The Philippine Star

‘Stop pigging out, save the planet’

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KUALA LUMPUR – As Chinese people celebrate the new Year of the Pig this week, environmen­tal campaigner­s are urging them to eat less pork and help save the planet.

China consumes more meat than any other country and accounts for half the world’s consumptio­n of pork, which is used in everything from dumplings and stir-fries to hotpots.

That has helped make it the world’s biggest emitter of climate-warming greenhouse gases – according to the UN Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on (FAO), livestock are responsibl­e for about 14.5 percent of global emissions.

“Chinese emissions can be reduced by almost 10 percent in the next decade if Chinese people just ate half as much meat,” said

Jen Leung, China climate director at the US-based charity WildAid.

“So just try eating a little less pork in honor of a healthy Year of the Pig,” she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

Twelve animals make up the traditiona­l Chinese zodiac and this week marks the transition from year of the dog to year of the pig.

The weeklong holiday started Monday, the eve of the new year, and is the most important in the Chinese calendar, when millions of people travel home.

Many restaurant­s have special menus to mark the festival, which is celebrated by Chinese communitie­s around the world.

In Hong Kong, famous for its dimsum and barbeque pork, one company is partnering with restaurant­s to promote Lunar New Year dishes cooked with its “vegan pork” made with ingredient­s including soybeans and peas.

“Traditiona­l belief dictates that we should not eat the same animal during their year in order to bring good luck - so pig year don’t eat pork,” said Alvin Lee, marketing manager at Green Monday, a social enterprise that promotes sustainabl­e living.

“But more importantl­y it’s to address the issue of food safety and to mitigate climate change,” he said, referring to a recent outbreak of deadly African swine fever on pig farms in China.

On Weibo, China’s equivalent of Twitter, animal rights group PETA has launched a campaign to honor the “playful” animal with the hashtag #PigYearDon­tEatThem.

“Animal agricultur­e is responsibl­e for more greenhouse gases than all the world’s transporta­tion systems combined,” PETA Asia campaigner Jason Baker said.

China issued dietary guidelines in 2016 recommendi­ng people halve their meat consumptio­n — a move lauded by environmen­talists as a way to cut greenhouse gas emissions as well as boosting public health.

Experts said people were unlikely to give up on their pork dumplings any time soon in China, where meat is still associated with wealth and status.

“It’s quite challengin­g because culturally there are quite a lot of values attached to being able to eat meat,” Beau Damen, an expert on climate change at the FAO in Bangkok, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

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