Replacing 20pc of beef with alternatives ‘could halve deforestation’
REPLACING A fifth of the beef people eat with fungi-based meat alternatives by 2050 could halve deforestation, a study suggests.
Meat from “ruminants” such as cattle contributes to climate change because carbon-storing forests are cut down for grazing land or crops that make up animal feed, while the livestock also produce methane emissions.
As well as dropping meat in favour of more vegetables to cut the climate impact of food, alternatives include plant-based ones such as soybean burgers, cultured meat or animal cells grown in a petri dish, and protein from microbes such as fungi produced in a fermentation process using sugar. Scientists say this microbial meat alternative – which people can already buy in the shops – is a protein-rich food that can taste and feel like red meat and be as nutritious.
Research by the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK) modelled the future environmental effects of substituting ruminant meat with microbial protein, taking into account food demand and diets, population growth and land use.
With a growing population and increased meat consumption, more and more forests and other natural vegetation could be cleared for grazing and crop land.
But the projections, published in the journal Nature, show that substituting 20 per cent of ruminant meat consumption per person with microbial protein by 2050 stops the increase in pasture areas needed for livestock grazing.
Florian Humpenoder, researcher at PIK and lead author of the study, said: “The food system is at the root of a third of global greenhouse gas emissions, with ruminant meat production being the single largest source.”
Switching out beef for microbial protein in the future could considerably reduce the greenhouse gas footprint of the food system, he said.