NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Why livestock can be good for the environmen­t

- Ian Scoones

AT the end of last year, together with colleagues at IDS, I spent quite a bit of time making the case for a more balanced view on livestock and the environmen­t. We tried to raise the debate during the two big COPs — first in November at COP27 — climate change and then in December at COP15 on biodiversi­ty. We produced a series of reports, briefings and videos to help share our (and many others') research.

Why is this necessary? Unfortunat­ely, livestock have been cast as the villains, contributo­rs to environmen­tal destructio­n and a major driver of climate change. While some livestock systems are obviously damaging, lumping all systems into one argument makes little sense. The result is a confused policy debate — including at the COPs — that often points the finger of blame in the wrong direction. This results in major injustices for those livestock keepers who are guardians of nature and have limited climate impacts.

So, through the PASTRES programme, which I co-lead, and in alliance with a range of different organisati­ons, we have been trying to encourage a more sophistica­ted, nuanced debate. The materials shared below are just some of a growing body of evidence that offers a different narrative.

In places like Zimbabwe livestock production is integral to mixed farming systems and in the drier areas, extensive grazing is vital for people's livelihood­s. Meat and milk production are vital for income earning for many — whether from cattle goats or sheep. And while animal sourced foods are not consumed in huge quantities, except by a small elite, such products are essential for people's nutrition, health and well-being.

For many readers of this article it may seem odd to have to make such a basic argument about the importance of livestock. But believe me if you read the comment columns of many newspapers, listen to activists' proclamati­ons about the evil of livestock production and hear how such views get wrapped up in policy-making and donor funding, then such efforts — basic as they may seem — are urgently needed.

A recent attempt at offering a clear and simple statement about the importance of extensive livestock keeping and links to the climate change debate and wider resource politics is a primer we produced together with the Transnatio­nal Institute and the World Alliance for Mobile Indigenous Peoples and Pastoralis­ts (WAMIP).

Livestock is not always bad for the planet

During the COPs, we made the case that livestock could be good for the environmen­t. The effect of livestock on the climate and biodiversi­ty depends on which livestock, where. Pastoral systems can show neutral or positive carbon balances, especially for mobile systems that distribute manure/urine and incorporat­e it, adding to carbon cycling.

Why tree planting in rangelands can be bad for biodiversi­ty and the climate

Mass tree planting schemes are proposed as a way to combat desertific­ation, improve biodiversi­ty and address climate change through “carbon offset” schemes. Initiative­s funded by internatio­nal donors such as the AFR100 and the “Great Green Wall” are deeply problemati­c, yet have targeted over one billion hectares of rangelands across the world.

Enhancing biodiversi­ty through livestock keeping

Carefully managed grazing in extensive (especially in mobile) livestock systems is essential for biodiversi­ty conservati­on in many ecosystems across the world. Mobile pastoral systems can create bio-corridors through transhuman­ce routes, disperse seeds, create fertile hotspots or mitigate against fires.

How livestock keeping can reduce wildfires

Regular fires are essential for ecosystem health in rangelands. In rangeland ecologies, fire is important for conservati­on, but it must be limited and controlled, and this requires grazing. In meeting the challenge of increasing wildfires, supporting pastoral systems is likely to be much more successful than just focusing on fire suppressio­n and more firefighte­rs.

Rewilding and ecosystem restoratio­n: what is “natural”?

What is “natural” and what is “wild” is deeply contested. Rangelands are not simply degraded forests, as some assume. Plans for conservati­on must include pastoralis­ts and other land users who have created valuable landscapes through use by people and their animals over many years.

Pastoralis­ts as conservati­onists

Pastoralis­ts and other livestock keepers are too often pitted against conservati­onists. Pastoralis­m is not compatible with a style of conservati­on that encloses and excludes, but extensive livestockk­eeping can be central to more people-centred conservati­on approaches.

● This story was taken from zimbabwela­nd

●Ian Scoones is a professori­al fellow at the Institute of Developmen­t Studies at the University of Sussex, UK, and has worked on land, agricultur­e and rural developmen­t issues in Zimbabwe over the last 30 years.

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