Published on April 5, 2018
written by Keir Watson
User Mohib Ebrahim notes that this article is an outstanding and thorough article that soundly and roundly dismantles the standard change-farming-to-save-the-planet alarmism, such as that cited in our recent post, here:

I. Lies, Damn Lies, and Statistics
Meat, we are told, is bad for the planet. It causes global warming, destroys forests, diverts substantial proportions of the world’s grain for feed, all to produce meat which only wealthy Westerners can afford. The iniquity of the situation led George Monbiot to declare in 2002 that “Veganism is the only ethical response to what is arguably the world’s most urgent social justice issue.” Monbiot later recanted but, since then, we are told with increasing regularity that to save the planet we must radically reduce our consumption of meat. In the face of what seems to be universal agreement on the sins of meat eating, is there really a green argument for meat? I think there is, and I think we should be talking about it. Not only is the public discourse heavily one-sided, but the anti-meat message risks destroying the very environment is claims to be protecting.
Let’s start with one of the most repeated statistics used to argue for reduced meat consumption: the claim that 100,000 litres of water are required to produce each kilo of beef – which is a staggering 1000 times more than what is needed to produce a single kilo of wheat. With magazines such as New Scientist uncritically quoting this figure, it is not surprising that it has circulated so widely. Taken at face value, this estimate is shocking and may on its own be responsible for switching tens of thousands of people away from eating meat.

However, there are many different estimates for the amount of water required to produce a kilo of beef. They can’t all be correct. The figure of 100,000 litres – which is one of the largest – comes from agronomist David Pimental (to whom we will return), but many other authorities have attempted to calculate this figure, each starting from different assumptions and political positions. In his book Meat, A Benign Extravagance, author and one-time editor of The Ecologist, Simon Fairlie, painstakingly deconstructs these figures. He points out that a typical beef steer, reared for 500 days, produces 125 kilos of meat at slaughter. From Pimental’s total, we can calculate that such a cow uses over 12 million litres of water during its lifetime – equivalent to an acre of land under ten feet of water. But cows typically drink only 50 litres of water per day, which leads to a figure of 200 litres per kilo or just 0.2 percent of Pimental’s value. How did the agronomist create such a monumentally inflated figure?
Astonishingly, Pimental included all of the rain that fell on the land on which the beef was reared, ignoring the fact that that rain would have fallen whether cattle were there or not. To inflate his alarmist balloon even further, Pimental used the most extreme rainfall figure he could get away with – for ranch cattle which roam over much larger areas than typical European herds. After patiently dismantling many different authors’ statistics, Fairlie concludes that, “The amount of water consumed by a beef cow appears to be a function of your political position.”
The story of how Simon Fairlie came to write his book tells us a lot about the politics behind the AMPAG (anti-meat-posing-as-green) ideology. Fairlie spent ten years living in a permaculture cooperative. They had 13 acres, only one of which was cultivated for crops. Everyone in the commune helped with this task, which provided them with most of their fresh vegetables and some of their fruit. The other 12 acres, however, were grassland, on which Fairlie almost single-handedly reared dairy cows and pigs. Due to the vegetarian predilection of the members of the commune, Fairlie found that although they would eagerly eat the cheese, yogurt, and milk he produced, they drew the line at the 350kg of meat, lard, and dripping that came from the livestock operation annually. So he had to sell it. This would not have been so bad, if not for the fact that the commune was spending £200 a week buying in alternative proteins and fats from halfway across the world: tahini, nuts, rice, lentils, peanut butter, soya. The irony was not lost on him.
Another anti-meat statistic is some variation on the claim that it takes 20kg of grain to produce a kilo of beef. This notion hangs on the false assumption that all farms raise animals in feedlots. In the UK, however, cows and sheep spend most of their life on grass. In winter, when the grass isn’t growing, forage crops (such as beet tops) and agricultural waste (such as straw) are primarily used as winter feed. Grain is an infrequent addition and usually only for a few weeks for ‘finishing’ beef prior to slaughter. So, it turns out that the guilt-trip headline figure is only representative of the worst-case scenario – the confined feedlot system, an industrial farming approach that most UK consumers reject for a host of reasons unrelated to feed efficiency.
David Pimentel, professor of ecology in Cornell University’s College of Agriculture and Life Sciences (who was also responsible for the distorted water statistic mentioned above) reported at the July 24-26 meeting of the Canadian Society of Animal Science in Montreal that the “U.S. could feed 800 million people with grain that livestock eat.”
It’s a superficially persuasive argument. Unfortunately, in addition to selecting the worst case scenario – feedlot cattle – Pimental also ignores the fact that virtually all the grain used for animal feed is grain deemed unfit for human consumption, either because it was spoiled or contaminated. Grain farmers rely on a market for animal feed to convert spoiled crops into cash. If we all stopped eating meat there would be a lot of spoiled grain going to waste forcing up food prices. So animal farming actually subsidises human grain production rather than competing with it as these misleading statistics imply.
Most AMPAG campaigners also fail to mention livestock by-products. As well as providing meat for human consumption, cows, sheep and pigs produce leather, wool, grease, blood and bones in substantial quantities which are used for a huge number of industrial processes, including making fertilisers for organic farming and even – for a brief time at least – the new five-pound notes. Almost nothing goes to waste.

II. Cows As Eco-Vandals
One of the biggest controversies (and misconceptions) about meat production is its contribution to global warming, which reached media prominence following the publication of the 2006 UN report entitled “Livestock’s Long Shadow.” This document made the shocking claim that livestock accounts for 18 percent of all greenhouse gas emissions globally, placing it ahead of the transport sector. Now, call me naive, but I thought the cause of global warming was our predilection for burning fossil fuels. Does it seem likely that farming – an activity that took place for thousands of years before the industrial revolution – is likely to be the problem?
For the last decade, “Livestock’s Long Shadow” has contributed to the near-religious dogma that to tackle global warming we all need to eat less meat. However, there are important caveats behind the UN figures that take much of the darkness out of the ‘long shadow.’
Firstly, this is a global figure. It masks the fact that the preponderance of greenhouse gas (GHG) come from deforestation to create new beef pasture or animal feed crops. That is, most of the carbon emissions attributed to the beef are actually from the destruction of the carbon sinks (forests) that preceded them, rather than the ranching itself. Furthermore, this activity is chiefly happening in developing countries. Most developed countries, by contrast, have seen increasing forest cover for many decades. Consequently, when the US did its own analysis of carbon emissions, researchers found that the American livestock industry contributes only 2.8 percent to US GHG emissions. So, even if everyone in the US gave up meat entirely, it would barely put a dent in the country’s emission figures.
Secondly, in many cases it is the value of the extracted timber which drives such deforestation, not the beef production that might follow in its wake. Even if beef production ceased tomorrow, the logging would still take place.
Thirdly, the UN report didn’t consider alternative land use after the loggers had gone. Indeed, researchers have since identified that changing to grassland actually provides the most effective sink and store of soil carbon – far superior to farmland and, surprisingly, even better than replanting forest. Indeed, the Irish Government has identified restoration of grasslands and pasture around the world as a priority with significant potential to mitigate Global Warming. In their analysis, they found that for UK and Irish livestock farms, the greenhouse emissions were negligible. This is in large part because our animals feed primarily on grass for much of the year.
Ploughing up grassland actually releases carbon from long-term soil stores, which makes the idea of switching from livestock to arable farming look decidedly un-green. Ploughing also increases soil erosion, runoff, and nutrient depletion – all factors that are ignored in the AMPAG narrative. Partly because of these environmental issues, the UK government has a target to increase the amount of permanent pasture in the UK as part of its greening agenda. “The principal aim of the new requirement,” says the Natural England Research Report NERR060, “is to ensure maintenance of grassland as one of the most important carbon sinks for climate change mitigation.”
Then there is the issue of dairy. Although most anti-meat advocates won’t come out and say it, dairy production is considerably greener than beef production even by their own dubious calculations. Primarily this is because dairy farming provides protein in the form of milk all year round, not just at slaughter. Besides which, the oft-repeated rhetoric that we can feed the world more efficiently with grains than animal products has another serious flaw: its calculations are based on meeting human energy requirements only, completely overlooking human protein needs.
There are other significant limitations on grain production: in temperate climates, grains produce just one harvest per season and to avoid nutrient depletion and disease build up they have to be rotated with other crops such as potatoes or oilseed rape. Taking into account the reality of the whole farm cycle as well as human protein needs, New Zealand researchers recently found that in temperate climates dairy farming is actually the most environmentally sound way to feed a population.
So rather than seeing farm herbivores as the ultimate eco-vandals it might be time to start appreciating their virtues. Their ability to convert inedible grass into high quality protein as meat and milk should be seen as a gift – a bit of magic that traditional pastoralists recognised and revered.
Read the complete article here.
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And here we have AGAIN
Another fight down at the social club involving statistics, Angels on Pins and Emporial Fashion statements.
As a small aside, if forests and grasslands produce stuff that always rots and decomposes, I have 2 questions for you:
1. Where did all the oil, coal and gas come from
2. Why did a guy name of John Deere feel the need to develop a plough made of steel – nothing else was strong enough to get through the densely matted organic material that lay under the prairies (now= corn-belt). A landscape chock full of organic material that had been ‘managed’ by buffalo for millennia
I find myself in deep empathy with the 50% of the *entire* human population who are completely and totally fed up with it all and want a stop.
They have it within their power to do so and started flexing that muscle some little while ago.
Oddly enough I think it was in France, I recall even some decades ago the French Government was in alarm at the declining birth rate and launched financial incentives for French People to make more of themselves. Literally.
And your clue:
If you want to start a war, if you want 100’s of thousands of *really* angry people out on the streets protesting (compare to the poorly attended Lonely Hearts Club organised in London), you will take, or attempt to take, butter out of a Frenchman’s diet.
We’re told that cows need x amount of nitrogen.
From experience I know that if you apply as much nitrogen (haha fertiliser) to a cow pasture as you do to a wheat field, you will almost certainly kill your cows.
We’re told protein protein protein. Plants make protein.
OK
What are are Lewy Bodies?
Why did they become a problem since the time of Ancell Keys, or specifically, Eisenhower’s heart attack.
Are you REALLY saying that a chain smoking middle aged man in THE highest stress job EVER, had his heart attack because he ate too much fat.
Heart attacks previously being a minor medical anomaly – because they happened so rarely otherwise and no-one studied them
Back to the 50% population, who or what are they? Remind yourself of why the Frenchman might have a riot

Look again at this:
What happens to the fat?
There is/was a story about a pet-food factory here in the UK, in the time after the 2nd war and after when rationing was lifted.
It was a big factory producing pet food and had its own canteen for the workers to have their lunch.
So, what was on the menu?
Pasta? Lentils? Cabbages? Bread?
Nope. The folks in the canteen ate the exact same stuff they had been putting into pet-food cans.
They looked forward to it, they relished and thrived on it and not least, because the knew *exactly* what it was made of.
Fat. Saturated fat of animal origin.
And again why this we see here is Total Junk Science in another misguided bar-room brawl.
Animals are NOT fed on grains so as to make protein.
Exactly as what happens to people when the eat carbohydrate, so happens to the cows.
They lay down body fat. They convert sugar to fat. This is what dairy cows do.
This is what the ‘finishing’ process is in beef feed-lots. The wholesale production of fat.
So we see what drives me and ALL THE GIRLS ON THIS PLANET to absolute distraction, is that the bar-room brawlers don’t realise that and actually throw away that most precious stuff.
(Frenchmen know better. Also folks from Poland, visit any one of their delicatessens to find out. English speakers not so)
Is truly is stratospheric insanity that even Monty Python couldn’t have dreamed up and the world’s fat processors (the girls) have had enough of this Utterly Insane & Unreasonable Behaviour by the boys.
No mater what question, the answer is:
no. no more. sorry. that’s it. You stop this or we will.
and they are doing
Good luck to them, not like they’ll need it.
And what do the boys do.
legalise cannabis as a vent for their inevitable frustration
Only to find, as they have in Canadia, their Government is now so inept it cannot even organise a p1ss up in a brewery and queues and queues of brain dead and zombified lentil eaters build up outside dope emporiums.
No better in the UK, haven’t had proper Government since Winston Churchill.
Maggie Thatcher was a bright spark but, as we saw, the self-seeking Zombies pulled her down, the seld seeking hypocrites absolutely epitomised by Tony Blair and his fugly wife
Hi Peta o’N. – I think you know the following, but will point it out as a distinction in case any readers are extrapolating concepts to ruminants.
Ruminants take up fatty acids (not carbohydrate derived “sugars”) that their symbiotic microbes synthesize. The microbial consortia do best with a certain % of nitrogen in their feed substrate; thus fattening up cattle is enhanced when nitrogen sources (ex: grain) are ingested.
I have to buy feed supplements with some nitrogen component to get good milk yield & to get enough weight on steers to make them profitable to sell. Many ranchers in my semi-arid area are also forced to transport water to their cattle; fortunately I’ve potable water wells.
I have never seen happier cows anywhere than a nearby fully automated stable. A milking robot, a large waterbed and back scratcher, with feed always ready. I kid you not. This is necessary in winter at 20 below.
AFAIK this farmer considers it organic, with a nearby biomas storage (biodiesel).
Chickens eat a bit over 4 kg compound feed to put 3 kg body mass in 42 days. They drink around 9 litres of water in the same period. Very efficient.
Cows taste better.
Cornell University’s nutrition dept. isn’t exactly covering itself in intellectual honesty these days.
https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2018/sep/20/brian-wansink-cornell-nutrition-prof-resigns/
I wrote about this extensively in the water and food chapters of ebook Gaia’s Limits. Pimental is not the only one providing grossly misleading figures.
Meat is by itself itself a complex subject, because animals have different feed/meat conversion efficiencies. Poultry conversion yield is higher than pork higher than beef, for example. But that is misleading in terms of human food resources because poultry and pork consume grain that could be eaten by humans, while beef consumes grass (humans cannot eat grass) on rangelands too dry or too steep to grow crops. The chapter illustrated this with a herd of very contented Swiss dairy cows high in the Alps in July, from a trip we took to meet with leading energy storage materials experts at the Swiss national lab in 2008.
so what happens to the water these cows drink? what happens to the grain they eat? these things get lost forever?
No. They build/repair the cells in the Humans who eat the meat. Ultimately of course when these cells are broken down and the components excreted or that Human dies and decays, the atoms will be returned to the Universe whence they came to make more grain and water or wood or cows or Humans… or whatever.
In Europe, cattle are raised most of the year on land that is not fit for growing crops, and so are sheep. Their drinking water is often extracted from rivers, streams or lakes or rainwater collection.
Swapping beef/sheep meat for plant matter would require much greater land use for farming, therefore.
Mass for mass, animal flesh produces far more nutrition than vegetable matter and has all the amino-acids required for Human nutrition. It would be necessary to eat a large quantity and varied plant material to match what meat provides… cows do this for us and concentrate it, so we do not have to.
Herbivores spend two thirds of the day eating because vegetable matter provides limited nutrition so must be consumed in quantity. Eating meat means we don’t have to spend most of the day eating, and the rest sitting on the lavatory.
John B
“Herbivores spend two thirds of the day eating because vegetable matter provides limited nutrition so must be consumed in quantity. Eating meat means we don’t have to spend most of the day eating, and the rest sitting on the lavatory.”
Specifically, veggies tend to be high in water and fiber – you can eat a lot and not get fat, which for most of us (especially in America), is a BENEFIT rather than a problem.
The nutritional value is outstanding. Here’s a look at spinach, for example, a leafy green that’s great in smoothies:
“Protein accounts for 30% of its calories and it contains all the essential amino acids. A 1-cup (30-gram) serving provides 1 gram of protein and 181% of the RDI for vitamin K (16).
It also contains high amounts of folate, manganese, magnesium, iron, potassium, calcium, vitamin A and vitamin C (16).
Besides its high protein content, spinach contains plant compounds that can increase antioxidant defense and reduce inflammation (17).
In one study, 20 athletes who took spinach supplements for 14 days experienced reduced oxidative stress and less muscle damage (18).
Another study gave nitrate-rich spinach to healthy participants and measured its effects on their levels of nitric oxide, a signaling molecule normally used in the body to widen the blood vessels.
The study also measured endothelial function and blood pressure. Nitrate-rich spinach was found to increase nitric oxide, improve endothelial function and lower blood pressure, all of which can improve heart health (19).
Lastly, regularly consuming spinach has been linked to as much as a 44% lower risk of breast cancer (20).”
https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/318600.php
******
A note to someone upthread: I didn’t mean to imply that eating meat causes cancer or heart disease – obesity is the underlying culprit.
I meant that by eating lots of fruits and vegetables you can reduce those risks……and the risk of becoming obese. The research is overwhelming.
Actually, plant sourced foods contain sugars & starch which recruit insulin which in turn up-regulates lipogenesis while inhibiting lipolysis to a much greater extent than meat sourced food, ie– carbs, not fat in the diet makes you fat.
“Another anti-meat statistic is some variation on the claim that it takes 20kg of grain to produce a kilo of beef.”
Aside from the sillyness of that ratio, it should be noted, that the types of grains used as animal feed are not suitable for human consumption without extensive processing. Cows generally eat things that humans are incapable of digesting directly.
Meatoo girls-
https://www.wellandgood.com/good-food/red-meat-healthy-for-women/slide/3/
From a woman who worked as nursing supervisor in Washington state I learned that older people exhibiting signs of dementia or Alzheimer’s are tested for amino acid levels and, frequently, put on protein supplements as an initial treatment. The human brain requires high quantities of protein to function properly. Our lords and masters have pushed a low protein diet on the masses; whether Egyptian slaves building the Pyramids, medieval serfs poaching game or modern Progressives being indoctrinated with radical environmentalism. The less protein the lower the brain function!
The grass the cows eat recover in weeks by taking the CO2 back out of the atmosphere! The hardwoods cut, chipped and shipped from the Carolinas to Drax Power in UK to be inefficiently burned to save 5he planet take 80yrs to recover. What kind of accounting is that?
I’m always a little confused by these articles, which act like there is no alternative between eating beef and going completely vegan. What about poultry? Fish? I eat more of those than any other sort of meat.
At any rate it is healthier tolet cows naturally graze, there is apparently a an e coli issue that comes from feeding them grain and corn, although that makes them fatter and is why ranchers are encouraged to do it.
Me, I’m a total vego. But to save time eating I use vegetable concentrates. They come in tasteful flavours and easily adapted to many dishes, nominally beef, pork and chicken flavours, with a few other fancy types available if the purse permits.