One More Reason to Become a Vegetarian?
March 6, 2009 by admin · Leave a Comment

There are a list of reasons for being a vegetarian — health, morality, ethics — but could global warming be yet another? As a matter of fact, it is. Oil, coal, and cars seem to get all the attention in environmental discourse these days, but there’s a new answer to the question, “Where’s the beef?” It turns out that our beef is busy melting ice caps and eating ozone.
According to the Scientific American, meat production itself produces up to 22% of greenhouse gases every year. And beef is the worst. It contributes more than 13 times as much as chicken to global warming, and 57 times more than potatoes…and consumption is rising rapidly.
The raising and production of livestock animals uses an amazing amount of energy. Here are some of the major effects that meat has on its way to your dinner table:
Livestock Waste Produces Greenhouse Gases
Fossil Fuel emissions may be number one, but methane is not far behind, and waste from livestock is a major contributor to methane emissions. The livestock industry on the whole accounts for 37% of human-induced methane. According to Low Impact Living, you would have to drive your car for three hours, while leaving all the lights on at home, just to come close to emitting as much greenhouse gas as is emitted during the life cycle of a single kilogram of beef.
One Year of Showers to Make 4 Hamburgers
Simply put, it takes 5,214 gallons of water to produce one pound of beef. One year’s worth of daily showers equals just four hamburgers. Waste from livestock, including chickens, is also a major contributor to poor water quality as it runs off into local streams.
Land for Animal Feed
A common criticism of biofuels, especially corn ethanol, is that it requires precious land and crops that could otherwise be consumed by the populace. But what about livestock feed? Crops for animal feed use 80% of U.S. agricultural land and half the water supply. Still a large sum of animals are packed into a relatively small amount of land, resulting in the long term degradation of that land.
A Hard Pill to Swallow
Whew! That is a lot of tough information to digest all at once (much harder than a hamburger). I myself am a meat eater, although I dabbled in vegetarianism for about three years when I was younger. It’s not easy to just give up meat. We are an omnivorous society. However, if we all stopped eating meat today the effect would be monumental, and there would be a lot of happy chickens clucking down our streets; but that is unlikely to happen. (more…)
One More Reason to Become a Vegetarian?
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