Dairy farming

Livestock producers are well aware that their sector has its critics.  But rather than addressing legitimate concerns, the industry response is  often to dismiss such people and organizations. For example, the  editorial here on Feb 1, 2012, ‘Who Says Beef Production Isn’t Sustainable?’  repeated a claim concerning the 2006 report Livestock’s Long Shadow  from the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO). The editorial  suggested that the FAO authors have backed off their contention that  livestock is responsible for large amounts of greenhouse gases  worldwide. “In 2006, the FAO concluded that livestock production was  responsible for 18 per cent of global greenhouse gas emissions, and  despite later admitting this figure was invalid, the number has stuck.”
In fact, however, the FAO authors never retracted their 18 per cent  figure. What they did retract was their statement that livestock is  responsible for more gas emissions than transport. After publication of  their report, they publicly conceded that the ‘transport’ comparison was  not based on a rigorous analysis, and they shouldn’t have said it.  But  that’s no reason to discount the entire report, which lays out sweeping  evidence that livestock production in the amounts, and methods, of  today is environmentally devastating for the long term. And that  viewpoint comes from authors who are internationally-recognised  agricultural economists and scientists, completely onside with animal  agriculture. They just think it needs to be done much better – emitting  fewer gases, polluting less water and soil, and going easy on the  earth’s finite resources. 
There’s another reason for producers to stop trying to undermine the FAO  report. By downplaying the extent of the environmental challenges,  they’ll be disengaging from the growing conversation on how to make meat  production cleaner and kinder. Galvanized partly by Livestock’s Long  Shadow, policymakers, citizens and scientists in the UK, US, Canada,  Australia, and elsewhere are increasingly questioning current methods  and amounts of intensive and mass-volume production.  
Let’s get back to the 18 per cent figure, and the industry’s claim that  livestock aren’t that bad. It’s true that within some particular  countries, such as the US, livestock are responsible for much less than  18 per cent, as Dr Frank Mitloehner and colleagues have pointed out. But  for the planet as a whole, taking into account the large amount of  deforestation to support meat production, and the fact that per-capita  consumption increases are continuing for meat (which is a  resource-intensive food), the FAO figure may actually be an  underestimate. As well, a growing list of scientists strongly supports  the FAO’s broader analysis that livestock are a significant contributor  to water pollution, loss of biodiversity, and threats to public health  from hormones, antibiotics, excessive fertilizers, other chemicals, and  more manure than local ecosystems can often absorb.
The beef industry and other segments of the livestock sector are indeed  moving to address some of these issues. Producers are working on ways to  raise livestock and make meat and dairy while minimising environmental  impacts, as Dr Judith Capper and others have documented. You’re figuring  out how to raise lower-carbon sheep and cattle.
But many commentators believe we need stronger public policy to ensure  that not only you -- but also your competitors -- are required to do  things in ways that are best for the environment and health, even if it  means higher-priced retail meat for consumers. And though it isn’t  popular with industry, there is also a growing global movement to  encourage heavy meat consumers to cut back on their intake so that  animal products can be produced within the capacity of local and global  ecosystems, and consumed in amounts that are better for human health.
Livestock producers are not the only ones who dismiss their critics. I  know environmentalists who only spend time with other like-minded  people. It’s human nature, and I’ve been guilty of it in the past.   Moving beyond our comfort zones is hard work, but it’s worth the  attempt. Let’s all try, and talk about how we can make livestock  production, and meat consumption, genuinely sustainable for the future.  Producers, policymakers, and citizens who care about environmental,  health and community issues can co-operate for long-time viability of  livestock and meat as a sector, a livelihood, and a food source.  I  welcome comments and an ongoing conversation.





















