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North American Livestock Production Contribution to Global Warming Less than Public Led to Believe
Dr. Frank Mitloehner - University of California Davis

Farmscape for March 9, 2017

An Air Quality Specialist with the University of California Davis says livestock production in North America plays a much smaller role in contributing to global warming than the public would be led to believe.
As governments move to address global warming the contribution of agriculture, particularly livestock production to greenhouse gas emissions is increasingly being identified as one of the primary culprits.
Dr. Frank Mitloehner, a Professor and Air Quality Specialist with the Department of Animal Science at the University of California Davis, says many countries are inefficient and resource hungry when it comes to livestock production so the contribution of their livestock industries to global warming skews the numbers.

Clip-Dr. Frank Mitloehner-University of California Davis:
In the United States, to give you that example, the number one culprit of carbon emissions is the use of fossil fuel.
Energy production and use and transportation, these two sectors make up for more than 50 percent.
The livestock sector in the United States contributes to 4.2 percent of all greenhouse gasses.
But, in other countries of the world, that is not the case.
For example in some South American countries livestock contributes t half of their carbon footprint.
In some African countries livestock contributes to as much as 90 percent so it's not fair to use one global average, which is then completely distorting the contribution livestock have in North America or in South America or in Africa.
If you compare different regions throughout the world, what by far has the greatest impact on their footprints, is the efficiency under which they can be produced.

Dr. Mitloehner says, if you can increase efficiency you can decrease emissions.
As an example he points out the average milk cow in California produces 25 thousand pounds of milk per year, 20 times more than in India so, if you need 20 times more cows to produce the same amount of milk, the environmental impact is going to be 20 times greater.
For Farmscape.Ca, I'm Bruce Cochrane.


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