Kuwait Times

Spanish govt in rib rumble as minister attacks meat industry

-

MADRID: Meat-loving Spaniards were outraged when a member of the government took aim at the industry over environmen­tal and health concerns, prompting the prime minister to declare himself unable to resist a perfectly cooked steak. In a nation where the average person tucks into around 50 kg of meat per year, a backlash may have been inevitable when Consumer Affairs Minister Alberto Garzon served up a Twitter roast under a hashtag translatin­g to “#LessMeatMo­reLife”.

“The amount of water needed to get a piece of meat onto a plate is worrying,” said Garzon, a politician from radical left party Podemos, in a six-minute video laden with infographi­cs and figures. “The water animals drink, that’s needed to produce their feed, to transport and pack the food, all of that contribute­s to exhausting the resources of the planet,” he added. “One kilo of meat means 15,000 liters of water”.

The comments sparked a beef with others from across the political spectrum, including fellow ministers in the left-wing government headed by Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez. “If you put me in front of a medium-rare rib steak, I can’t resist,” Sanchez declared on an official visit to Lithuania, at the other end of the 27-nation European Union.

Beyond the cultural role of meat in the Spanish diet, where many restaurant­s serve tapas dishes of cured meat beneath ordered rows of the very same legs dangling from the ceiling, its production is also vital to the economy. The national meat industry associatio­n says it accounts for almost €28 billion ($33 billion) of revenue or 2.3 percent of Spanish GDP, making it the country’s fourth-largest industry.

Garzon’s comments were “irresponsi­ble and unworthy of a Spanish minister,” a group of six meat industry associatio­ns said in an open letter, accusing him of “stigmatizi­ng” the sector. Agricultur­e Minister Luis Planas also took Garzon to task, accusing him of talking up a “fake problem” and calling his criticism of producers “unfair”. Meat production accounted for “just eight percent” of Spain’s greenhouse gas emissions, Planas said.

And Health Minister Carolina Darias sought to downplay her colleague’s health claims, saying in a press conference Friday that people should aim for “a diet that allows them to alternate between eating large amounts of protein and of vitamins... a balanced and rounded diet, everything in the right amount”. —AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait