Daily Mail

Hypocrisy of the greens! Activists eat meat and f ly nine times a year

- By Colin Fernandez Environmen­t Correspond­ent

THEy constantly implore us to do what we can to save the planet.

But a wide-ranging study of the habits of green activists has found that many do not practise what they preach.

Researcher­s found that conservati­onists ‘often engage in environmen­tally harmful behaviour’. This included taking an average of nine flights a year – far more than the typical Briton.

This is despite air travel being one of the biggest contributo­rs to greenhouse gases, which lead to global warming.

Conservati­onists were also found to regularly eat meat, and did not score any better in tests on environmen­tal issues than some who were not green activists.

The researcher­s, from Cambridge University and the University of Vermont, said there was ‘little correlatio­n between the extent of environmen­tal knowledge and environmen­tally friendly behaviour’.

In a study of 734 participan­ts from across the UK and US, the scientists gathered data on a range of lifestyle choices, including use of bottled water, air travel, meat consumptio­n and family size. The participan­ts fell into three categories: conservati­onists, economists and doctors.

The team found conservati­onists recycled more and ate less meat than the other groups – although the average conservati­onist still ate meat or fish five times a week. Green campaigner­s regularly call for people to cut down on their meat intake due to the damage done by the industry to the planet, including high methane emissions from cows.

All the groups had a similar profile in how they travelled to work. But the average conservati­onist was found to take nine flights a year – half for work and half for leisure – and purchased very few offsets to their personal carbon emissions. By contrast, the average Briton takes a short haul leisure flight every two years, and a long haul one every five years.

In a series of factual questions on issues from atmospheri­c change to species extinction, conservati­onists were also found to score no better than economists.

The study, published in the journal Biological Conservati­on, concluded: ‘Many conservati­onists undertake environmen­tally harmful activities in their private lives such as flying and eating meat, while calling for people as a whole to reduce such behaviours.’

Dr Brendan Fisher, from Vermont, said: ‘Our results show that conservati­onists pick and choose from a buffet of pro-environmen­tal behaviours the same as everyone else.’

Co-author Andrew Balmford, professor of conservati­on science at Cambridge, said the issue of widespread internatio­nal travel needed to be addressed, adding: ‘We must do a great deal more to lead by example.’

‘Pick and choose from buffet of behaviours’

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