Save the Planet:
Eat More Beef*
By LISA
ABEND Monday, Jan. 25, 2010 Time
Magazine
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1953692,00.html
Cattle on this Hardwick,
Mass., farm grow not on feedlots but in pastures, where their grazing
helps keep carbon dioxide in the ground.
On a farm in
coastal Maine, a barn is going up. Right now it's little more than a
concrete slab and some wooden beams, but when it's finished, the barn
will provide winter shelter for up to six cows and a few head of
sheep. None of this would be remarkable if it weren't for the fact
that the people building the barn are two of the most highly regarded
organic-vegetable farmers in the country: Eliot Coleman wrote the
bible of organic farming, The New Organic Grower, and Barbara Damrosch
is the Washington Post's gardening columnist. At a time when a growing
number of environmental activists are calling for an end to eating
meat, this veggie-centric power couple is beginning to raise it.
"Why?" asks Coleman, tromping through the mud on his way
toward a greenhouse bursting with December turnips. "Because I
care about the fate of the planet."
Ever since the
U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization released a 2006 report that
attributed 18% of the world's man-made greenhouse-gas emissions to
livestock - more, the report noted, than what's produced by
transportation - livestock has taken an increasingly hard rap. At
first, it was just vegetarian groups that used the U.N.'s findings as
evidence for the superiority of an all-plant diet. But since then, a
broader range of environmentalists has taken up the cause. At a recent
European Parliament hearing titled "Global Warming and Food
Policy: Less Meat=Less Heat," Rajendra Pachauri, chairman of the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, argued that reducing meat
consumption is a "simple, effective and short-term delivery
measure in which everybody could contribute" to emissions
reductions.
And of all the
animals that humans eat, none are held more responsible for climate
change than the ones that moo. Cows not only consume more
energy-intensive feed than other livestock; they also produce more
methane - a powerful greenhouse gas - than other animals do.
"If your primary concern is to curb emissions, you shouldn't be
eating beef," says Nathan Pelletier, an ecological economist at
Dalhousie University in Halifax, N.S., noting that cows produce 13 to
30 lb. of carbon dioxide per pound of meat.
So how can Coleman
and Damrosch believe that adding livestock to their farm will help the
planet? Cattleman Ridge Shinn has the answer. On a wintry Saturday at
his farm in Hardwick, Mass., he is out in his pastures encouraging a
herd of plump Devon cows to move to a grassy new paddock. Over the
course of a year, his 100 cattle will rotate across 175 acres four or
five times. "Conventional cattle raising is like mining," he
says. "It's unsustainable, because you're just taking without
putting anything back. But when you rotate cattle on grass, you change
the equation. You put back more than you take."
(See the top 10
scientific discoveries of 2009.)t works like this: grass is a perennial. Rotate cattle
and other ruminants across pastures full of it, and the animals'
grazing will cut the blades - which spurs new growth - while their
trampling helps work manure and other decaying organic matter into the
soil, turning it into rich humus. The plant's roots also help maintain
soil health by retaining water and microbes. And healthy soil keeps
carbon dioxide underground and out of the atmosphere.
Compare that with
the estimated 99% of U.S. beef cattle that live out their last months
on feedlots, where they are stuffed with corn and soybeans. In the
past few decades, the growth of these concentrated animal-feeding
operations has resulted in millions of acres of grassland being
abandoned or converted - along with vast swaths of forest - into
profitable cropland for livestock feed. "Much of the carbon
footprint of beef comes from growing grain to feed the animals, which
requires fossil-fuel-based fertilizers, pesticides, transportation,"
says Michael Pollan, author of The Omnivore's Dilemma. "Grass-fed
beef has a much lighter carbon footprint." Indeed, although
grass-fed cattle may produce more methane than conventional ones
(high-fiber plants are harder to digest than cereals, as anyone who
has felt the gastric effects of eating broccoli or cabbage can
attest), their net emissions are lower because they help the soil
sequester carbon.
From Vermont, where
veal and dairy farmer Abe Collins is developing software designed to
help farmers foster carbon-rich topsoil quickly, to Denmark, where
Thomas Harttung's Aarstiderne farm grazes 150 head of cattle, a
vanguard of small farmers are trying to get the word out about how
much more eco-friendly they are than factory farming. "If you
suspend a cow in the air with buckets of grain, then it's a bad guy,"
Harttung explains. "But if you put it where it belongs - on
grass - that cow becomes not just carbon-neutral but
carbon-negative." Collins goes even further. "With proper
management, pastoralists, ranchers and farmers could achieve a 2%
increase in soil-carbon levels on existing agricultural, grazing and
desert lands over the next two decades," he estimates. Some
researchers hypothesize that just a 1% increase (over, admittedly,
vast acreages) could be enough to capture the total equivalent of the
world's greenhouse-gas emissions.
This math works out
in part because farmers like Shinn don't use fertilizers or pesticides
to maintain their pastures and need no energy to produce what their
animals eat other than what they get free from the sun. Furthermore,
pasturing frequently uses land that would otherwise be unproductive.
"I'd like to see someone try to raise soybeans here," he
says, gesturing toward the rocky, sloping fields around
him.
By many standards,
pastured beef is healthier. That's certainly the case for the animals
involved; grass feeding obviates the antibiotics that feedlots are
forced to administer in order to prevent the acidosis that occurs when
cows are fed grain. But it also appears to be true for people who eat
cows. Compared with conventional beef, grass-fed is lower in saturated
fat and higher in omega-3s, the heart-healthy fatty acids found in
salmon.
But not everyone is
sold on its superiority. In addition to citing grass-fed meat's higher
price tag - Shinn's ground beef ends up retailing for about $7 a
pound, more than twice the price of conventional beef - feedlot
producers say that only through their economies of scale can the
industry produce enough meat to satisfy demand, especially for a
growing population. These critics note that because grass is less
caloric than grain, it takes two to three years to get a pastured cow
to slaughter weight, whereas a feedlot animal requires only 14 months.
"Not only does it take fewer animals on a feedlot to produce the
same amount of meat," says Tamara Thies, chief environmental
counsel for the National Cattlemen's Beef Association (which contests
the U.N.'s 18% figure), "but because they grow so quickly, they
have less chance to produce greenhouse gases."
To Allan Savory, the
economies-of-scale mentality ignores the role that grass-fed
herbivores can play in fighting climate change. A former wildlife
conservationist in Zimbabwe, Savory once blamed overgrazing for
desertification. "I was prepared to shoot every bloody rancher in
the country," he recalls. But through rotational grazing of large
herds of ruminants, he found he could reverse land degradation,
turning dead soil into thriving grassland.
Like him, Coleman
now scoffs at the environmentalist vogue for vilifying meat eating.
"The idea that giving up meat is the solution for the world's
ills is ridiculous," he says at his Maine farm. "A
vegetarian eating tofu made in a factory from soybeans grown in Brazil
is responsible for a lot more CO[subscript 2] than I am." A
lifetime raising vegetables year-round has taught him to value the
elegance of natural systems. Once he and Damrosch have brought in
their livestock, they'll "be able to use the manure to feed the
plants, and the plant waste to feed the animals," he says.
"And even though we can't eat the grass, we'll be turning it into
something we can."
*Grass feeding
required Cattle on this Hardwick, Mass., farm grow not on feedlots but
in pastures, where their grazing helps keep carbon dioxide in the
ground