A timed for IPCC report claim: Meeting climate targets may require reducing meat and dairy consumption

From the Chalmers University of Technology

Greenhouse gas emissions from food production may threaten the UN climate target of limiting global warming to 2 degrees Celsius, according to research at Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden.

On Monday 31 March the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) presents their report on the impacts of climate change.

Carbon dioxide emissions from the energy and transportation sectors currently account for the largest share of climate pollution. However, a study from Chalmers now shows that eliminating these emissions would not guarantee staying below the UN limit. Emissions from agriculture threaten to keep increasing as global meat and dairy consumption increases. If agricultural emissions are not addressed, nitrous oxide from fields and methane from livestock may double by 2070. This alone would make meeting the climate target essentially impossible.

“We have shown that reducing meat and dairy consumption is key to bringing agricultural climate pollution down to safe levels,” says Fredrik Hedenus, one of the study authors. “Broad dietary change can take a long time. We should already be thinking about how we can make our food more climate friendly.”

By 2070, there will be many more of us on this planet. Diets high in meat, milk, cheese, and other food associated with high emissions are expected to become more common. Because agricultural emissions are difficult and expensive to reduce via changes in production methods or technology, these growing numbers of people, eating more meat and dairy, entail increasing amounts of climate pollution from the food sector.

“These emissions can be reduced with efficiency gains in meat and dairy production, as well as with the aid of new technology,” says co-author Stefan Wirsenius. “But the potential reductions from these measures are fairly limited and will probably not suffice to keep us within the climate limit, if meat and dairy consumption continue to grow.”

Beef and lamb account for the largest agricultural emissions, relative to the energy they provide. By 2050, estimates indicate that beef and lamb will account for half of all agricultural greenhouse gas emissions, while only contributing 3 percent of human calorie intake. Cheese and other dairy products will account for about one quarter of total agricultural climate pollution.

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John G.
March 31, 2014 8:03 am

Reducing laughing gas in the atmosphere is essential for meeting the climate targets?! Really? When did that happen? How about increasing the laughing gas in the atmosphere . . . then maybe everyone would be more favorably disposed or at least not as antagonistic to the idea of not eating beef or cheese anymore. Is this from The Onion?

March 31, 2014 8:16 am

Why the worry when we’ve been assured that all those cattle will have become extinct due to the future warming. Problem solved.

Robert W Turner
March 31, 2014 8:19 am

How to acquire more converts 101:
1. Get more people to become vegetarian and vegan.
2. Wait for dementia to set in as their brains turn to mush from lack of complex proteins and cholesterol in their diets.
3. They are now ready for full indoctrination into the cult of global warming and will believe whatever we say.

Walter Sobchak
March 31, 2014 8:50 am

“Is there an actual syndrome name to latch onto the environmentalist chicken littleism?”
Stupidity.

Mary Wilbur
March 31, 2014 11:26 am

These people are living in another dimension.

chuckarama
March 31, 2014 12:04 pm

Well $#!+ There goes all the organic fertilizer, which we will need desperately, to raise more vegan food stuffs. Guess we’ll need more oil derived fertilizers to backfill the necessary spike of producing all the green replacement foods.

Pamela Gray
March 31, 2014 2:15 pm

No dairy???? It’s like these idiots hate women!!!!! Look. I am no different than any other lactating animal. If dairy is bad, so am I. Which is udder nonsense.
As for beef. Pry it out of my cold dead hands.

Pamela Gray
March 31, 2014 2:19 pm

Well. To be honest. It’s been awhile since I’ve had calves to feed. But the point is made!

stargazer
March 31, 2014 2:46 pm

In india, that methane is sacred. Are we about to tick off a billion or more people?
Buncha anti-religious bigots.

Eamon Butler
March 31, 2014 6:17 pm

So what exactly do they want? Are we to eat the cattle and sheep or not? Do we ignore them and hope they go away? This looks like the first possible species extinctions due to Global Warming… Alarmism. Our children will not know what a farm is! When we want to take a photo of our kids and we tell them to ”say cheese” they’ll think we’re crazy, they won’t know what to do. We won’t be able to pull the wool over their eyes either. It’s worse than we thought.

Jimbo
April 1, 2014 6:56 am

Here is another timely paper.

Abstract / Paper- 7 February, 2014
Nutrition and Health – The Association between Eating Behavior and Various Health Parameters: A Matched Sample Study
………..Our results revealed that a vegetarian diet is related to a lower BMI and less frequent alcohol consumption. Moreover, our results showed that a vegetarian diet is associated with poorer health (higher incidences of cancer, allergies, and mental health disorders), a higher need for health care, and poorer quality of life. Therefore, public health programs are needed in order to reduce the health risk due to nutritional factors.
………On the other hand, the mental health effects of a vegetarian diet or a Mediterranean diet rich in fruits, vegetables, whole-grain products and fish are divergent [9,15]. For example, Michalak et al. [16] report that a vegetarian diet is associated with an elevated prevalence of mental disorders. A poor meat intake has been shown to be associated with lower mortality rates and higher life expectancy [17], and a diet which allows small amounts of red meat, fish and dairy products seems to be associated with a reduced risk of coronary heart disease as well as type 2 diabetes [18].
http://www.plosone.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0088278
http://www.plosone.org/article/fetchObject.action?uri=info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0088278&representation=PDF

Brian H
April 3, 2014 12:27 am

When I am Emperor, I will incentivize farms to maximize CO2 output, thereby providing a positive feedback, in a virtuous circle.

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