Will "burger laws" be needed to tackle climate change?
Report claims limiting ourselves to three burgers a week is necessary keep
food-related greenhouse gas emissions at a constant, and warns regulation may be
needed to change diets
Consumers in the developing world will have to cut meat and dairy consumption
to a burger every other day and three cheese sandwiches a week – just a tenth of
current consumption – if food related emissions are not to increase by 2050,
according to a
report
by the Food Climate Research Network
(FCRN) at the University of Surrey.
Food related emissions account for about a third of global greenhouse gas
emissions, the report said, adding that a failure to respond to the increased
adoption of meat and dairy-rich "standard" diets in developing countries will
have the dual effect of raising agriculture-related greenhouse gas emissions
globally and increasing the chances of a global food shortage for the poorer
sectors of society.
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In April this year, global food prices reached a 30-year high in real terms
as poor harvests and worldwide stock piling led to shortages for many nations.
UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon told a
summit in Rome that food production would have to rise by 50 per cent by 2030 to
meet demand.
The UN has been quick to point out that the global poor will begin to starve
if developed nations do not address the issue of food shortages.
The report recommends that governments in developed countries, such as the
UK and US, use regulatory and fiscal instruments to encourage citizens to eat
less meat, buy more seasonal field-grown vegetables, and prepare food in a more
carbon efficient manner.
Cutting alcohol and luxury goods consumption is also important because they
do not contribute nutritionally, but have significant carbon footprints, the
report says.
"Study upon study has shown that awareness-raising campaigns alone are
unlikely to work, particularly when it comes to more difficult changes," the
report concludes, adding that wider legislation to address agriculture's carbon
footprint will be required.
Recently the head of the United Nations intergovernmental panel on climate
change, Rajendra Pachauri, urged consumers to have one meat-free day a week.
Meat is much more carbon and agriculture intensive to eat than vegetables,
while dairy products also contribute to global warming through cows' methane
emissions.
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