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Capping greenhouse gas emissions from Canada's cows, pigs, chickens and other farm animals, while bolstering support for plant-based food, could help the country reach its climate goals, a new analysis has found. But experts question whether the approach would encourage factory farming, infuriate farmers and further annoy a cash-strapped public.
The study, commissioned by animal rights group World Animal Protection, compared the effectiveness of reducing harmful emissions of Canada's carbon tax and clean fuel regulations against a cap on emissions or livestock production.
Where they’ve been tried in the past, politics and economics made policies like these fail in spectacular fashion.
Farming is responsible for about 12 per cent of Canada's emissions, well over half of which are generated by animals or fertilizers used on feed crops. Livestock counts have remained relatively stable in recent years, except for poultry, which has seen considerable growth.
Capping emissions is the cheapest and most efficient way for Canada to mitigate the climate impact of farms, followed by a cap on total animals raised. Aggressively bolstering the consumption of plant-based foods, without limiting animal production, was found to be the least effective and most expensive option.
"We need to reduce our climate emissions. Everyone knows that, and the Canadian agriculture sector is not doing its part," said Lynn Kavanagh, farming campaign manager for World Animal Protection. She cited a recent federal Commissioner of the Environment report that found the government doesn't have a plan to reduce the sector's emissions.
Capping how much Canada's livestock and dairy sectors can emit and implementing a 50 per cent reduction compared to 2005 levels by 2050 would in practice reduce the number of animals by about half, the research found. It would also push farmers and agribusinesses to invest more in emission-reduction technologies like biodigesters, electric heating and vehicles.
But experts question if the approach is even desirable – or politically feasible.
In 2022, New Zealand became the first country in the world to propose capping emissions from livestock. The backlash was swift, with some observers linking the policy to the country's political swing to the right. In the Netherlands, a proposal for the government to buy out livestock farmers, as part of an emissions-reduction plan, generated years of protest and fuelled authoritarian conspiracies there and abroad.
In Canada, a 2022 federal proposal for a voluntary plan to reduce emissions linked to fertilizers led to swift political backlash. Conservatives accused the government of attacking farmers, with conspiracy theorists going even further to falsely claim on social media the proposal was part of an authoritarian plot. (It is not.)
"It is tricky, it is challenging, and there's going to be probably pushback for sure," Kavanagh acknowledged. "We don't want to leave farmers out of the equation."
She said the group "would recommend" that any effort to create an agricultural emissions cap be rejoined by a slew of programs to ease the transition cost to farmers. Canada has a suite of programs designed to help farmers reduce emissions, from improving the carbon stored in farmland to adopting more sustainable farm technologies.
Ryan Katz-Rosene, a political economist at the University of Ottawa and farmer, echoed those concerns.
"The big red herring here is feasibility," he said, because devising policies to enact this kind of rule would be difficult. There are only a handful of oil and gas producers and facilities in Canada, making it relatively easy to measure their emissions and ensure they don't breach an emissions cap. But Canada has thousands of farms, and devising a strategy to measure and cap their emissions would be technically challenging.
Another problem is ensuring that rangeland currently devoted to raising cattle wouldn't be used for more emissions-intensive purposes than before, said Darrin Qualman, director of climate crisis policy and action for the National Farmers Union. Cattle ranching can help protect grasslands from being dug up and turned into fields for crops, which themselves can generate greenhouse gas emissions if they are over-fertilized with nitrogen.
A cap on livestock emissions or production would only work well if rejoined by measures that encourage farmers and ranchers to ensure that land previously used for livestock would be stewarded to sequester carbon in the soil, he explained.
Katz-Rosene echoed similar concerns, adding that an emissions cap might actually bolster factory farms and feedlots. If the only metric is emissions reductions, raising livestock in feedlots emits fewer harmful greenhouse gases than growing them on pasture because the animals grow faster and live shorter lives. But the approach comes with a host of environmental and animal welfare problems, he said.
But he warned the biggest hurdle is convincing Canadians – and politicians – that efforts to regulate livestock emissions are worth it.
"We're in a context where there's so much working against [climate action] in our current political climate that the idea of intentionally hampering the cost of food, or access to meat and animal products – it's so politically fraught," he said
Comments
This false dichotomy really annoys me. It's presented as either business as usual or no animal products and usually promoted by the animal rights lobby who are using climate change as a method to force their opinions on others. There's no consideration of alternative approaches. It's a distraction away from the real villain in this country, the oil and gas industry.
thank you, there are a few people who can use common sense and self-evidence.
the sad thing is look at the comments of this post there are far more people defending demonizing farmers and ignoring fossil fuels industry
I can't imagine a government in Canada foolish enough to propose a cap on livestock emissions.
A link to the study would have been appreciated.
Policies to Promote Plant-Based Food Production and Consumption in Canada
Executive summary: https://www.worldanimalprotection.ca/siteassets/reports-pdfs/navius-rep…
Full report: https://www.worldanimalprotection.ca/siteassets/reports-pdfs/navius-rep…
The study notes that there are other beneficial environmental effects, beyond reducing greenhouse gas emissions, of shifting to more plant-based food consumption:
"Currently, agriculture land accounts for around half of all habitable land on earth, where 83% is used for animal agriculture including feed crops. Switching to a more plant-based diet would partially free up these land areas -- including marginal lands that are often inefficient at producing food, but ecologically valuable -- which could become available for conservation, restoration, and reforestation. In addition, agriculture is the leading cause of biodiversity degradation globally, mainly due to the production of crops needed for animal feed. Research suggests that this degraded land can recover its original carbon stocks and biodiversity levels if transitioned away from agricultural land. Lastly, animal agriculture uses 43% of all the water consumed by the global food system and is responsible for a disproportional amount of water pollution. Switching to a lower animal consumption diet would therefore reduce not only greenhouse gas emissions, as quantified in this analysis, but could also reduce land use, water consumption, and water pollution, while increasing biodiversity levels. There are also substantial health benefits from reducing animal consumption."
At some point, we'll collectively need to get serious about stopping GHG emissions; hopefully, it will be before we cross tipping points that make the current catastrophe into something much worse. Oil and gas is the correct main focus, but even if all fossil fuel burning stopped, emissions from animal agriculture would still ruin the planet - just more slowly.
Canadians won't support things they don't understand or don't think is fair. There is a lot of work to be done in educating people - but it will be impossible while governments do exactly the wrong things (TMX, Hwy 413, fracking permits), which all tell people that we've got no emergency.
Denmark just passed legislation regarding agriculture - including "the world’s first climate tax on agriculture". They elect their federal government through proportional representation and the legislation was widely backed.
https://www.arc2020.eu/political-deal-reached-on-denmarks-green-tripart…
its shocking how the media brainwashes people like you who's never worked a day in your life on a farm, if you did you'd know the truth.
look a guy name Allan Savery, you might learn something.
https://www.bing.com/videos/riverview/relatedvideo?q=youtube+allan+savo…
notice not ONE articles from any media, not even the National Observer, which is self evident its just another mouthpiece of glolbal elites to mislead public, not one article on how fossil fuels are harmful, are responsible for the damage to the world, not one article raising the alarm as oil gas and coal is constantly increasing, not one article on how toxic its emissions are.
no, they're demonizing farming, when in fact the emissions from a vegan diet are much more, bc for a large time of a cows life [spring summer and fall] it is out grazing the grass with no need for fossil fuels to plant spray pesticides, fertilize with fertilizer made from fossil fuels, or harvest and process, packaging in plastic]
vegitable crops kill small rodents and all insects, the base of the pyrmid of life. but hey, your ego is raging, and thats all that matters eh ;)
Numbers, please! Not everything that "sounds right" at first blush actually passes muster.
And btw? Those grass-grazing critters are then fattened up in feedlots.
"[G]razing livestock – even in a best-case scenario – are net contributors to the climate problem, as are all livestock. Good grazing management cannot offset its own emissions, let alone those arising from other systems of animal production. What’s more, soils being farmed using a new system of management, such as grazing, reach carbon equilibrium, where the carbon that flows into soils equal carbon flows out, within a few decades. This means that any benefits from grass-fed cows are time-limited, while the problems of methane and other gases continue for as long as the livestock remain on the land."
https://theconversation.com/why-eating-grass-fed-beef-isnt-going-to-hel…
As for crop production killing animals:
https://www.uvic.ca/law/asri/resources-education/research-outputs/shoul… .
manipulating at its worst, ignorace is bliss, unless you're one of the children having to inherit the world from people such as yourself. who ignore the real problems and spread lies through half truths and phony studies which were funded by big oil.
people eat food, any way you look at it its going to create emissions, the question is what is the best system. the system that has existed for thousands of years, self-evident that the world had none of the problems it faces today until a 100 years ago.
its frustrating when people such as yourself who are quite intelligent fail to use reasoning and self-evidence, facts and reality.
do you know the difference between traditional farming and factory farming?
the first is humane, the later not,
the first is illegal, the latter is not
the fist benifits the world and doesn't harm it, the latter is built are greed and ignorance.
https://www.bing.com/videos/riverview/relatedvideo?q=youtube+allan+savo…
Farming is not a subsistence activity anymore, it is a business, a way to make money. A noble way!
You must show farmers how to improve their bottom line by avoiding a waste of energy in the form of methane and nitrous oxide. If you can invent methods and demonstrate how to do that, and that it will be good for the environment, farmers will follow.
If you penalize them, there is no way that they accept your ideas.
ever hear of the Renaissance; that was when people went back to old ways.
which is what farming needs to do, go back to the small family farms, natural farming without fossil fuels used on large scale, without factory farms emitting all those things you mentioned of.
jsut ONCE I'd like to see you so called "intelligent" people make the point that fossil fuels need to be decreased, not increased, just once I'd like to see you blame oil coal and lng and mining for the destruction of the world instead of nature and farms
https://www.bing.com/videos/riverview/relatedvideo?q=youtube+allan+savo…
Umm ... there was about 1000 years called "the Dark Ages" before the Renaissance, which brought all kinds of new discoveries, art forms, etc. And it didn't need a colonizer, which is what ruled Europe before then. The Roman Empire was no more civil or civilized to the colonized, than the Dark Ages (aka Middle Ages) were to ordinary people.
PS: There are projects going on in several countries, including Australia and Spain, that get basically the same results by digging ponds to encourage rainfall to stay around, rather than leaving as flood-causing runoff, and planting around them.
The UAE had a project of "desert renewal" but used the usual forms of watering crops, using water from the (natural) system of underground streams found in several countries. The UAE stopped when they realized they were using up the underground water. There is also renewal going on in Europe, without bringing in herds of animals. So it's not the only way.
A big part of The Problem with agriculture as it's practised in North America is that it relies on heavy equipment compacting the soil, fossil fertilizers, and single crops (often to be fed to animals -- along with those animals' own waste products and slaughter by-products, and massive amounts of antibiotics and hormones). Another huge cause of desertification (and flooding, and global warming) is the way we "harvest" forests, and "replace" mixed species forests with single crop tree plantations. I grew up in a community sustained by farming (small, family farms) and the lumber industry. Right around when I left town, a huge British forestry concern built a huge "timber factory" and introduced widespread clear-cutting. Government recalled all the harvesting licenses of small producers, plowed out rivers to a uniform width and depth (like canals) resulting in greater run off for all the reasons that people have written about here.
The effects were clearly visible to those of us who returned to the valley for short visits with the parents, though it seemed not nearly as evident to those who were there all the time. Kind of like when you see a baby for a while, then only once or twice a year afterward. To us, as children, we were always the same, while visiting relatives would always exclaim about how we'd grown. Same deal.
One of the big problems with Mr. Savory's conclusions is that we don't have vast tracts of desertified grasslands available for planned grazing.
There's a farmer in Britain who uses such a method on his own farm: it's not conducive to the kind of single species animal production we use now.
Few people here don't accept that fossil fuels have to go. But that doesn't mean consuming a diet with less meat and dairy wouldn't be much healthier for us humans, and the planet.
And FWIW, so-called "vegan meat" is highly, highly processed food, and not at all healthy. One of the earliest ones had such an imbalance of B vitamins that it could cause functional deficiencies in some, because of the over-glut of others. I don't understand its charm, any more than I understood how people would find "tofurkey" moulded to look like a squashed bird, complete with the little bumps where feathers would have been in the real McCoy.