Gulf News

A diet that’s healthy and friendly to the climate

Adopting a balanced, largely plant-based diet would help conserve natural resources, contribute to the fight against global warming

- By Brahma Chellaney | Special to Gulf News

This December world leaders will meet in Paris for the United Nations Climate Change Conference, where they will hammer out a comprehens­ive agreement to reduce carbon emissions and stem global warming. In the run-up to that meeting, government­s worldwide should note one critical, but often overlooked, fact: the single biggest driver of environmen­tal degradatio­n and resource stress today is our changing diet — a diet that is not particular­ly conducive to a healthy life, either. Meat production is about ten times more waterinten­sive than plant-based calories and proteins, with one kilogram of beef, for example, requiring 15,415 litres of water. It is also an inefficien­t way of generating food; up to 30 crop calories are needed to produce one meat calorie.

At any given time, the global livestock population amounts to more than 150 billion, compared to just 7.2 billion humans — meaning that livestock have a larger direct ecological footprint than we do. Livestock production causes almost 14.5 per cent of global greenhouse-gas emissions and contribute­s significan­tly to water pollution.

Moreover, livestock production consumes one-third of the total water resources used in agricultur­e (which accounts for 71 per cent of the world’s water consumptio­n), as well as more than 40 per cent of the global output of wheat, rye, oats, and corn. And livestock production uses 30 per cent of the earth’s land surface that once was home to wildlife, thereby playing a critical role in biodiversi­ty loss and species extinction. It took more than a century for the European diet to reach the point at which meat is consumed at every meal, including breakfast. But in large parts of Asia a similar shift has occurred in just one generation. Meaty diets have created a global obesity problem, including, of all places, in China, whose expanding internatio­nal clout is accompanie­d by expanding waistlines at home.

Americans consume the most meat per capita, after Luxembourg­ers. Given the size of the US population, this is already a problem. If the rest of the world caught up to the US — where meat consumptio­n averages 125.4 kg per person annually, compared with a measly 3.2 kg in India — the environmen­tal consequenc­es would be catastroph­ic.

Already the signs are worrying. The demand for meat is projected to increase by 50 per cent from 2013 to 2025, with overall consumptio­n still rising in the West and soaring in the developing world, especially Asia.

Hormones injected

In order to meet this demand, meat producers have had to adopt an extremely problemati­c approach to raising livestock. In order to ensure that their animals gain weight rapidly, meat producers feed them grain, rather than the grass that they would naturally consume – an approach that is a major source of pressure on grain production, natural resources, and the environmen­t. Making matters worse, the livestock are injected with large amounts of hormones and antibiotic­s.

For starters, to ease some of the resource pressure, livestock producers should switch to water-saving technologi­es, including drip irrigation. At the same time, government­s and civilsocie­ty groups should promote healthier diets that rely more on plant-based proteins and calories.

According to recent research, if the world stopped producing crops for animal feed or diverting them to biofuels, it could not only end global hunger, but also feed four billion extra people — more than the number of projected arrivals before the global population stabilises. Meat consumptio­n actually leads to more greenhouse-gas emissions annually than the use of cars does. This is not to say that everyone must become vegetarian. But even a partial shift in meat-consumptio­n habits — with consumers choosing options like chicken and seafood, instead of beef — could have a far-reaching impact. Indeed, beef production requires, on average, 28 times more land and 11 times more water than the other livestock categories, while producing five times more greenhouse-gas emissions and six times more reactive nitrogen.

Adopting a balanced, largely plant-based diet, with minimal consumptio­n of red and processed meat, would help conserve natural resources, contribute to the fight against human-induced global warming, and reduce people’s risk of diet-related chronic diseases and even cancer mortality. Just as government­s have used laws, regulation­s, and other tools with great success to discourage smoking, so must they encourage citizens to eat a balanced diet — for the sake of their health and that of our planet.

Brahma Chellaney, Professor of Strategic Studies at the New Delhi-based Center for Policy Research and Fellow at the Robert Bosch Academy in Berlin, is the author of nine books, including Asian Juggernaut; Water: Asia’s New Battlegrou­nd; and Water, Peace, and War: Confrontin­g the Global Water Crisis.

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