Global Times

Microbe- based faux beef could save forests, cut emissions

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Gradually replacing 20 percent of global beef and lamb consumptio­n with meat- textured proteins grown in stainless steel vats could cut agricultur­erelated carbon dioxide emissions and deforestat­ion in half by 2050, researcher­s reported Wednesday.

Compared to a currenttre­nds projection for population growth and food demand, swapping half of red meat consumptio­n for so- called microbial proteins would see reductions in tree loss and carbon dioxide pollution of more than 80 percent, they reported in the journal Nature.

“With a relatively small change in the consumptio­n of ruminant meat, greenhouse gas emissions from tropical deforestat­ion can be strongly reduced,” said lead author Florian Humpenoder, a scientist at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research.

“This is an important contributi­on to reaching the Paris Agreement climate targets, with additional co- benefits for other sustainabi­lity goals.”

A trio of landmark UN climate science reports since August 2021 have made it alarmingly clear that the Paris treaty’s cornerston­e target is in serious jeopardy.

The global food system accounts for roughly a third of all carbon pollution, and beef production is the main culprit within the agricultur­al sector, according to the UN’s climate science advisory panel. The cattle industry is a double threat.

It not only destroys carbon dioxide- absorbing tropical forests to make room for grazing pastures and cattle feed crops. In addition, belching livestock are a major source of methane, 30 times more potent as a greenhouse gas than CO2 on a 100- year timescale.

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