Submitted by seeyoubythesea t3_1065gbh in Maine
dancingkittensupreme t1_j3ezufx wrote
Honestly it's true that what we eat has a huge impact. And going vegan as much as possible is definitely an easy action to take with a big positive impact. Even just one person can save lots of emissions and water usage
Methane can be remediate out of the atmosphere way quicker and is significantly way 'warmer' than CO2.
Reducing methane emissions should be one of the first things we attack. The biggest way that we contribute to that is what we eat 3 times a day.
Eat local, EAT LESS ANIMAL PRODUCTS, eat more veggies. Yes your individual actions can have a meaningful impact. No it's not enough to fix the world but it can give you a clear conscience and actually make a realistic impact.
Also reduce and reuse comes before recycling.
You can still give yourself a clearer conscience, and also prepare for the dramatic changes or let it destroy you.
It sucks but it's the reality we live in
madatsquirrels t1_j3gqx2q wrote
And compost your food and garden waste!
ArchersMakeGoodKings t1_j3h3ikf wrote
Even just removing beef, if you're not ready to give up other meat, would go a long way.
dancingkittensupreme t1_j3h3vip wrote
You are correct. However it's easy to just stop at beef when milk is often worse because the animals are alive longer to keep milking them. They too are still cows and produce a lot of methane. And considering supply chain complexity it's still better to stop eating all animals. Even fish and chicken are still really awful for the environment to catch or raise. Vegetable farming (even the worst kind) is still less impact full on the planet than animal agriculture. And most of the plants we currently grow on land in the world is fed to animals too
ArchersMakeGoodKings t1_j3h5z1b wrote
I don't think dairy is statistically worse, but that's not my point. Everyone has to start somewhere. Not eating beef is a great place to begin. That's all I'm saying.
dancingkittensupreme t1_j3h6a8m wrote
Dairy cows live longer than beef cows yes?
What would make a dairy cow somehow produce less methane per day than a beef cow...?
It makes perfect sense and it is true. Dairy cows live longer and therefore each Dairy cow produces more methane in its life than a beef cow.
They both shouldn't be consumed for obvious ethical reasons, but it doesn't have to be worse for my point to stand that cheese is just as bad for the environment as beef
ArchersMakeGoodKings t1_j3hac4j wrote
You have to kill a cow to eat it. And then raise a new cow to eat more. It's about energy and GHG emission per gram consumed.
Again, I was just pointing out one place to start. There are hundreds of things each individual could do differently. Picking one of the biggest is a good beginning point.
dancingkittensupreme t1_j3hbinx wrote
ArchersMakeGoodKings t1_j3hdf7c wrote
It literally says "Lamb and beef cause the most greenhouse gas emissions by far."
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