• Rimu@piefed.social
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    9 months ago

    Vegans love to conflate all meat into one big group because their goal is to make veganism look good in comparison.

    In reality, beef is the main problem.

    graph

    It would be a lot more environmentally effective to convince people to reduce beef consumption and replace it with chicken/pork instead, but vegans aren’t interested in that because for them it’s not really about the climate - it’s about reducing animal suffering and death.

    This duplicity muddies the waters and makes getting real actual change that would benefit the climate harder to achieve and less likely to happen.

    • usernamesAreTricky@lemmy.ml
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      9 months ago

      I would hazard saying “environmentally effective” here unless we are willing to ignore some of the other large environmental issues with meat production outside of just green house gases emission. Plant-based foods are lower not just on GHG emissions, but water usage, land usage, eutrophication, fertilizer usage1, etc.

      There’s all kinds of other pollutants such as Nitrogen runoff. The rise of the pig farming is has helped fueled a crisis in Nitrogen runoff in the Netherlands for instance

      There’s the high level of antibiotic usage to maintaining the high levels of production fueling antibiotic resistance.

      And so on.

      If we do want to look at the suffering, we should also note that chicken farming does not just keep things the same, but actually makes it worse with more chickens required than other creatures due to their smaller size.

      1 Even less synthetic fertilizer even compared to the maximal usage of manure per https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0921344922006528

      EDIT: I should also mention that land use change (deforestation) factor can change as you rapidly increase these industries size. Deforestation makes up a large portion of beef’s current emissions. Plant-based foods require overall less cropland due to not needing to grow any feed and removing that energy loss. This is not the case for chicken production. Currently beef does make up the majority of Amazonian deforestation, however, the second largest portion is growing animal feed primary for chickens. Switch from beef to chickens and you might risk just moving around where the deforestation comes from

      • Rimu@piefed.social
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        9 months ago

        Yes. Sloppy choice of words on my part but this is a climate change topic, here.

        Chicken meat uses 4x less water than beef. I’m not disputing your point, just firming up the perspective for anyone lurking.

        chicken vs beef

        Clearly, vegetables are way way better. But in terms of what kind of behavior change people are willing to consider, cutting out beef is a way way easier sell than cutting out all meat.

      • Rimu@piefed.social
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        9 months ago

        Yes. Sloppy choice of words on my part but this is a climate change topic, here.

        Chicken meat uses 4x less water than beef. I’m not disputing your point, just firming up the perspective for anyone lurking.

        chicken vs beef

        Clearly, vegetables are way way better. But in terms of what kind of behavior change people are willing to consider, cutting out beef is a way way easier sell than cutting out all meat.

    • iiGxC@slrpnk.net
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      9 months ago

      one aspect of this is that many vegans care about the environment and the victims of animal agriculture. Things are so bad for the animals (we kill trillions per year. That’s insane.) that people are desperate to do or say anything to get people to stop supporting it.

      • Aceticon@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        Clearly not, as, humans being as humans are, merelly getting people to just start having vegetarian meals once in a while, reducing meat consumption (which is even a good thing healthwise) and eating more of the less environmentally harmful meats and less of the worst ones, is a far faster path to reduce the Environmental problem and avoiding the kind of push-back reaction that will put many people altogether against the idea.

        The genuine, pragmatic approach to maximizing the Environmental outcomes both on the long- and short-term is the very opposite of how Moralists, driven by their own Moral standpoint and self-righteousness, are abusing broader Environmental concerns to push their morals.

        People putting Environmentalism first aren’t pushing for absolutist “abide by my Morals” pseudo-“solutions”.

      • psud@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        Then keep beef. One cow is a hundred meals, one chicken is two. 50 chickens die to save one cow.

        And chickens don’t give milk

    • Noedel@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      If tofu is still ten times better for the planet than cheese I don’t think it’s “mostly beef” that’s the problem.

      • wahming@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        Given cheese is a beef-related product I don’t see the issue with the reasoning

    • activistPnk@slrpnk.net
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      9 months ago

      It would be a lot more environmentally effective to convince people to reduce beef consumption and replace it with chicken/pork instead,

      Let’s not drive a wedge between the eco-vegans and the animal welfare vegans. Beef is the worst for climate while chickens get the least ethical treatment.

      This duplicity muddies the waters and makes getting real actual change that would benefit the climate harder to achieve and less likely to happen.

      Dividing an already tiny population of much needed activists is not how you get progressive change. Non-beef meats still shadow plant-based food in terms of their climate harm.

      Your pic was too big for me to download but if it’s the same data I’ve seen, then beef is the worst and lamb is 2nd at about ½ the emissions of beef, and all the meats are substantially more harmful than plant based options.

      • inb4_FoundTheVegan@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        Honestly this whole argument reminds me of the importance of intersectionality. Yes different groups have different forms, levels and styles of oppression, but there is still a joint cause for dismantling oppression as a whole.

    • monobot@lemmy.ml
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      9 months ago

      I came to say that. Not everyone has to change completely, reducing meat intake a little, eating meat with less emissions and even different beef farms haslve large range of emissions. There are different ways of raising beef.

      So for sustainability there are multiple solutions.

      For promoting veganism and reduce animal suffering only one, which I do support, but don’t put them together. It will only pusg people away from any improvement.

    • psud@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      Note that there are developments in reducing the methane production of cattle. Supplementing their food with seaweed lets the bacteria in their gut fully digest the grass, breaking the methane to CO2

      As it is if you removed the cattle and re-wilded the land they were on, that land would produce as much methane and CO2 as the cows did, as the same bacteria would break down fallen grass, or work in deer guts and no one will feed the wild land and deer seaweed

    • Blackrook7@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      I feel like it’s so unfair that there’s so many people in the world we need to stop eating our favorite foods. How about reduce the human population instead? Such that we could all sustain an enjoyable existence where we don’t have to worry about what we eat…