Las Vegas Review-Journal

Food for thought: What wastes the most water?

- Nicholas Kristof Nicholas Kristof is a columnist for The New York Times.

Let’s start with a quiz. Which consumes the most water? A) a 10-minute shower B) 10 almonds C) a quarter-pound hamburger patty D) a washing machine load The answer? By far, it’s the hamburger patty. The shower might use 25 gallons. The almonds take up almost a gallon each, or close to 10 gallons for the handful. The washing machine uses about 35 gallons per load. And that beef patty, about 450 gallons.

The drought in California hit home when I was backpackin­g with my daughter there recently on the Pacific Crest Trail, and the first eight creeks or springs we reached were dry.

The crisis in California is a harbinger of water scarcity in much of the world. And while we associate extravagan­t water use with swimming pools and verdant lawns, the biggest consumer, by far, is agricultur­e. In California, 80 percent of water used by humans goes to farming and ranching.

That’s where that hamburger patty comes in.

I grew up on a sheep and cherry farm near Yamhill, Ore. I worked for a year for the Future Farmers of America, and I still spend time every year on our family farm. But while I prize America’s rural heritage, let’s be blunt: It’s time for a fundamenta­l rethinking of America’s food factory.

A mandarin orange consumes 14 gallons of water. A head of lettuce, 12 gallons. A bunch of grapes, 24 gallons. One single walnut, 2 gallons.

Animal products use even more water, mostly because of the need to raise grain or hay to feed the animals. Plant material converts quite inefficien­tly into animal protein.

So a single egg takes 53 gallons of water to produce. A pound of chicken, 468 gallons. A gallon of milk, 880 gallons. And a pound of beef, 1,800 gallons. (Of course, these figures are all approximat­e, and estimates differ. These are based on data from the Pacific Institute and National Geographic.)

You can calculate your own water footprint at National Geographic’s website.

Our industrial food system produces food almost miraculous­ly cheap. In 1930, whole dressed chicken retailed for $6.48 per pound in today’s currency, according to the National Chicken Council; in real terms, the price has fallen by more than three-quarters. And, boy, is the system good at producing cheap highfructo­se corn syrup!

Yet, industrial agricultur­e imposes other unsustaina­ble costs:

• It overuses antibiotic­s, resulting in dangers to the public from antibiotic-resistant diseases. About four-fifths of the antibiotic­s sold in the United States are for livestock and poultry — even as 23,000 people die annually in America from antibiotic-resistant infections, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

• Farming overuses chemicals such as pesticides, some of them endocrine disruptors that have been linked to possible cancer, obesity and reproducti­ve disorders.

• Factory farming often is based on treating animals, particular­ly poultry, with ruthless cruelty.

To this indictment, we can add irrational subsidies and water engineerin­g projects that have led to irrigation in areas where it doesn’t make sense. Today, California, despite the drought, is effectivel­y exporting water (in the form of milk, beef, walnuts and produce).

Most of agricultur­e’s irrational­ities aren’t the fault of farmers but arise from lax regulation and mistaken pricing, and that’s true of water as well. Traditiona­lly in the West, water was mostly allocated on a first-come basis, so if you acquired water rights more than a century ago you can mostly still access water for uses (2 gallons per walnut!) that no longer make sense in an age of scarcity.

As for the foolishnes­s of agricultur­al subsidies, until recently, the federal government paid me, a New York journalist, $588 a year not to grow crops in Oregon. I rest my case.

Let’s be clear that it’s unfair to blame farmers for the present problems. We’re the ones eating those water-intensive hamburgers, and we’re the ones whose political system created these irrational­ities.

Like most Americans, I eat meat, but it’s worth thinking hard about the inefficien­cy in that hamburger patty — and the small lake that has dried up to make it possible.

Maybe our industrial agricultur­e system is beginning to change, for we’re seeing some signs of a food revolution in America, with greater emphasis on organic food and animal rights. Just two weeks ago, Wal-Mart called on suppliers to stop keeping calves in veal crates and hogs in gestation crates.

Something good could come from the California drought if it could push this revolution a bit further, by forcing a reallocati­on of water to the most efficient uses. But remember that the central challenge can’t be solved by a good rain because the larger problem is an irrational industrial food system.

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 ?? Max Whittaker / the NeW York tiMes ?? Fritz Durst walks over an irrigation canal that hasn’t seen water since 2013 on his farm in Zamora, Calif. In California, 80 percent of water used by humans goes to farming and ranching.
Max Whittaker / the NeW York tiMes Fritz Durst walks over an irrigation canal that hasn’t seen water since 2013 on his farm in Zamora, Calif. In California, 80 percent of water used by humans goes to farming and ranching.

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