Beef News
Study links beef production to global warming
By Tom Johnston on 7/20/2007 for Meatingplace.com
Japanese scientists have concluded that beef production typically contributes more to global warming than cars do.
A study commissioned by the National Institute of Livestock and Grassland Science in Tsukuba, Japan, and published in the Animal Science Journal, found that producing 2.2 pounds of beef generates more carbon dioxide than an average car does every 160 miles.
The main source of greenhouse gas emissions is the methane released from an animal's digestive system.
The study showed that producing 2.2 pounds of beef also consumed nearly 170 megajoules of energy, most of it spent on producing and transporting cattle feed. It's the same amount of energy that a 100-watt light bulb would consume if it were left on for 20 days, the U.K.'s New Scientist magazine reported.
NILGS looked at several aspects of beef production, including calf production, animal management and production and transport of feed. The study didn't account for emissions from farm equipment and transportation vehicles.
NILGS is calling on the beef industry to take steps to reduce carbon dioxide emissions, including improving waste management and reducing by one month the interval between calving.
Yep we'll get right at reducing the calving interval by 1 month.
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