo&hl=en&ei=2WKMTOfkIMWBlAe-s5Vg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=9&sqi=2&ved=0CDsQ6AEwCA#v=onepage&q=waste%20heat%20hothouse&f=false
In case you haven’t fully grasped the idiocy of vegan extremism:
Vegan Couple Starved Toddler, Cops Say
“The Swintons, who say they approach veganism as a religion, fed the child a diet of ‘ground nuts, fresh-squeezed fruit juices, herbal tea, beans, cod liver oil and flax seed oil…'”
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,51494,00.html
Their daughter was 16 months old and weighed ten pounds. But that juice was “fresh squeezed!”
Willis, really, really good and very needed post, on the spot. You do have a way with thoughts and words. In agreement everything you raised. If I say anymore on this topic I won’t be able to stop ☺.
Great news. Since the philosophy to become unitarian vegetarian has been spoken, so let it be done.
The animals will soon get in the way, and the society of the grainers will weaken. The resulting era will be known as the Return of the Barbarians, who will descend upon the Vegetarians, bringing thier sheep, goats, cows, chicken & pigs with them.
Maybe that’s what happened to the Neanderthals: They got forcibly herded into extinction by the superior ominvore, Modern Man.
Seems that George Monbiot may agree with you about this one:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2010/sep/06/meat-production-veganism-deforestation
He writes in review of “Meat: A Benign Extravagance” by Simon Fairlie, “He demonstrates that we’ve been using the wrong comparison to judge the efficiency of meat production. Instead of citing a simple conversion rate of feed into meat, we should be comparing the amount of land required to grow meat with the land needed to grow plant products of the same nutritional value to humans. The results are radically different.”
What is being said here, that we should kill (to extinction if necessary) every animal that eats vegetarian food edible for humans?
Willis scores again! My farmer friends will all thank you as soon as they get the latest bumper crop out of the fields. With local reports of 250bu an acre corn coming in already, (think GMO) and ongoing shortages of storage facilities we will soon be seeing those pictures of mountains of corn on the ground again.
But then we get comments like this one!
bubbagyro says:
September 11, 2010 at 7:21 pm
Oh, and these are some of the same vegan eco-clowns who have maneuvered the addle-pated politicians into converting corn to ethanol, starving millions.
Bubba! I challange you to show me exactly how converting corn to ethanol starves millions. While the economics of ethanol plants might be dependant on subsidies, the production of ethanol is a useful way to turn a relatively low value product (corn) into a variety of higher value products such as ethanol. Other coproducts produced with ethanol are a clean CO2, DDG’s for animal feed and corn oil for people food just to name a couple.
Ethanol production facilities will continue to add new products made from corn and its byproducts as the industry matures. Fertilizers. Plastics. Who knows what these simple uneducated farmers might come up with.
And yet you have pinned the starving of millions (did you even read the first post on this subject)? on one and only one thing, corn to fuel production! Wow, thats one heck of an assumption.
I await your answer.
I think of all the rich and well off people in the world,take away half of what they eat and drink,how many more billions could you feed?Of course I don’t want to do that because their consumption creates employment,but there is no doubt we actually over produce food.
One day we may be eating a piece of bread manufactured without corn,but tastes like it and gives the same benefit.
The world is our oyster,and I will not let you wowsers tell me otherwise.
Willis: you note in your essay, “In a book excerpt in the February 2002 Scientific American entitled “The Bottleneck”, the noted ant entomologist Professor Edward O. Wilson put forward the familiar Malthusian argument that humans are about to run out of food.”
In the comments to your previous essay, “I Am So Tired of Mathus“, RW said: (September 9, 2010 at 1:33 am) Willis, I usually love your contributions but I take some issue with this one in that I am extraordinarily tired of people who have missed the bulk of what Malthus said.
Have you had time to read and consider this comment in its entirety? I believe it may modify your thoughts, and thence comments, on Malthus, to the value of us all.
It seems to me we have another King Canute (no… he did not set out to stop the tide) furphy (Australian slang for a rumour, or an erroneous or improbable story) here which it would serve us all well to kill.
(And don’t forget to keep on with the eight glasses of water a day…)
thanks for explaining why goats went extinct, GM, and why the mountains crumble to the sea.
I guess if you expect a shortage in the future, you recommend creating an artificial one in anticipation? Others have a different strategy. You buy your groceries from them…lol
Well, my grandmother lived to 104, her mother to 101. Her daughter, 52. My mother didn’t stick to the plan.
Tom Grey above says we should eat Marmite but hey, one question: Aren’t yeasts aimals too? After yeasts have done their duty in the brewing industry they should be released back into the wild. Eating them would be morally bankrupt.
So we are supposed to ship veggies from Chile to feed vegans in Bemidji in January using ships running on what?
Eating cattle IS vegetarian in my opinion. We are taking grass we can not digest, feeding it to an animal that CAN digest it and eating the product. Same with sheep and goats. The animal is just a protein processor, consider it part of the process of the digestion of grass.
Rattus Norvegicus says:
September 11, 2010 at 9:05 pm
How am I missing trophic levels (which I think is what you mean)?
Great post Professor E! You are my favorite teacher.
Larry Fields says:
September 11, 2010 at 8:00 pm
“I’d advise naturalistically-oriented vegetarians, who believe that eating meat and dairy products is equivalent to murder, to give serious consideration to coprophagia.”
Brilliant! I once explained to a vegan that the reason many colobus monkeys are coprophagous was due to their poor, vegetarian diets. I never thought to use the B-12 angle and stopped short of suggesting that they become one (although I have told a few people to eat $#!+ and die). You have emboldened me.
Vegetables are what food eats.
Dear Willis!
You said “The land used for animals is about a third of the land used for humans”.
Isn’t it about a fourth (23% / 77%)?
Thanks for an interesting post,
Very entertaining thread, thanks Willis!
Swampie: Informative
Larry: Funny
GM: It’s condescending people like yourself who will ensure the disappearance of the warped world view you represent, well done.
I don’t get your “farmers aren’t dumb” argument. Of course they aren’t, but when they’re selling what they produce, they will of course maximize the money they earn rather than the amount of food. And if meat costs more than grain, it can pay off for them to produce “less food” (as measured in calories, or even protein).
I’m sure you’re right that there is less to be gained from eating less meat than is often claimed, but I’m not convinced that it’s so little as you suggest. On the other hand, I wouldn’t suggest trying to change people’s diets to increase the food supply unless or until there is real, empirical evidence that the world is producing too little food for the total population. That may never happen.
Sorry skip my comment, wrong reasoning, I thought of the land used for animals is about a fourth of the land used for both animals and humans.
This is my take on the whole issue for what its worth.
In the beginning man was just another animal in the ecosystem.
The creation of an all-powerful God by man was a fundamental change which also allowed the belief that God created man. This simple act of creation elevates the status of man from lowly animal to the all important role of God’s agent on earth. In the process God becomes dependant on man almost as much as man is dependant on God. (“I created Man that he might worship Me.” The Koran)
Then along comes Charles Darwin. “No”, he says “No God, No separate creation. You’re just animals”.
Now that leaves man denied a premier position. Enter the Greens.
They exploit a need for man to re-elevate himself to a pre-eminent position separated from the animal kingdom. Man again has higher moral duties. Killing animals for meat has now become morally wrong. Man has custodianship of the planet. He must preserve it exactly as it is. Or as it was, as if it has already attained some form of perfection. Man must save the whales, preserve the ecosystems, prevent species extinction, stop evolution, stop climate change, and stop continental drift.
It’s a yearning to restore Eden, and reverse the disgrace of the expulsion. Its all about denying our genetic history, the burden carried in our genes.
And joining the Gods.
The word “ecosystem” was heavily present in my post. For those who can read, of course. In a functioning ecosystem, goats never reach the kind of numbers that threaten the existence of the ecosystem because there are plenty of predators that keep their population in check. In a world where everything is seen as existing for humans to devour, those predators are eliminated (Why? Because they eat goats) and the number of goats is maximized (which usually ends up in the overshoot scenario I described). Again, sustainability is all about having functioning ecosystems, overshoot is about maximizing the short term at the expense of ecological capital and not taking the long term carrying capacity into account.
Tom says:
September 11, 2010 at 8:36 pm (Edit)
One of those agricultural wastes that animals eat is distiller’s dried grains, the stuff that’s left after fermenting alcohol. I for one am willing to make the sacrifice of eating a steak so that the beer and distilled spirits can keep flowing.
Tom, animals aren’t stupid enough to want to eat grains which have had all the goodness taken out of them. A lot of it gets converted into ‘low calorie’ breakfast cereals and sold to dumb humans at a premium price.
While you make a good point that we made up God in our image which enabled us to see ourselves as the masters of the universe with everything in it existing for us to feast on it, the rest of your post is absolute nonsense.
Has it ever occurred to you that the primary reason for why we need to preserve the ecosystems is that without them, we’re dead? Yes, our genes urge us very strongly to be fruitful and multiply, which is what all other animals do too, but all other animals eventually come against the limits of their environment, and we are no different. Fortunately for us (one would naively think), we have brains that allow us to see a little bit further in the future and realize that maximizing our numbers in the present is a very poor evolutionary strategy in the long term because it may lead ot our extinction if the whole overshoot and collapse thing unfold really badly, as there is a good chance it will. A realization, which would only occur if the majority of us had basic reading comprehension skills and used them to read the relevant scientific literature and invest some time into understanding its implications. Which is not the case, unfortunately…
“Tom, animals aren’t stupid enough to want to eat grains which have had all the goodness taken out of them.”
Wrong, brewers grain is commonly used as an animal feed.