mothra wrote on Dec 19
th, 2015 at 1:13pm:
Karnal wrote on Dec 19
th, 2015 at 12:50pm:
How can the cattle industry be more efficient than veges? Milk production alone requires kilograms of feed per liter. Milk production requires constant breeding for lactation. 50% of those cows (the males) must be culled or sold off as beef products. The land degredation from cattle is a constant complaint of farmers. The methane produced is a major greenhouse issue.
There is no way this study can support itself. It appears, however, to address pork, not beef.
There is certainly much more water used in the production of meat than in the production of plants.
When you consider that the supply of water is going to be one of the most pressing issues in the not too distant future, there are more arguments against meat than for it.
Despite the findings of this very flawed study.
The supply of water, Mother, but also the supply of land. Beef farming requires multiple fields per unit of food produced. Forest clearing for beef production, particularly around the Amazon, is one of the major producers of CO2.
In the US, grass feed has been replaced with corn feed. That corn could feed hundreds more people than the beef produced. Over 80% of beef goes into mince, most of this used for hamburger patties. Corn and beef are big ticket US exports, all subsidized. Most of it goes into fast food products, soft drinks and processed foods.
When you add the government subsidies, manufacturing process and supply chain to the water and land use, you couldn’t dream up a more inefficient way of producing food.
When this process dumps food on the global market and puts smaller producers out of business, it puts food security itself at risk. The ultimate result is the monopolization of food.
Multinationals like Cargills, Monsanto and Nestle earn larger profits than the GDP of many nations they trade in, and in doing so, they put farmers in those countries out of business. Those farmers join the slums of the major urban centres. Manila, Mumbai, Dhaka, Lagos, the old food producers become the new urban poor, while the air conditioned malls sell McDonalds to the children of the rich and newly emerging middle classes.
This is not just about land use, it’s about an entire global economy.