Eat less meat, dairy to
slow climate change, study says
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[December 03, 2014]
By Chris Arsenault
ROME (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Meat
and dairy consumption are rising rapidly across the developing world,
and consumers are unaware that their appetite for animal products
contributes as much to climate change as exhaust emissions from the
transport sector, a new survey shows.
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Climate-changing emissions from livestock are estimated to account
for 14.5 percent of the global total, according to Chatham House, a
UK-based thinktank.
A survey of 12,000 people in 12 countries released by Chatham House
late on Tuesday showed that more than twice as many respondents saw
transport exhaust emissions as a major contributor to climate change
than saw emissions from meat and dairy output as important - 64
percent vs 29 percent.
Livestock consumption is set to rise significantly over the next 40
years, particularly in large emerging markets including China,
India, Brazil and South Africa, which were included in the survey.
"By 2050, we are looking at a 60-70 percent increase in meat
consumption," Antony Froggatt, a senior research fellow at Chatham
House, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
Part of this increase is happening because consumers do not know the
climate-changing impacts of meat and dairy consumption, researchers
said.
More than 40 percent of Russians, and 25 percent of South Africans,
thought meat and dairy production caused "little or no" climate
change.
Once consumers were aware of the implications for global warming of
eating more meat, about 20 percent became more likely to express
willingness to change their diet, according to the survey.
Respondents in Brazil, India and China, where meat consumption is
rising, showed a greater willingness to modify their consumption
than the average of the countries assessed, once they were shown the
climatic impact of their diet.
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Climate change impacts, however, are generally secondary to more
immediate considerations of taste, price, health and food safety in
shaping food choices, the research said.
Across the 12 countries, women were more likely than men to say the
impact of climate change was an important determinant of how much
meat they eat, by 71 to 64 percent.
"It is unlikely dangerous climate change can be avoided unless
(meat) consumption falls," Rob Bailey, lead author of the study,
said in a statement. "Consumers need to change their behavior and
this survey shows a substantial lack of awareness of this."
(Reporting By Chris Arsenault; Editing by Tim Pearce)
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