Title: Global Warming
1Global Warming Food Consumption Patterns
- Presented by
- Shea Riley
- Laura Cowie
- John Shields
- Veronica Castro
- Wasif Islam
2Agenda
- Global Warming
- Meat Production (affects)
- Fishing
- Deforestation
- Biofuels
- IPCC
- Food Consumption Patterns (Developed Developing
Countries) - Guest speaker and Prof.
3Environmental Impact of food production and
consumption
- The environmental impact of farming
- Need to increase world food production, to keep
pace with the growing global population. - Many regions in the world already suffer from
severe symptoms of overexploitation, degradation,
and reduced productivity caused by unbalanced
management of natural agro-ecosystems. 1 - In the 50 years since 1950, global agricultural
production has increased by 60 per cent.
4Food Production
5- In 1996 3.1 billion people lived in rural
areas, 2.5 billion dependent on agriculture
labor, in poor countries, contribution to total
GDP represents 40-60 percent, total value of
output from worlds agro-ecosystems has been
estimated as US1.3 trillion per year (2) - Currently, cropland and managed pasture cover 28
per cent of the global land surface, whereas
permanent crops occupy around 131 million
hectares. - Thirty-eight per cent of global agriculture is in
tropical regions and 23 per cent in subtropical
regions. The irrigated areas cover at present 270
million hectares globally, but they continue to
expand annually by 3.3 million hectares. 3
6Forests represent natural ecosystems and perform
numerous functions such as carbon storage,
maintenance of soil fertility, and highly
efficient conversion of solar energy. The large
amounts of fossil energy currently used in modern
agriculture have transformed cultivated lands
from CO2-net-absorbers to CO2-emitters. 4
Problems Soil erosion, tree cutting, habitat
destruction, and fertility loss are problems more
frequently observed in poor rural areas, while
deterioration of soil and water, eutrophication,
salinization, and excess of nutrients are usually
typical of high-input farming, as is the case in
Europe and Latin America. Result Global
competition for freshwater
7Meat Production
- The Vegetarian Union of North America (VUNA), a
network of many independent vegetarian groups,
challenges global warming activists and
environmentalists to acknowledge that eating meat
is one of the greatest causes of global warming.
By eating lower on the food chain - ideally,
an-all-plant-based diet -- humankind can take an
essential and enormous step in reducing global
warming. - "Al Gore and climate activists have consistently
failed to recognize one of the most inconvenient
truths of our time that animal agriculture and
animal product consumption on a global scale is
perhaps the greatest (anthropogenic) cause of
global warming today," said Saurabh Dalal,
president of VUNA. "Given a personal choice
between helping to save the planet and consuming
animal products, too many people who should know
better continue to gorge on their chicken wings
and hamburgers." - A 2006 United Nations Food and Agriculture
Organization (FAO) report entitled Livestock's
Long Shadow (http//www.fao.org/newsroom/en/news/2
006/1000448) concludes that global animal
agriculture contributes more greenhouse gas
emissions (in CO2 equivalents), an astonishing 18
percent of the total, than all forms of
transportation,. - The production of meat and other animal products
for food contributes significantly to the primary
global warming gases carbon dioxide, methane, and
nitrous oxide, accounting for 9, 37, and 65 of
world totals, respectively. Furthermore, the
global warming potential and effect of these
gases is more striking since methane and nitrous
oxide are 23 and 296 times more harmful than
carbon dioxide. A University of Chicago study
found that the average American diet, including
all food processing steps, annually produces 1.5
tons of CO2-equivalent more than a meat-free diet
8The Environmental Impact of Livestock Production
- The total effect on the environment due to animal
farming can be divided into direct impacts such
as gas emissions, pollution, and soil
degradation, and indirect impacts such as the
production of grain and animal feed required for
cattle nutrition. - It has been estimated that, in the year 2000, the
global livestock population was 1,331 million
cattle, 1,060 million sheep, 905 million pigs,
and 235 million geese (this being the highest
absolute increase since 1961). - The major global issue raised by this number of
animals is undoubtedly their need for food and
space.
9Global Demand for Meat
The so-called Livestock Revolution occurring in
most developing countries has already caused
serious environmental problems of forest loss and
soil degradation.
10Affect on Land
- Overgrazing, may be the cause of soil erosion,
decreased fertility and organic content, water
infiltration and soil compaction. - These effects are already observable in large
regions of Africa where the time required for
land recovery is not respected anymore, and
animals are kept in high numbers on the same spot
for long periods.5
11Gases
- The greatest pressures on the environment from
intensive farming are methane and ammonia (NH3)
emissions, water and soil pollution due to slurry
and manure accumulation, eutrophication and
pathogenic contamination. - It has been estimated that the annual global
emissions of atmospheric ammonia by domestic
animals account for 23 million tonnes of NH3-N. - NH3 is a very important atmospheric pollutant
with a variety of effects including a
contribution to soil acidification which can lead
to eutrophication when animal slurry contaminates
water.
12Waste
- When animal excreta come into contact with water,
additional pollution can be caused, because it
often contains amounts of toxic residues,
hormones, heavy metals or zoonotic
micro-organisms. - Another pollutant derived from livestock
production is the solid manure which forms a
large amount of organic waste to be disposed of.
13Environmental Impact at the Consumer Level
- The influence of consumers over total energy
consumption and emmission account for 32 per cent
of the total energy demand of the food sector.
6 - A consumer could achieve a greater reduction in
his/her environmental impact by choosing
different food products rather than, for example,
going shopping by bicycle instead of by car. - It has been argued elsewhere that behavioural
changes have the potential for greater reductions
in energy consumption than technological
improvements.
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15Transportation
- Transportation is an important factor, both
during the retail and distribution phases and in
the process of household consumption. - The energy spent in car use for eating out has
been estimated at 20 MJ per outside meal.7 - Transportation processes have the largest impact
in terms of energy consumption, global warming,
acidification and eutrophication.