Climate benefits of changing diet
Reducing global meat consumption would reduce
greenhouse gas emissions and cut the costs of climate policy
substantially. This is the result of a PBL study published in Climatic
Change. Apart from a reduction in methane and N2O emissions, vast
agricultural areas would become unused, mostly as a result of reduced
cattle grazing, and could take up large amounts of carbon. Shifting
worldwide to a healthy low-meat diet would reduce the costs of
stabilising greenhouse gases at 450 ppm CO2 eq. by more than 50%.
To the article
Authors
Elke Stehfest , Lex Bouwman, Detlef P. van Vuuren, Michel G. J. den Elzen, Bas Eickhout and Pavel Kabat
Date 12 February 2009
Publication Climatic Change
AbstractClimate
change mitigation policies tend to focus on the energy sector, while
the livestock sector receives surprisingly little attention, despite
the fact that it accounts for 18% of the greenhouse gas emissions and
for 80% of total anthropogenic land use. From a dietary perspective,
new insights in the adverse health effects of beef and pork have lead
to a revision of meat consumption recommendations. Here, we explored
the potential impact of dietary changes on achieving ambitious climate
stabilization levels.
By using an integrated assessment model, we found
a global food transition to less meat, or even a complete switch to
plant-based protein food to have a dramatic effect on land use. Up to
2,700 Mha of pasture and 100 Mha of cropland could be abandoned,
resulting in a large carbon uptake from regrowing vegetation.
Additionally, methane and nitrous oxide emission would be reduced
substantially.
A global transition to a low meat-diet as recommended
for health reasons would reduce the mitigation costs to achieve a
450 ppm CO2-eq. stabilisation target by about 50% in 2050
compared to the reference case. Dietary changes could therefore not
only create substantial benefits for human health and global land use,
but can also play an important role in future climate change mitigation
policies.
Source :Netherlands Environmental Assessment Agency