| > environmental impact is higher for producing meat that that of driving cars (globally) That's a pretty tall claim. Have you got a citation? I'd also argue that there are ways to grow meat much more environmentally friendly and not all that more expensive than traditional feed lots. > People aren't sheep. They just don't care. Sheep care, at least for their babies and each other. You're a fool if you believe this. Sheep don't plan their environment in any kind of meaningful way, they just wander around eating. If you cut the field in half and move the sheep from side to side and actually manage their grazing you can get more production per acre than if you just leave the sheep to themselves. Without the farmer intervening and selling sheep off, they'd quickly outgrow the feeding capacity of their naive grazing strategy, continue having babies, and start causing deaths from malnutrition. Please learn about natural systems a little bit before spouting things that sound insightful but which are actually devoid of any reality. |
FAO of the United Nations - report 2006 http://www.fao.org/docrep/010/a0701e/a0701e00.HTM
There are newer reports but I just want to point out how long the information is out.
This is the direct citation:
> The livestock sector is a major player, responsible for 18 percent of greenhouse gas emissions measured in CO2 equivalent. This is higher share than transport.
What's also a little bit comforting is that the impact is reducing (production is getting more and more efficient). Although as Chinese became rich and started eating meat insanely fast doubling the consumption of the USA, same might happen to peoples of India and Africa.
Increase of demand might neutralize the efficiency increase.
> You're a fool if you believe this. ...
Well, this is not really sheep I had in mind. I was thinking more of the free roaming - no owner - kind of animals.
> Please learn about natural systems a little bit before spouting things that sound insightful but which are actually devoid of any reality.
I completely do not get how my half-assed comment about sheep escalated to your comments about my education (or lack of).