Hula Paradiso Publications Inc.
Why be a Vegan?
C
OWS GASEOUS EMISSIONS ARE
CONTRIBUTING TO GLOBALWARMING...
WORSE THAN AUTOMOBILE AND
VEHICLES!
Cow 'emissions' more damaging
to planet than CO2 from cars
By Geoffrey Lean, Environment
Editor December
2006
Meet the world's
top destroyer of the environment. It is not the car or the
plane: it is the cow.
A United Nations
report has identified the world's rapidly growing herds of
cattle as the greatest threat to the climate, forests and
wildlife. And they are blamed for a host of other environmental
crimes, from acid rain to the introduction of alien species,
from producing deserts to creating dead zones in the oceans,
from poisoning rivers and drinking water to destroying coral
reefs.
The 400-page
report by the Food and Agricultural Organization, entitled
Livestock's Long Shadow, also surveys the damage done by sheep,
chickens, pigs and goats. But in almost every case, the world's
1.5 billion cattle are most to blame. Livestock are responsible
for 18 per cent of the greenhouse gases that cause global
warming, more than cars, planes and all other forms of
transport put together.
Burning fuel to
produce fertilizer to grow feed, to produce meat and to
transport it - and clearing vegetation for grazing - produces 9
per cent of all emissions of carbon dioxide, the most common
greenhouse gas. And their wind and manure emit more than one
third of emissions of another, methane, which warms the world
20 times faster than carbon dioxide.
Livestock also
produces more than 100 other polluting gases, including more
than two-thirds of the world's emissions of ammonia, one of the
main causes of acid rain.
Ranching, the
report adds, is "the major driver of deforestation" worldwide,
and overgrazing is turning a fifth of all pastures and ranges
into desert. Cows also soak up vast amounts of water: it takes
a staggering 990 liters of water to produce one liter of
milk.
Wastes from
feedlots and fertilizers used to grow their feed over nourish
water, causing weeds to choke all other life. And the
pesticides, antibiotics and hormones used to treat them get
into drinking water and endanger human health.
The pollution
washes down to the sea, killing coral reefs and creating "dead
zones" devoid of life. One is up to 21,000sqkm, in the Gulf of
Mexico, where much of the waste from US beef production is
carried down the Mississippi.
The report
concludes that, unless drastic changes are made, the massive
damage done by livestock will more than double by 2050, as
demand for meat increases.
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