|
By ELISABETH ROSENTHAL , NY Times.com
Published: December 3, 2008
STERKSEL, the Netherlands — The cows and pigs dotting these flat green plains in the southern Netherlands create a bucolic landscape. But looked at through the lens of greenhouse gas accounting, they are living smokestacks, spewing methane emissions into the air.
That is why a group of farmers-turned-environmentalists here at a
smelly but impeccably clean research farm have a new take on making a
silk purse from a sow’s ear: They cook manure from their 3,000 pigs to
capture the methane trapped within it, and then use the gas to make
electricity for the local power grid.
Rising in the fields of the environmentally conscious Netherlands, the
Sterksel project is a rare example of fledgling efforts to mitigate the
heavy emissions from livestock. But much more needs to be done,
scientists say, as more and more people are eating more meat around the
world.
What to do about farm emissions is one of the main issues being
discussed this week and next, as the environment ministers from 187
nations gather in Poznan, Poland, for talks on a new treaty to combat
global warming. In releasing its latest figure on emissions last month,
United Nations climate officials cited agriculture and transportation
as the two sectors that remained most “problematic.”
“It’s an area that’s been largely overlooked,” said Dr. Rajendra
Pachauri, head of the Nobel Prize-winning United Nations
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. He says people should eat
less meat to control their carbon footprints. “We haven’t come to grips
with agricultural emissions.”
The trillions of farm animals around the world generate 18 percent of
the emissions that are raising global temperatures, according to United
Nations estimates, more even than from cars, buses and airplanes.
But unlike other industries, like cement making and power, which are
facing enormous political and regulatory pressure to get greener,
large-scale farming is just beginning to come under scrutiny as policy
makers, farmers and scientists cast about for solutions.
High-tech fixes include those like the project here, called “methane
capture,” as well as inventing feed that will make cows belch less
methane, which traps heat with 25 times the efficiency of carbon
dioxide. California is already working on a program to encourage
systems in pig and dairy farms like the one in Sterksel.
Other proposals include everything from persuading consumers to eat
less meat to slapping a “sin tax” on pork and beef. Next year, Sweden
will start labeling food products so that shoppers can look at how much
emission can be attributed to serving steak compared with, say, chicken
or turkey.
“Of course for the environment it’s better to eat beans than beef, but
if you want to eat beef for New Year’s, you’ll know which beef is best
to buy,” said Claes Johansson, chief of sustainability at the Swedish
agricultural group Lantmannen.
But such fledgling proposals are part of a daunting game of catch-up.
In large developing countries like China, India and Brazil, consumption
of red meat has risen 33 percent in the last decade. It is expected to
double globally between 2000 and 2050. While the global economic
downturn may slow the globe’s appetite for meat momentarily, it is not
likely to reverse a profound trend.
Of the more than 2,000 projects supported by the United Nations’
“green” financing system intended to curb emissions, only 98 are in
agriculture. There is no standardized green labeling system for meat,
as there is for electric appliances and even fish.
Indeed, scientists are still trying to define the practical, low-carbon
version of a slab of bacon or a hamburger. Every step of producing meat
creates emissions.
Flatus and manure from animals contain not only methane, but also
nitrous oxide, an even more potent warming agent. And meat requires
energy for refrigeration as it moves from farm to market to home.
>> Next Page
|