Archives for category: Climate Change

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The Great Barrier Reef Marine Park in Australia contains coral reefs and marine habitats along a 2,300 kilometre stretch of the Queensland coast. Its coral reef ecosystem is the world’s largest, and the park itself is larger than the United Kingdom, Switzerland and Holland combined. [1]

However, the park is much more than coral reefs, which comprise around seven per cent of the Marine Park and the World Heritage Area. The Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority has said, “The Great Barrier Reef is home to a stunning array of animals, from microscopic plankton to whales weighing more than 100 tonnes. . . . The different types of animals . . .  help make [the Reef] one of the richest and most complex natural systems on earth. While there is a lot known about some of the animals that make the Reef home, vast amounts of information and species are yet to be discovered.” [2]

Some idea of the park’s scale can be gauged by this image, bearing in mind (in relation to the inset image) that Australia is almost as wide as the contiguous United States:

SDC2004120620Sept200420General20Reference

Under Threat

Despite its iconic status, the reef is under extreme threat.

Guardian journalist Graham Readfearn has referred to the following factors [3]:

  • Dredging for coal and gas ports
  • Related to the first point, dumping of dredged material.
  • Also related to the first point, increased shipping frequency.
  • Run off from agricultural developments
  • Increased ocean acidity
  • Rises in sea temperatures from fossil fuel burning

A key recent development in respect of dredging and dumping was the decision of the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority (GBRMPA), in January, 2014, to approve the dumping of sediment from dredging in relation to the massive Abbot Point port project.

Readfearn has stated:

“Now the government’s Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority (GBRMPA) has decided to allow up to three million cubic metres of ocean bottom to be dredged and then dumped within the borders of the marine park and also the Great Barrier Reef World Heritage area.”

“The decision is another necessary block removed in order to liberate millions of tonnes of coal from Queensland’s Galilee Basin, where miners hope to then rail it to shore and load it onto containers at an expanded coal terminal at Abbot Point. The dredging is to make way for the ships as they weave their way through the Great Barrier Reef – a wondrous icon of the blue planet that doubles as the world’s most iconic coal shipping lane.”

Climate Change: IPCC Fifth Assessment Report

In its March 2014 Fifth Assessment report, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) addressed the issues of risk, adaptation and vulnerability. They reported that coral reef systems were already experiencing “irreversible regime shifts”, and were at very high risk with additional warming of 2 degrees Celsius. [4]

There are three key concerns arising from climate change. Firstly, rising ocean temperatures cause bleaching of corals. Secondly, increased acidity arising from CO2 being absorbed by sea water weakens, and inhibits formation of, calcium carbonate (limestone) skeletons of hard corals and other organisms that contribute to reef building. Finally, the increased intensity of tropical cyclones adversely affects coral reefs. [5]

Dredging, dumping and climate change are significant aspects of what appears to be unrelenting pressure on the Great Barrier Reef. However, what if they not the key problems?

Could cattle grazing be the biggest problem?

In a submission to the Victorian State Government in July, 2008, I highlighted some of the impacts of Australian beef production on the reef.  I quoted the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority, which has stated (with my underlines): [6]

  • “80 percent of the land adjacent to the Great Barrier Reef World Heritage Area supports agricultural production, primarily beef cattle grazing and intensive cropping agriculture.”
  • Beef cattle grazing is the largest single land use with approximately 4,500,000 cattle grazing in the Great Barrier Reef Catchment (Department of Primary Industries & Fisheries 1993). Grazing land management has resulted in extensive clearance of vegetation and with over-stocking, particularly during drought conditions has caused widespread soil erosion and the export of eroded material, with its associated nutrients, into the Great Barrier Reef World Heritage Area.” 
  • “Fertilisers and pesticides are taken up by the crop but a significant portion applied to the land ends up in coastal waters. Poor agricultural practice results in soil erosion and the discharge of sediments, nutrients and pesticides into rivers, estuaries and eventually the Great Barrier Reef World Heritage Area.”

The authority has reported that the highest stock numbers are in the Fitzroy and Burdekin catchments. They have said (with my underlines) [7]:

  • “Beef grazing on these large, dry catchments adjacent to the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park has resulted in extensive tree clearance and over-grazing, especially during drought conditions. This has resulted in widespread soil erosion (The Condition of River Catchments in Queensland 1993).”
  • The majority of the Great Barrier Reef catchment is used for rangeland beef grazing. This development has involved wide-scale clearance of woodland vegetation, particularly Brigalow, for conversion to pasture (Gilbert in press).”
  • “The principal consequence for the Great Barrier Reef from the introduction of beef grazing on catchment lands stems from increased soil erosion (Ciesiolka 1987).”
  • “Soil erosion increases arise from woodland removal; overgrazing, (especially in drought conditions, where vegetation cover falls below 60%); and streambank erosion when cattle have direct access to streams (Finlayson and Brigza 1993).”

The Authority has also stated, “Grazing of cattle for beef production is the largest single land use on the catchment with cropping, mainly of sugarcane, and urban/residential development considerably less in areal extent.” [8]

Some thoughts from the World Preservation Foundation:

The World Preservation Foundation serves “as an access-point for information to assist media and concerned parties to engage” the topic of climate change, including deforestation, disease, drought and global hunger.

In July, 2013, it produced an article arguing that the cattle industry is the key threat to the Great Barrier Reef’s coral. Here are some extracts [9]:

“ . . . the reef used to be amazing, but the report card  [from the Queensland Government’s Reef Water Quality Protection Plan Secretariat] [10] released in July 2013 has now downgraded the health of the Great Barrier Reef to “poor”. 72% of the reef’s hard coral has died since the 1960′s, leading UNESCO to question [11] government protection and consider revoking its World Heritage status.”

“We know that as the oceans grow more acidic this weakens calcium formation of shells and coral. Also, much has been said on the outbreaks of crown-of-thorns starfish – these voracious creatures eat live coral, leaving behind white, dead coral, that soon turns green as algae make it their new home. But the real reasons for the degradation of this amazing reef (including the reason for outbreaks of starfish numbers) have now been well studied, [12] and found not to be climate change, but pollution, mainly from the Burdekin and Fitzroy rivers, the largest rivers flowing onto the reef.

What’s killing the reef is (in order of importance) (my underlines):

  • Fine silt (the major coral killer), over 75% of which comes from grazing lands
  • Nitrogen pollution, mostly particulate, from sediment erosion of grazing lands
  • Phosphorous pollution, mostly particulate, from sediment erosion of grazing lands

“Nitrogen and phosphorous nutrient increases are the major cause of crown-of-thorns starfish outbreaks. Minor sources of pollution were dissolved nitrogen and phosphorous from sugarcane production, as well as herbicides and pesticides, also from farming.”

“So there we have it – what’s killing the Great Barrier Reef is cattle.”

The Foundation pointed out that although plans have been drawn up to improve pollution levels, compliance is voluntary, and only 17% of beef graziers complied with them. [13]

An interactive presentation released by The Guardian in March, 2014 neglected to mention cattle grazing. It referred to farming, including run-off of sediment and chemicals, but only in relation to sugarcane.[14]

In addition to the run-off caused by animal agriculture, the sector’s significant contribution to greenhouse gas emissions is also affecting the reef through its climate change impacts.

Some political perspectives

With the dramatic impact of the beef cattle industry on a natural icon that generates massive tourism revenues, it would seem reasonable for a local federal Member of Parliament to raise some concerns. George Christensen (Nationals) is the member for Dawson, which includes the towns of Bowen and McKay, along with the Whitsunday Islands. [15]

However, Mr Christensen is a staunch supporter of the beef cattle industry, as demonstrated by the fact that he established a “Free Meat Week” campaign [16] in an effort to counter “Meat Free Week” [17], from 24th to 30th March, 2014.

The website states: “Free Meat Week (March 24 to 30) calls on everyone to host a barbecue for their mates to celebrate our Aussie farmers and graziers. Our mates in the bush are doing it tough – after having the live cattle export market shut down overnight some of them are now battling the biggest drought in a century. Rubbing salt into their wounds is a national campaign called Meat-Free Week, which is trying to recruit people to vegetarianism. When our farmers and graziers are doing it so tough, that’s just un-Australian. Free Meat Week is a counter-campaign to promote a great Australian industry and to support our great Australian farmers and graziers. “

Christensen’s electorate includes various industries, such as: small crops; prawn and fish farms; sugar growing and refining; beef cattle; coal mining related industries; abattoirs; and tourism. [18] However, tourism may be left behind if Christensen maintains his current approach.

It’s possible that he is unaware of the industry’s impact on the reef, but his actions conjure memories of former Queensland Premier (1968-1987), Joh Bjelke-Petersen. The former Premier was linked to environmental degradation resulting from beef cattle and other agricultural industries. According to the Wilderness Society, “In the 1950s a young Joh Bjelke-Petersen came up with the idea of using an enormous chain strung between two tractors to drag down great swathes of bushland.” [19] Broadscale land clearing occurred on a massive scale in Queensland for many years, most significantly for the beef cattle industry, until the Labor Government banned such clearing with effect from the end of 2006.

However, the current Liberal National Party government led by Premier Campbell Newman has introduced new legislation to again allow significant levels of land clearing. Land that was protected under Labor’s legislation can now be cleared if deemed to be of “high agricultural value”. [20]

Bjelke-Petersen was also referred to in the Guardian’s interactive presentation mentioned earlier:

“A loose coalition of amateur conservationists had managed to scupper an initial plan to mine an area of the reef for fertiliser but appeared powerless to stop Bjelke-Petersen, who lashed them as ‘nitwits’, ‘cranks’ and ‘Commies’.  Bjelke-Petersen had himself invested in oil companies he had licensed. One of his ministers even claimed any oil spill would actually provide nutritious food for marine life, rather than kill it off. Unsurprisingly, the move to list the reef as a world heritage site was vigorously opposed by Bjelke-Petersen.”

Conclusion:

There are many factors contributing to the demise of the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park’s magnificent corals. It is possible that any of those factors, in their own right, could destroy them. All must be addressed, including our continued utilisation of animal agriculture, particularly beef production. It is our choice, and the time to act is now!

Author: Paul Mahony

Images:

Fish at Great Barrier Reef © Tanya Puntti | Dreamstime.com

Map: Australian Government, Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority, http://www.reefed.edu.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/0009/18783/SDC2004120620Sept200420General20Reference.pdf

References:

[1] Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority, “Facts about the Great Barrier Reef”, http://www.gbrmpa.gov.au/about-the-reef/facts-about-the-great-barrier-reef

[2] Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority, “Animals” http://www.gbrmpa.gov.au/about-the-reef/animals

[3] Readfearn, G, “Death by sludge, coal and climate change for Great Barrier Reef?”, The Guardian, 31 January, 2014 http://www.theguardian.com/environment/planet-oz/2014/jan/31/great-barrier-reef-australia-dredging-abbot-point-coal-export

[4] Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) “Climate Change 2014: Impacts, Adaptation, and Vulnerability, Summary for Policymakers”, http://ipcc-wg2.gov/AR5/images/uploads/IPCC_WG2AR5_SPM_Approved.pdf

[5] Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority, “Climate change impacts on coral reefs”, http://www.gbrmpa.gov.au/outlook-for-the-reef/climate-change/what-does-this-mean-for-habitats/coral-reefs

[6] Australian Government Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority, http://www.gbrmpa.gov.au/corp_site/key_issues/water_quality/agriculture (accessed 3 July 2008 but no longer available and cited in Mahony, P. “Is There Anything That I Can Do? Yes, Modify Your Diet!”, 9 July 2008, http://www.slideshare.net/paulmahony101/a-climateofopportunitysubmissionpaulmahony9july08)

[7] Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority, “Environmental Status: Water Quality” http://kurrawa.gbrmpa.gov.au/corp_site/info_services/publications/sotr/water_quality/pressures.html (accessed 3 March 2012)

[8] J. Brodie, C. Christie, M. Devlin, D. Haynes, S. Morris, M. Ramsay, J. Waterhouse and H. Yorkston, “Catchment management and the Great Barrier Reef”, pp. 203 & 205, Water Science and Technology Vol 43 No 9 pp 203–211 © IWA Publishing 2001, http://www.iwaponline.com/wst/04309/wst043090203.htm (accessed 30 March 2014)

[9] World Preservation Foundation, “Cattle – not climate change – killing the Great Barrier Reef”, 28th July, 2013, http://www.worldpreservationfoundation.org/blog/news/cattle-not-climate-change-killing-the-great-barrier-reef/#.UzvvA6Ikykw

[10] Reef Water Quality Protection Plan Secretariat, Queensland Government, 2013, “Great Barrier Reef Report Card 2011: Reef Water Quality Protection Plan”, http://www.reefplan.qld.gov.au/measuring-success/report-cards/assets/report-card-2011.pdf

[11] UNESCO World Heritage Committee, Thirty-seventh session, Phnom Penh, Cambodia, 16-27 June 2013, http://whc.unesco.org/archive/2013/whc13-37com-7B-en.pdf

[12] Australian Government and Queensland Government,  2013 Scientific Consensus Statement, “Reef Water Quality Protection Plan, Chapter 4, Sources of sediment, nutrients, pesticides and other pollutants in the Great Barrier Reef catchment”, http://www.reefplan.qld.gov.au/about/scientific-consensus-statement/sources-of-pollutants.aspx

[13] Hunt, Colin, “Great Barrier Reef report in: time to make polluters pay”, The Conversation, 16th July, 2013, https://theconversation.com/great-barrier-reef-report-in-time-to-make-polluters-pay-16073

[14] Oliver Milman, Christian Bennett and Mike Bowers, “The Great Barrier Reef: An Obituary”, The Guardian, 27th March, 2014, http://www.theguardian.com/environment/ng-interactive/2014/mar/great-barrier-reef-obituary

[15] Parliament of Australia, Senators and Members, Mr George Christensen, MP, Member for Dawson, Queensland, http://www.aph.gov.au/Senators_and_Members/Parliamentarian?MPID=230485

[16] Free Meat Week, http://www.freemeatweek.com.au/

[17] Meat Free Week, https://meatfreeweek.org/

[18] Australian Electoral Commission, Profile of the electoral division of Dawson (Qld), http://aec.gov.au/profiles/qld/dawson.htm

[19] The Wilderness Society, “Land Clearing in Queensland”,  https://www.wilderness.org.au/land-clearing-queensland

[20] Roberts, G, “Campbell Newman’s LNP bulldozing pre-election promise”, The Australian, 1 June, 2013, http://www.theaustralian.com.au/national-affairs/campbell-newmans-lnp-bulldozing-pre-election-promise/story-fn59niix-1226654740183; http://sunshinecoastbirds.blogspot.com.au/2013/06/campbell-newman-takes-axe-to-queensland.html

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One of the most common questions heard by anyone on a plant-based diet is: “Where do you get your protein?”

The question arises because of a common misconception that protein is only available in meat or other animal products, such as chickens’ eggs or cows’ milk, or that plant-based protein is somehow inferior.

The fact that some of the largest, strongest animals are herbivores or near-herbivores should alert people to the fact that there is plenty of protein available without eating animals. The range of herbivores or near-herbivores includes elephants, rhinoceroses, giraffes, cows, horses and great apes such as chimpanzees, gorillas, and orangutans.

The position is further highlighted by the fact that a 2013 paper from the Institute on the Environment at the University of Minnesota stated [1]:

“The world’s croplands could feed 4 billion more people than they do now just by shifting from producing animal feed and biofuels to producing exclusively food for human consumption”.

Animal feed crops represent 90% of that figure (representing 3.6 billion people), and biofuels only 10%.

The lead author, Emily Cassidy, has been quoted as saying:

“We essentially have uncovered an astoundingly abundant supply of food for a hungry world, hidden in plain sight in the farmlands we already cultivate. Depending on the extent to which farmers and consumers are willing to change current practices, existing croplands could feed millions or even billions more people.”

Similarly, Dr David Pimentel of Cornell University reported in 2003 that the grain fed each year to livestock in the United States could feed 840 million people on a plant-based diet. [2]

Referring to US Department of Agriculture statistics, Pimentel has also stated that the US livestock population consumes more than 7 times as much grain as is consumed directly by the entire American population.

He and Marcia Pimentel have also reported:

” . . . each American consumes about twice the recommended daily allowance for protein “.

The results cited above reflect, in part, the gross and inherent inefficiency of animals as a food source.

Is it difficult to replace animal protein with plant protein?

The Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine (PCRM) has stated [3]:

“To consume a diet that contains enough, but not too much, protein, simply replace animal products with grains, vegetables, legumes (peas, beans, and lentils), and fruits. As long as one is eating a variety of plant foods in sufficient quantity to maintain one’s weight, the body gets plenty of protein.”

Also:

“It was once thought that various plant foods had to be eaten together to get their full protein value, but current research suggests this is not the case. Many nutrition authorities, including the American Dietetic Association, believe protein needs can easily be met by consuming a variety of plant protein sources over an entire day. To get the best benefit from the protein you consume, it is important to eat enough calories to meet your energy needs.”

PCRM is a US-based non-profit organisation that promotes preventive medicine, conducts clinical research, and promotes higher standards for ethics and effectiveness in research.

The US Department of Agriculture has reported the following protein content for a variety of food products, as shown in Figure 1 [4].

Figure 1: Protein content of selected foods

Figure-1

Some health implications of consuming too much protein 

PCRM has also highlighted some of the health implications of excessive protein intake, including kidney disease and certain types of cancer. Specifically in relation to animal protein, it has referred to osteoporosis and kidney stones, stating [5]:

“Diets that are rich in animal protein cause people to excrete more calcium than normal through their kidneys and increase the risk of osteoporosis. Countries with lower-protein diets have lower rates of osteoporosis and hip fractures.”

I have also commented on some health implications of eating animals in my article If you thinks it’s healthy to eat animals, perhaps you should think again. [6] Amongst the studies referred to was a 26-year study of more than 120,000 people by Harvard University, which found that eating red meat is associated with a sharply increased risk of death from cancer and heart disease. The lead author described the results as “staggering”. [7]

Other Issues

In addition to contributing significantly to human health problems, by utilising animals as a source of protein and other nutrients, we are causing extreme cruelty to the animals themselves, creating massive environmental problems (including those relating to climate change) and contributing to the malnutrition of more than 800 million people. [8]

Protein sources in Australia

The following chart shows that 81 percent of protein produced in Australia in 2010/11 came from plants, and only 19 percent from animals.

It includes products that are exported and/or used as livestock feed.  The inclusion of the latter means there is some double-counting of protein content.  However, given animal agriculture’s relatively low output level, the double-counting does not appear to be significant.

Figure 2: Protein value of Australian food production

Protein-value-Aust-food-production

The chart is based on: (a) production figures from the Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry’s “Australian food statistics 2010-11″; [9] and (b) nutritional information for each product from the United States Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) National Nutrient Database for Standard Reference. [4]. It appeared in my September, 2012 submission in response to the Department of Agriculture Fisheries and Forestry’s National Food Plan Green Paper. [10]

Conclusion

Despite effective campaigns by powerful interest groups to convince us that animal-based protein is essential to human health, an objective review of the available evidence points strongly in the opposite direction. If we are to improve human health and create a world that is more just and sustainable, we must move away from animals as a food source.

Notes:

  1. This article is not intended to represent dietary, nutritional, health, medical or similar advice.
  2. Figure 1 was updated on 21st February, 2016.
  3. The comment “Animal feed crops represent 90% of that figure, and biofuels only 10%” added 1st April, 2016.

Author: Paul Mahony

Image: Bull elephant © William Manning | Dreamstime.com

References:

[1] CassidyE.S., West, P.C., Gerber, J.S., Foley, J.A., “Redefining agricultural yields: from tonnes to people nourished per hectare”, Environ. Res. Lett. 8 (2013) 034015 (8pp), doi:10.1088/1748-9326/8/3/034015, cited in University of Minnesota News Release, 1 Aug 2013, “Existing Cropland Could Feed 4 Billion More”, http://www1.umn.edu/news/news-releases/2013/UR_CONTENT_451697.html

[2] Pimentel, D., Cornell University “Livestock production and energy use”, Cleveland CJ, ed. Encyclopedia of energy (in press), cited in Pimentel, D. & Pimentel M. “Sustainability of meat-based and plantbased diets and the environment”, American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, Vol. 78, No. 3, 660S-663S, September 2003, http://ajcn.nutrition.org/content/78/3/660S.full

[3] Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine “The Protein Myth”, http://www.pcrm.org/health/diets/vsk/vegetarian-starter-kit-protein

[4] USDA National Nutrient Database for Standard Reference at http://ndb.nal.usda.gov/ via Nutrition Data at http://www.nutritiondata.com (First link updated 9th July, 2015.)

[5] PCRM 2013 Consolidated Fiscal Year Report, http://www.pcrm.org/media/good-medicine/2014/winter2014/pcrm-2013-consolidated-fiscal-year-report

[6] Mahony, P., “If you thinks it’s healthy to eat animals, perhaps you should think again”, 12th February, 2013, https://terrastendo.net/2013/02/12/if-you-think-its-healthy-to-eat-animals-perhaps-you-should-think-again/

[7] Bakalar, N., “Risks: More Red Meat, More Mortality”, The New York Times, 12 March, 2012, http://www.nytimes.com/2012/03/13/health/research/red-meat-linked-to-cancer-and-heart-disease.html?_r=1&scp=2&sq=red%20meat%20harvard&st=cse#

[8] Food & Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, “Global hunger down, but millions still chronically hungry”, 1st October, 2013, http://www.fao.org/news/story/en/item/198105/icode/

[9] Dept of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry, “Australian Food Statistics 2010-11”, http://www.agriculture.gov.au/ag-farm-food/food/publications/afs/australian-food-statistics (Link updated 9th July, 2015.)

[10] Mahony, P., “Submission in Response to Department of Agriculture Fisheries and Forestry National Food Plan Green Paper: The urgent need for a general transition to a plant-based diet” Sep, 2012, pp. 37-38 http://www.daff.gov.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/0011/2211014/Mahony-Paul.pdf

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Perhaps the biggest news in south-eastern Australia in the four days commencing 14th January, 2014 was the extreme heat. In Melbourne, for the first time ever recorded, we experienced four consecutive days above 41 degrees Celsius (105.8 Fahrenheit), ranging from 41.7C to 43.9C (107F to 111F). [1]

News bulletins were full of: fires raging across the states of South Australia and Victoria; increased incidents of cardiac failure and other heat-induced trauma; public transport failures; power blackouts; and players suffering at the Australian Open tennis championships, including Canadian Frank Dancevic  who famously fainted after hallucinating and seeing the cartoon character Snoopy. [2]

Those few days brought back memories of January and February, 2009 and the “Black Saturday” bushfires that killed 173 people. [3] In the final week of January that year, Melbourne experienced three consecutive days above 43C, the highest being 45.1C.  On 7th February (Black Saturday), we experienced a record maximum of 46.4C (115.5F). [4] [Note 1]

In his book “Requiem for a Species”, Clive Hamilton described some effects on wildlife: “Brush-tailed possums fell dead from the trees. Flying foxes, unable to cool their bodies, dropped from the sky”. [5]

In the week commencing Australia Day, 26 January, 2009, there were 374 more deaths than normal in the state of Victoria. In its report on the health impacts of the excessive heat, the Department of Human Services (DHS) stated [4]:

“There was a clear increase in all cause mortality that followed the onset of the heatwave with a rapid decline as temperatures fell. Over the week of 26 January to 1 February 2009, total deaths were 980 and the expected deaths for the week was 606. This represents 374 excess deaths . . .  representing a 62% increase in deaths for this week.” [Note 2]

Similarly, from 13 to 23 January, 2014 (a period that included another heatwave), The Victorian Institute of Forensic Medicine (which does not deal with all deaths in the state) recorded 139 deaths above the normal level. [6]

Why the sense of surprise at extreme temperatures?

Climate scientists have been warning of the dangers for decades. Some world leaders have also spoken frankly. The problem is that  those world leaders and others have failed to address the problem in a meaningful way.

Here’s a small sample of statements from some of the prominent speakers on this issue.

1965: US President Lyndon Johnson [7]:

Presidential-seal-cropped-2

This generation has altered the composition of the atmosphere on a global scale through a steady increase in carbon dioxide from the burning of fossil fuels.

1988: NASA Scientist Dr James Hansen testifying before the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee, paraphrased in the New York Times [8]:

James-Hansen

. . . it was 99 percent certain that the warming trend was not a natural variation but was caused by a buildup of carbon dioxide and other artificial gases in the atmosphere.

1989: British Prime Minister, Margaret Thatcher speaking to the United Nations General Assembly for the first time in four years (choosing to focus solely on the environment) [9]:

Margaret-Thatcher

Of all the challenges faced by the world community in those four years, one has grown clearer than any other in both urgency and importance. I refer to the threat to our global environment. I shall take the opportunity of addressing the general assembly to speak on that subject alone.

We are seeing a vast increase in the amount of carbon dioxide reaching the atmosphere. The annual increase is three billion tonnes, and half the carbon emitted since the Industrial Revolution still remains in the atmosphere. At the same time as this is happening, we are seeing the destruction on a vast scale of tropical forests which are uniquely able to remove carbon dioxide from the air.

As mentioned in previous posts, the range of extreme temperatures has increased in recent times. Records between 2003 and 2008 reflected a 10-fold increase in extreme summer temperatures (hot and cold) globally relative to the base period of 1951-1980. Extreme temperatures are considered to be more than three standard deviations from the historical mean. The following chart from NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies demonstrates the changing patterns for the period 2000-2010, with a general move toward higher temperatures.

Figure 1: Shifting distribution trends of summer temperature anomalies

sandy-2-temp-anomaly-standard-deviation-resized

The following chart from the Australian National Academy of Sciences and the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) shows a growing trend of record hot days, and a fall in the number of record cold days.

Figure 2: Changes in number of Australian record hot and cold day maxima

Record-hot-days

It is interesting to consider how vulnerable our health is to the effects of excessive heat.

Forensic pathologist David Ranson has said: “It’s unclear what toll the current heatwave will take on human life but we know that when the temperature exceeds 32.2C [90F] for three or more consecutive days (considered a heatwave), the rate of heat-related illness and unexpected death rises.” [10] [Note 3]

Who is most vulnerable?

Dr Ranson has stated, “The elderly and the very young, in particular, are unable to react adequately to high ambient temperatures. Individuals who are very obese, very malnourished or have poor physical fitness are also more physically vulnerable to extreme heat. A range of medications and illicit drugs may also reduce the body’s capacity to react to heat or increase the stress effects of heat, placing a person at increased risk of heat-related illness and death.”

The European heatwave of 2003 resulted in tens of thousands more deaths than normal. Estimates vary, but a 2006 report in the International Journal of Epidemiology indicated a figure of between 22,000 and 45,000, with average temperatures 3.5C above normal. [11]

Dr Liam Phelan of Newcastle University has indicated a figure of 35,000. [12]

The 2009 DHS report referred to earlier indicated that “excess all-cause mortality across twelve countries has recently been revised up from 50,000 to 70, 000”, citing sources from peer-reviewed journal Eurosurveillance [13] and the World Health Organisation [14].

In 2010, a heatwave in Moscow was responsible for 11,000 deaths. [15]

Heat stress is the main cause of weather-related deaths in the USA. [16]

What can we do about climate change?

Become engaged, acknowledge the crisis, and fight for change:

Politicians in a democracy seldom lead on difficult issues; they generally react to the demands of the electorate if their hold on power is at stake. We face a potentially overwhelming threat to our way of life and the welfare of future generations and other species. We must demand emergency action from politicians who establish laws and national strategies.

In commenting on strategic challenges facing those campaigning for meaningful action, author and commentator David Spratt quoted former coal, oil and gas industry executive, Ian Dunlop [17]:

“Honesty about this challenge is essential, otherwise we will never develop realistic solutions. We face nothing less than a global emergency, which must be addressed with a global emergency response, akin to national mobilisations pre-WWII or the Marshall Plan . . . This is not extremist nonsense, but a call echoed by an increasing numbers of world leaders as the science becomes better understood . . . In the face of catastrophic risk, emission reduction targets should be based on the latest, considered, science, not on a political view of the art-of-the-possible.”

Convincing others of the need to act can play a key role. One person convinces another, two convince two, four convince four, and so on. In that way, the message can spread exponentially until politicians take notice. “People power” has overturned governments and brought about fundamental social change, and it can do so again.

Emission-reduction measures by individuals, although helpful, will not be enough. Social commentator and author, Clive Hamilton (referred to earlier) has quoted US analyst Michael Maniates: “A privatization and individualization of responsibility for environmental problems shifts blame from state elites and powerful producer groups to more amorphous culprits like ‘human nature’ or ‘all of us'” [18]

David Spratt has suggested that campaigning efforts need to be far more strategic, focussed and united than they have been to date. [17]

Ignore denialists:

Skepticism is an essential element of science. However, generally, the more active climate change denialists do not appear to be true skeptics; they seem to oppose meaningful action for ideological reasons and/or to pursue vested interests. My article Relax, have a cigarette and forget about climate change outlines sophisticated PR techniques used by the fossil fuel sector, and before them the tobacco industry, to falsely create doubt amongst the general population about valid, crucial scientific findings. [19]

Grasp change:

When we advanced from the horse and carriage to the automobile, blacksmiths lost their jobs. However, new jobs were created. In 2008, the ACTU (Australian Council of Trade Unions) and the Australian Conservation Foundation estimated that Australia could create around 850,000 new jobs  by 2030 by investing in green technologies, including renewable energy. [20] (Many opportunities will have passed by since then, but others will be available now and in the future.)

Other actions:

Dr James Hansen has also advocated the use of the courts by those with the power to do so, to force governments to act. [21] Bill McKibben of 350.org has a strategy of convincing superannuation funds, pension funds and the like, to cease investing in fossil fuel interests. As I have written elsewhere, a general move away from animal agriculture is an essential mitigation measure.

Conclusion

We are rapidly losing any window of opportunity to overcome climate change. No one can realistically say they have not been warned of the dangers. If we want to avoid increasing death rates from excessive heat, along with other impacts, then we must actively engage in addressing the crisis.

Blog Author: Paul Mahony (Also on Twitter, Scribd and Slideshare)

Notes on temperature records and reports of Victorian deaths in January, 2009:

  1. Temperature records also available from from http://www.bom.gov.au/climate/data/index.shtml, using weather station 086071, Melbourne Regional Office
  2. In its report, “The Critical Decade: Extreme Weather”, the former Climate Commission appears to have mis-reported the referenced paper, by indicating that all 980 deaths were heat-related. It stated, “There were 980 heat related deaths during this period, 374 more than would have occurred on average for that time of year”. [5] Nevertheless, in terms of absolute numbers, the error appears immaterial; there were 374 more deaths than normal for the week from 26 January to 1 February, 2009, which appear to be heat-related. (Source: Steffen, W., Hughes, L., Karoly, D. (Climate Commission), Apr, 2013, “The Critical Decade: Extreme Weather”, p.14, http://pandora.nla.gov.au/pan/136923/20130919-1415/climatecommission.gov.au/wp-content/uploads/ExtremeWeatherReport_web.pdf)
  3. Like the Climate Commission researchers referred to above, forensic pathologist David Ranson appears to have inadvertently mis-reported relevant information. He has stated, ” . . . in Victoria in 2009, there were 374 “extra” deaths beyond what would have been expected over the summer.” In fact, the number of 374 only relates to the week commencing 26 January that year. It does not include, for example, any extra deaths on 7th February, when the temperature reached a new record of 46.4C.

References:

[1] Cauchi, S. & Zielinski, C., The Age, 17 Jan, 2014, “Temperature to plummet as cool change makes its way across Victoria”, http://www.theage.com.au/victoria/temperature-to-plummet-as-cool-change-makes-its-way-across-victoria-20140117-30zqf.html

[2] Hanlon, P., 15 Jan, 2014, “Extreme heat proves too much for Canadian player Frank Dancevic”, http://www.smh.com.au/sport/tennis/extreme-heat-proves-too-much-for-canadian-player-frank-dancevic-20140114-30t3y.html

[3] Final Report – 2009 Victorian Bushfires Royal Commission, http://www.royalcommission.vic.gov.au/finaldocuments/summary/pf/vbrc_summary_pf.pdf

[4] Victorian Government Department of Human Service, 2009, “January 2009 Heatwave in Victoria: an Assessment of Health Impacts”, http://docs.health.vic.gov.au/docs/doc/F7EEA4050981101ACA257AD80074AE8B/%24FILE/heat_health_impact_rpt_Vic2009.pdf

[5] Hamilton, C., “Requiem for a Species: Why we resist the truth about climate change”, Allen & Unwin 2010, p. 203

[6] Medew, Julia, “Anger over heat deaths”, The Age, 27 Jan, 2014, http://www.theage.com.au/victoria/anger-over-spike-in-deaths-during-record-victorian-heatwave-20140126-31gxb.html

[7] President Lyndon Johnson, 1965 message to Congress, cited in The Science Show, ABC Radio National, 8 January, 2011, “Naomi Areskes – Merchants of Doubt”.

[8] Shabecoff, P., “Global Warming Has Begun, Expert Tells Senate”, New York Times Archive, 24 June, 1988, http://www.nytimes.com/1988/06/24/us/global-warming-has-begun-expert-tells-senate.html

[9] Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, Speech to United Nations General Assembly (Global Environment), 8 November, 1989, Margaret Thatcher Foundation, http://www.margaretthatcher.org/document/107817

[10] Ranson, D., “Death in a hot climate: southern heatwave to take its toll”, The Conversation, 17th January, 2014, http://theconversation.com/death-in-a-hot-climate-southern-heatwave-to-take-its-toll-22039

[11] Jordi Sunyer and Joan Grimalt, “Global climate change, widening health inequalities, and epidemiology”, Int. J. Epidemiol. Advance Access published February 17, 2006, http://ije.oxfordjournals.org/content/early/2006/02/17/ije.dyl025.full.pdf, cited in Ranson, D., “Death in a hot climate: southern heatwave to take its toll”, The Conversation, 17th January, 2014

[12] Phelan, L., “Cuts in emissions are at a premium”, The Age, 25 Jan 2011, http://www.smh.com.au/federal-politics/society-and-culture/cuts-in-emissions-are-at-a-premium-20110124-1a2ul.html

[13] Brucker, G., Vulnerable populations: lessons learnt from the summer 2003 heatwaves in Europe. Euro Surveill, 2005. 10(7): p. 147, http://www.eurosurveillance.org/ViewArticle.aspx?ArticleId=551, cited in Vic Govt Dept of Human Services, “January 2009 Heatwave in Victoria: an Assessment of Health Impacts”

[14] Robine, J.M., “Death toll exceeded 70,000 in Europe during the summer of 2003” in “Protecting health in Europe from climate change”, p 14. Edited by Bettina Menne, Franklin Apfel et al, World Health Organisation, 2008, Comptes Rendus Biologies, 2008. 331(2): p. 171–178, cited in Vic Govt Dept of Human Services, “January 2009 Heatwave in Victoria: an Assessment of Health Impacts”

[15] Paul Tullus, Time, Science & Space, 10 May 2012 “Global Warming – An Exclusive look at James Hansen’s Scary New Math”, http://science.time.com/2012/05/10/global-warming-an-exclusive-look-at-james-hansens-scary-new-math/

[16] Dr Michael H. Smith, Australian National University and Investor Group on Climate Change, “Assessing Climate Change Risks and Opportunities for Investors: Mining and Minerals Processing”

[17] Spratt, D., “As Tony Abbott launches all-out war on climate action, what’s the plan?”, Climate Code Red, 28 January, 2014, http://www.climatecodered.org/2014/01/as-tony-abbott-launches-all-out-war-on.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+ClimateCodeRed+%28climate+code+red%29

[18] Hamilton, C, “Scorcher: The Dirty Politics of Climate Change”, (2007) Black Inc Agenda, p. 110

[19] Mahony, P., “Relax, have a cigarette and forget about climate change”, Viva la Vegan, 7 Aug, 2012, http://vivalavegan.net/community/articles/358-relax-have-a-cigarette-and-forget-about-climate-change.html

[20] ACTU and Australian Conservation Foundation, 2008, “Green Gold Rush: How ambitious environmental policy can make Australia a leader in the global race for green jobs”, http://www.acfonline.org.au/sites/default/files/resources/Green_Gold_Rush.pdf

[21] Hansen, J, “Storms of my Grandchildren”, Bloomsbury, 2009, p.291

Images:

Heat Wave High Temperatures © Lucidwaters | Dreamstime.com

Seal of the President of the United States © Americanspirit | Dreamstime.com

James Hansen, Columbia University

Margaret Thatcher © | Dreamstime.com

Goddard Space Flight Center Scientific Visualization Studio, 2 Aug 2012 “Shifting Distribution of Northern Hemisphere Summer Temperature Anomalies, 1951-2011”, Animation No. 3975, http://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/goto?3975

Australian Academy of Science, “The Science of Climate Change: Questions and Answers”, Aug 2010, Figure 3.3, p. 8, http://www.science.org.au/reports/climatechange2010.pdf (Original source CSIRO, Bureau of Meteorology, 2010 “State of the Climate”)

dreamstime_xs_7648322

In a recent blog post (Risk Management, Insurance and the Climate Crisis), I reported that insurance regulators had found that the vast majority of US insurers were under-prepared for climate change.

In presentation slides contained within that post, I quoted the chair of major Australian insurer QBE, Belinda Hutchinson, who asserted in 2011 that climate change had nothing to do with the recent string of natural disasters that had cost insurance companies more than $3.6 billion. She said:

“The catastrophe events that have taken place this year, the floods in Queensland, the fires, have nothing to do with climate change. They are part of Australia’s really long history of floods, fires, droughts.”

I challenged that assertion with material provided by Australia’s former Climate Commission and others.

The Climate Commission was disbanded by the recently-elected Liberal/National Party coalition government led by Tony Abbott. The Commission, led by former Australian of the Year, Professor Tim Flannery, has re-formed as the independently-funded Climate Council.

Two articles in today’s Age newspaper are very relevant to these issues:

QBE takes $4b hit on profit downgrade, chair’s exit (Extracts from The Age, 9th December, 2013 with my underline):

“QBE shareholders have taken a $4 billion hit this morning after the company announced a major profit downgrade and Belinda Hutchinson signalled her retirement from the insurance behemoth.”

“QBE’s US division has been pummelled by problems in its crop, lenders placed property insurance and program businesses. The crop arm has been hit by the worst drought in over 50 years . . .”

“QBE announced this morning it would suffer an expected $US250 million . . . net loss for the year to December, as profit hits from its beleaguered US division festered. Shares tumbled this morning, . . . falling 19.4 per cent, . . . wiping between $3.5 billion and $4 billion from the insurer’s market capitalisation.

Reality bites as climate change adds fuels to bushfires (The Age, 9th December, 2013):

This article was written by Professor Flannery on the day the Climate Commission released a report on the growing frequency and intensity of bushfires in Australia.

Professor Flannery wrote:

“So, while bushfires are part of the Australian story, more intense and frequent bushfires are part of the Australian climate change story. The current environment in which we experience bushfires is changing. The lengthened bushfire season, and increased frequency and intensity of heatwaves, mean that the overall risk of bushfires in Australia has amplified. Bushfires in Australia are now occurring in a new, more dangerous environment. It is this new environment of increased bushfire risk that will affect Australia, and Australians, significantly.”

Conclusion:

I argue that those involved in risk management and insurance need to consider the non-linear nature of:

(a) trends in the frequency and intensity of extreme events; and

(b) the destructive capacity of those events.

Due to this non-linearity, past history of events is not necessarily a reliable guide to current and future impacts.

We must also consider the conservative nature of many official climate change projections, along with credible alternative findings.

References:

Flannery, Tim, “Reality bites as climate change adds fuels to bushfires“, The Age, 9th December, 2013, http://www.theage.com.au/comment/reality-bites-as-climate-change-adds-fuels-to-bushfires-20131208-2yz47.html

Liew, Ruth, “QBE takes $4b hit on profit downgrade, chair’s exit“, The Age, 9th December, 2013, http://www.theage.com.au/business/banking-and-finance/qbe-takes-4b-hit-on-profit-downgrade-chairs-exit-20131209-2yzyi.html

Image: Climate change, global warming: Dry salt lake © Milacroft | Dreamstime.com

The-warming-planet

I have an interest in the world of insurance, which is a far more comprehensive and intricate industry than suggested by domestic insurers’ multi-policy discounts and the like.

In fact, commerce and industry in general would not operate without the insurance mechanism to support them.

Risk management is a related discipline, consisting of insurance (within its “risk transfer” component) and many other elements.

I also have a keen interest in climate change, and have felt for some time that its near-term and longer-term impacts are not fully appreciated by various major participants in the insurance industry. For that reason, I have developed the presentation below, with two different versions provided here: a slideshow; and downloadable PDF. It is also available on the Slideshare website, from where it can be expanded to full screen.

Slideshow

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PDF (Downloadable)

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If you have any thoughts on this issue, I’d welcome your comments below.

Author

Paul Mahony (also on on Twitter, Slideshare and Sribd)

Image

NASA

Update

Slideshow and PDF versions added on 14th and 15th March 2016, replacing an embedded Slideshare version.

The following note has been transferred from an earlier version of the article:

Slide 65 has satellite images from November, 2013 of an iceberg the size of Singapore separating from Antarctica’s Pine Island Glacier.

Earth

This is a short post to present my recent slideshow of quotations from some prominent politicians and scientists on climate change. The slideshow is a work in progress, and will be extended over time. (To hold it steady, simply click the pause button, and use arrows to navigate.)

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

The slideshow can also be downloaded here, from where it is best viewed by using the navigation arrows, rather than scrolling.

From the tragedy of recent events such as Typhoon Haiyan in the Philippines may rise the demand of the masses that finally convinces politicians to treat climate change as the crisis that it is, implementing an effective state of emergency.

In referring to a state of emergency, I have in mind the type of scenario referred to in an interview from from 17th April 2009 on Beyond Zero Radio (3CR Melbourne) with Janet Larsen, Director of Research at the Earth Policy Institute in the USA. The interviewer was Scott Bilby. They were discussing the book “Plan B 3.0: Mobilizing to save civilization“.  Here’s an extract:

Scott: “That war-footing that’s been spoken about by a few people, and can you just basically tell our audiences about the kind of World War 2 analogy?”

Janet: “Well, certainly. Sometimes social change happens rather gradually, and other times it happens immediately. You go to bed one night and you wake up, and you’re in a new world and it’s that latter case that is what happened in the United States back in 1941, December 7th, when the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbour. Before that point, most Americans were rather reluctant to get involved in a massive war being fought on the far sides of two distant oceans. They didn’t feel affected, and there was very little public support to get involved.”

“After Pearl Harbour was bombed, one month later, President Roosevelt could stand before the country giving his State of the Union address and in that address he announced this incredibly ambitious arms production goals. He said we’re going to produce 45,000 tanks, 60,000 planes, 20,000 anti-aircraft guns and 6 million tons of merchant shipping.”

“These are enormous numbers and after that he called in the leaders of the American auto manufacturing companies and he said,”

‘We’re going to need all your capacity to help us achieve these goals’,

“and apparently the leaders of these companies hem’d and hahhed and said,”

‘Well you know, Mr President, we will do our best. That will be difficult, but you know, we are making these cars, but we’re going to try’.

“And his reply was along the lines of,”

‘You don’t understand. We’re not going to be producing any cars. We’re going to be devoting all of our resources to this war effort.’

“And indeed between early 1942 and 1944, there were essentially no cars produced in this country, but instead they were churning out planes and tanks, and toy factories started manufacturing compasses, and spark plug factories were churning out machine guns. Those that made corsets were then making grenade belts.”

“So, we, in just a matter of months, we completely restructured the US economy. And this is the kind of massive and rapid scale restructuring that we’re saying we need to confront the challenges we’re facing today. Mainly, this is what we need to do to stop climate change from spinning out of control.”

Adopting this sort of mindset in relation to climate change may be our only hope, provided it’s not too late.

Blog Author: Paul Mahony (also on on Twitter, Slideshare and Sribd)

Image: The Earth © Pmakin | Dreamstime.com

This article first appeared on the Viva la Vegan website on 7th August, 2012.

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It’s not surprising that many people are uncertain about the dangers of climate change. Much confusion has been created by groups with vested interests, who have successfully utilised sophisticated PR (public relations) techniques to influence public perceptions and opinion.

In this article, I consider the link between tobacco industry PR and that of the fossil fuel sector. The story is largely one of relationships between: individuals; their areas of expertise; and industries.

Edward Bernays was a nephew of “the father of psychoanalysis”, Sigmund Freud. Bernays himself is widely regarded as being “the father of PR”. Here’s an extract on Edward Bernays from the documentary “The Century of Self” [1]:

“Bernays was the first person to take Freud’s ideas about human beings and use them to manipulate the masses. He showed American corporations for the first time how they could make people want things they didn’t need by linking mass produced goods to their unconscious desires. Out of this would come a new political idea of how to control the masses. By satisfying people’s inner selfish desires, one made them happy and thus docile. It was the start of the all-consuming self which has come to dominate our world today. “

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Let’s look at some history of PR within the tobacco industry.

1929: TOBACCO INDUSTRY PR ENDS THE TABOO ON WOMEN SMOKING

Here’s an extract from an article on the website of the American Psychological Association [2]:

Manipulating behaviors: Intrigued by Freud’s notion that irrational forces drive human behavior, Bernays sought to harness those forces to sell products for his clients. In his 1928 book, ‘Propaganda’, Bernays hypothesized that by understanding the group mind, it would be possible to manipulate people’s behavior without their even realizing it. To test this hypothesis, Bernays launched one of his most famous public relations campaigns: convincing women to smoke.”

Here’s another extract from “The Century of Self” [1]:

“Every year New York held an Easter day parade to which thousands came. Bernays decided to stage an event there . He persuaded a group of rich debutants to hide cigarettes under their clothes. Then they should join the parade and at a given signal from him they were to light up the cigarettes dramatically. Bernays then informed the press that he had heard that a group of suffragettes were preparing to protest by lighting up what they called ‘torches of freedom’.

Pat Jackson, Public Relations Adviser and Colleague of Bernays: He knew this would be an outcry, and he knew that all of the photographers would be there to capture this moment so he was ready with a phrase which was ‘torches of freedom’. So here you have a symbol, women, young women, debutantes, smoking a cigarette in public with a phrase that means anybody who believes in this kind of equality pretty much has to support them in the ensuing debate about this, because I mean torches of freedom. What’s our American point, it’s liberty, she’s holding up the torch, you see and so all this there together, there’s emotion there’s memory and there’s a rational phrase, all of this is in there together. So the next day this was not just in all the New York papers, it was across the United States and around the world. And from that point forward the sale of cigarettes to woman began to rise. He had made them socially acceptable with a single symbolic ad.”

So, in 1929, the PR industry likened smoking by women to liberty and freedom. Decades of smoking by women since then have caused untold pain and suffering. It seems that the tobacco and PR industries were influencing people to act in ways prejudicial to those people’s own interests.

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1969: MEMO OUTLINING THE BASIS OF PR WITHIN THE TOBACCO INDUSTRY

A famous memo between tobacco industry executives in 1969 stated: “Doubt is our product since it is the best means of competing with the ‘body of fact’ that exists in the mind of the general public. It is also the means of establishing a controversy.” [3]

Naomi Oreskes is Professor of History and Science Studies at the University of California and co-author (with Erik Conway) of “Merchants of Doubt: How a Handful of Scientists Obscured the Truth on Issues from Tobacco Smoke to Global Warming” [4]. Speaking at the University of New South Wales in 2010, she stated:

“Now this is an incredibly important memo. It’s been reproduced by many scholars in many different contexts, and it was a crucial piece of evidence in the US federal prosecution of the tobacco industry, because it showed that the tobacco industry deliberately worked together, conspired. The tobacco industry was found guilty of conspiracy under the Racketeering and Corrupt Organisations Act, because of documents like this that showed that the tobacco industry consciously set out to challenge the scientific evidence by manufacturing doubt.”

Professor Oreskes went on to say: “But one of the key insights the tobacco industry realised early on was that for this doubt-mongering campaign to be credible, for it to be effective for journalists who’d quote them, it wouldn’t do for tobacco industry executives to get up and say, we don’t really know if tobacco is harmful. . . .  But if the tobacco industry could get scientists to say it, and particularly if they could get distinguished scientists, prestigious scientists, a president of the US National Academy of Sciences to say it, well that would have a lot of credibility. In particular, the documents show that the tobacco industry understood that it would have credibility with the media . . .  So a key component of this strategy was the recruitment of scientists, was finding scientists who would be willing to participate in this activity.”

1993: CONTINUING THE TOBACCO INDUSTRY’S PR STRATEGY

In his ground-breaking book on climate change, “Heat: How to stop the planet burning”, Guardian columnist George Monbiot reported on the tactics of tobacco company, Philip Morris.  Following the December, 1992 release of the U.S. Environment Protection Agency’s report on the adverse health effects of passive smoking, an internal memo between executives of the company in 1993 stated:

“Our overriding objective is to discredit the EPA report . . . Concurrently, it is our objective to prevent states and cities . . . from passive smoking bans.” [5]

For this purpose, the company hired a PR firm, APCO, to develop an appropriate strategy. The firm established a “fake citizens group”, The Advancement of Sound Science Coalition (TASSC).

Tobacco industry communications stated that it was important ‘to ensure that TASSC has a diverse group of contributors’; to ‘link the tobacco issue with other more ‘politically correct’ products’; and to associate scientific studies that cast smoking in a bad light with ‘broader questions about government research and regulations’ – such as ‘global warming’, ‘nuclear waste disposal’ and ‘biotechnology’. APCO would engage in the ‘intensive recruitment of high-profile representatives from business and industry, scientists, public officials, and other individuals interested in promoting the use of sound science’”. [6]

Monbiot reported that, “TASSC did as its founders . . . suggested, and sought funding from other sources.” Those sources included the fossil fuel sector. He says, “The website it has financed – JunkScience.com – has been the main entrepot for almost every kind of climate-change denial that has found its way into the mainstream press. It equates environmentalists with Nazis, communists and terrorists. It flings at us the accusations that could justifiably be levelled against itself: the website claims, for example, that it is campaigning against ‘faulty scientific data and analysis used to advance special and, often, hidden agendas’. I have lost count of the number of correspondents who, while questioning manmade global warming, have pointed me there.”

He also stated that the tobacco and fossil fuel lobbies “use the same terms, which appear to have been invented by Philip Morris’s consultants. ‘Junk science’ meant peer-reviewed studies showing that smoking was linked to cancer and other diseases. ‘Sound science’ meant studies sponsored by the tobacco industry suggesting that the link was inconclusive.”

CONTRIBUTIONS OF PROMINENT DENIALIST, FRED SINGER

Professor S. Fred Singer is described by Naomi Oreskes as, “the bête noire of many climate scientists, who continues today to attack climate science”. He is a former director of the U.S. National Weather Satellite Service. According to Professor Oreskes:

“He often claims to be a climate scientist because of this connection to the weather service, but he was the director of the weather service not in his capacity as a climate scientist, which he was not, but as a rocket scientist who knew how to get those satellites up into space.” [3]

She says, “In the 1980s, Singer worked with the Reagan administration to cast doubt on the significance and severity of acid rain, arguing that controlling sulphur emissions was a billion dollar solution to a million dollar problem, so implying that environmentalists had exaggerated the significance of acid rain, and it wouldn’t be significant enough to justify what it would cost to fix. So this is an argument we hear again today regarding global warming.”

In challenging (with lawyer Kent Jeffreys) the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) over the dangers of passive smoking, he wrote in 1993, “If we do not carefully delineate the government’s role in regulating dangers, there is essentially no limit to how much government can ultimately control our lives.” [6]

He was challenging the EPA’s conclusions: that tobacco was a proven carcinogen; that second-hand smoke was responsible for 3,000 additional adult cancer deaths each year in the United States alone; that second-hand smoke was responsible for as many as 300,000 additional cases of bronchitis and pneumonia in infants and young children; and that second-hand smoke was correlated with an increase in Sudden Infant Death Syndrome or cot death.

It appears that Singer was following and promoting an anti-regulation ideology. That view is supported by the background of various organisations linked to the work of himself and/or Jeffreys. They include (with descriptions from Naomi Oreskes):

Alexis de Tocqueville Institute: Published the report of Singer and Jeffreys. It is a think tank whose goal is “the extension and perfection of democracy and economic liberty and political freedom”.

Cato Institute: A think tank to whom Kent Jeffreys was affiliated. It is “dedicated to individual liberty, limited government and free markets”.

Competitive Enterprise Institute: Another think tank to whom Kent Jeffreys was affiliated. It is dedicated to “expanding liberty, increasing individual opportunity and strengthening free markets”.

Professor Singer is also on the “global warming experts” list of The Heartland Institute. [7]

Here are some comments on the Heartland Institute from an editorial in the journal “Nature”:

“Despite criticizing climate scientists for being overconfident about their data, models and theories, the Heartland Institute proclaims a conspicuous confidence in single studies and grand interpretations….makes many bold assertions that are often questionable or misleading…. Many climate sceptics seem to review scientific data and studies not as scientists but as attorneys, magnifying doubts and treating incomplete explanations as falsehoods rather than signs of progress towards the truth. … The Heartland Institute and its ilk are not trying to build a theory of anything. They have set the bar much lower, and are happy muddying the waters.” [8]

According to the institute’s web site, “it is a non-profit ‘think tank’ that questions the reality and import of climate change, second-hand smoke health hazards, and a host of other issues that might seem to require government regulation.” [9]

Professor Singer’s views about government regulation were also apparent in the following comments about regulation of chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) in 1989:

“And then there are those with hidden agendas of their own, not just to save the environment, but to change our economic system. Some of these coercive utopians are socialists, some are technology-hating luddites, and most have a great desire to regulate on as large a scale as possible.” [3]

What if we had adopted Professor Singer’s position on CFCs?

According to the journal “Australasian Science”, the ozone layer would have almost disappeared by 2007, and CFCs would have been by far the most significant contributor to global warming:

“If you express CFCs in CO2-e [CO2-equivalent], and if you look at the growth of CFCs prior to the 1987 Montreal Protocol, you can estimate the amount of CO2-e emissions that Montreal has saved. This calculation shows that, by 2012, the Montreal Protocol will have prevented the equivalent of between 9.7 and 12.5 billion tonnes of CO2 being pumped into the atmosphere every year. On the other hand, if all countries meet their Kyoto targets by 2012, we will save the equivalent of only about 2 billion tonnes of CO2 per year. You can also show that, if CFCs had continued to grow at their 1970s growth rates, they would be the gases having the biggest impact on global temperatures today (they would have also almost completely destroyed the ozone layer). Were it not for their other stratospheric side-effects, perhaps we would be setting up deodorant-trading schemes to control them!” [10]

CFC-image

CONCLUSION AND FURTHER THOUGHTS

In summary, some important aspects of the PR industry’s influence on cigarette smoking and climate change can be summarised as:

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The concept of the “all-consuming self”, as referred to in respect of the early achievements of Edward Bernays, seems relevant to ideas on climate change that have been considered by Clive Hamilton in his book “Requiem for a Species” [11].

Commenting on the book, La Trobe University academic Robert Manne said:

“Perhaps it is the character type that flourishes under the conditions of consumer capitalism that presents the primary obstacle to taking action on climate change. Faced by an apparent choice between the continuation of our lifestyle and the wellbeing of our planet, perhaps it is the continuation of our lifestyle that in the end we will decide to choose.” [12]

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Let’s hope for the future of our planet and its current and future inhabitants that we choose more wisely than indicated in that comment.

Blog Author: Paul Mahony (Also on Twitter, Scribd and Slideshare)

Footnote:

In 1960, the efforts of Bernays to inform the public of the dangers of smoking earned him praise from Action on Smoking & Health. He said that, had he known in 1928 what he knew in 1960, he would have refused the offer to be involved in the smoking campaign. [13]

References:

[1]      “Century of  Self – Part 1 – Happiness Machines”, An Adam Curtis film, broadcast on BBC TV in 2002, http://pialogue.info/books/Century-of-the-Self.php (Accessed 3 August, 2012)

[2]     Held, L. “Psychoanalysis shapes consumer culture. Or how Sigmund Freud, his nephew and a box of cigars forever changed American marketing.”, Monitor on Psychology, December 2009, Vol 40, No. 11, Print version: page 32,
http://www.apa.org/monitor/2009/12/consumer.aspx (Accessed 3 August, 2012)

[3]     Prof. Naomi Oreskes, co-author of “Merchants of Doubt” on The Science Show, ABC Radio National, 8 January, 2011, http://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/scienceshow/naomi-oreskes—merchants-of-doubt/3012690 (Accessed 3 August, 2012)

[4]     Oreskes, N. & Conway, E.M. “Merchants of Doubt: How a Handful of Scientists Obscured the Truth on Issues from Tobacco Smoke to Global Warming”, 2010, Bloomsbury Press, http://www.merchantsofdoubt.org/ (Accessed 3 August, 2012)

[5]     Monbiot, G., “Heat: How to stop the planet burning”, 2006, Allen Lane, p. 31 http://www.monbiot.com/2006/11/07/heat/ (Accessed 3 August, 2012)

[6]     Singer, S.F. & Jeffreys, K. “EPA and the Science of Environmental Tobacco Smoke”, cited in Prof. Naomi Oreskes, co-author of “Merchants of Doubt” on The Science Show, ABC Radio National, 8 January, 2011

[7]     Source Watch, http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=Heartland_Institute/Global_warming_experts (Accessed 3 August, 2012)

[8]     “Nature”, Volume: 475, Pages: 423–424, 28 July 2011, DOI: doi:10.1038/475423b (2011-07-28). “Heart of the matter”. Nature : Nature Publishing Group. Retrieved on 14 August 2011, cited in http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=Heartland_Institute#Exxon_funding

[9]     Source Watch, http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=Heartland_Institute#Exxon_funding (Accessed 3 August, 2012)

[10]   Anon., “The global warming potential of deodorants”, Australasian Science, Nov/Dec, 2007, p. 39

[11]   Hamilton, C., “Requiem for a Species: Why we resist the truth about climate change”, 2010, Allen & Unwin, http://www.clivehamilton.net.au/cms/ (Accessed 3 August, 2012)

[12]   Manne, R, “How can climate change denialism be explained?”, The Drum Opinion, ABC, 9 December, 2011, http://www.abc.net.au/unleashed/3722126.html (Accessed 3 August, 2012)

[13]    The Museum of Public Relations, “Edward L. Bernays, 1960: Dangers of Smoking”, http://www.prmuseum.com/bernays/bernays_1960.html

Images:

Cigarette Packet © Akiyoko74 | Dreamstime.com

“Statue of Liberty” © Americanspirit | Dreamstime.com

dreamstime_xs_1983295

I’ve been concerned for many years about the approach of so-called economic rationalists, who generally believe in the “user pays” principle in relation to social services, but not in relation to products they purchase, for which the price may not incorporate the true cost.

Some current examples highlight this discrepancy. Conservative forces in the USA have campaigned vigorously against President Obama’s health care reforms. However, like their Australian counterparts, they are generally opposed to a price on carbon that would assist in realistically allocating environmental costs involved in producing goods and services.

Nevertheless, pressure is mounting to adequately account for what are currently economic externalities in relation to the environment.

Author Jane Gleeson-White discussed the issue in her Numbers Rule the World presentation on ABC Radio National’s “Big Ideas” program on 3rd September, 2013.  Here’s an extract:

“Today, some economists, accountants, politicians and environmental activists are beginning to re-think this old way of valuing nature, and are re-conceiving it as natural capital. In 2012, the UN adopted a new international standard to give natural capital equal status to GDP. And next December, an international body will publish its guidelines for a new corporate accounting paradigm which includes natural capital.

So, if numbers and money are the most powerful language of our time, it seems we must use this language to account for nature.”

Gleeson-White cited the example of Costa Rica, where the former Energy and Environment Minister, Carlos Manuel Rodriguez, applied the concept in seeking to save his country’s forests. She explained:

” . . . now the economics of nature is institutionalised in Costa Rica, and as a result, not only were the forests protected, but large areas of degraded land were also restored. In the late 1980’s, Costa Rica had only 21% forest cover. It now has 52%.”

She also referred to Guardian journalist Jonathan Watts, who wrote in his 2010 article Are accountants the last hope for the world’s ecosystems?:

“So it has come to this. The global biodiversity crisis is so severe that brilliant scientists, political leaders, eco-warriors, and religious gurus can no longer save us from ourselves. The military are powerless. But there may be one last hope for life on earth: accountants.”

Gleeson-White explained: “What he means by this is that only accountants can translate the value of nature into the only language that counts in modern 21st Century business and government; numbers and money.”

The UN’s new approach on natural capital was also referred to in a Scientific American article of 30th August, 2013 headed, Banks Put a Price on Earth’s Life Support“.  The Natural Capital Declaration defined natural capital as “the Earth’s natural assets (soil, air, water, flora and fauna), and the ecosystem services resulting from them, which make human life possible.”

As part of the UN exercise, forty-three of the world’s largest financial institutions have set up a working party to establish how best to account for natural capital, to assist banks in their financing decisions when considering loans to companies that may be acting unsustainably.

The article noted: “They want governments to force companies to disclose their dependence on natural capital and the impact they have on it by disclosures in annual financial reports. They also want penalties for companies not doing so and tax incentives for those who protect natural capital as part of their business.”

According to the article, the ultimate target date is 2020 “to get an international system up and running and recognized by all governments signed on to the UN Framework Climate Change Convention”.

It quoted Liesel Van Ast, project manager for the Natural Capital Declaration, who said, “Everyone believes they can get out before the resources run out and the crash occurs. We are hoping to change that attitude and get companies to pay a price for overuse of natural capital.”

The article concluded with the words, “It may be slow and difficult work, they acknowledge, but they believe this is vital to prevent the current economic system destroying the planet.

Potential Resistance

Profound words indeed, but the new measures may be strongly resisted by conservative governments and vested interest groups.

As recently as 18th September, 2013, The Australian newspaper reported that the industry minister in the recently elected conservative Liberal/National Party government, Ian Macfarlane, had said (subject to environmental approval), “we’ve got to make sure that every molecule of gas that can come out of the ground does so” in order to boost exports and supply the domestic market.  He said, ” . . . we should develop everything we can”.

In July, 2012, the head of Exxon Mobil, Rex Tillerson was advocating adaptation to climate change, rather than the vastly more beneficial mitigation approach. The Guardian newspaper reported that Tillerson acknowledged that global temperatures are rising. He said, “clearly there is going to be an impact”, but also said that people would be able to adapt to rising sea levels and changing climates that may force agricultural production to shift.

In reporting Tillerson’s comments, the climate change website, Skeptical Science, stated:

“It’s true that if we had infinite resources, we could probably successfully adapt to the consequences of climate change, to a point.  However, in reality we don’t have infinite resources, and thus we generally try to utilize those resources most efficiently.  When it comes to climate change we have the option to choose our desired combination of mitigation, adaptation, and suffering. . . . As we recently examined, climate change consequences from carbon emissions are already costing our society hundreds of billions of dollars every year.  Research by the German Institute for Economic Research and Watkiss et al. 2005 have concluded that choosing mitigation above adaption would save us tens of trillions of dollars.”

The article used the following image to illustrate its point:

Action_vs_Inaction_480

Figure 1: Approximate global costs of climate action (green) and inaction (red) in 2100 and 2200. Sources: German Institute for Economic Research and Watkiss et al. 2005 via Skeptical Science

Another Example

In July, 2013, a paper published in the journal Nature estimated that “the release of a single giant ‘pulse’ of methane from thawing Arctic permafrost beneath the East Siberian sea ‘could come with a $60 trillion global price tag'”.

To put that figure into perspective, global gross domestic product in 2012 was around US$70 trillion.

The researchers indicated that nearly 80 percent of the cost would be borne by the poorer regions of Africa, Asia and South America, in the form of extreme weather, poor health, and lost agricultural productivity.

Conclusion

Let’s hope the language of money can be used in positive ways to force corporations and governments to respond constructively to the crisis we’ve created before it’s too late.

In my next article, I will consider the related issue of quantifying the impact of animal agriculture.

References:

Gleeson-White, J., Numbers Rule the World“, ABC Radio National, 3rd September, 2013, http://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/bigideas/numbers-rule-the-world/4881098

Brown, P and the Daily Climate, Banks Put a Price on Earth’s Life Support, Scientific American, 30 August, 2013, http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=banks-put-a-price-on-earths-life-support

Watts, J., Are accountants the last hope for the world’s ecosystems?“, The Guardian Environment Blog, 28th September, 2010, http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2010/oct/28/accountants-hope-ecosystems

Crowe, D.,Use it or lose it, miners warned by Coalition, The Australian, 18th September, 2013, http://www.theaustralian.com.au/national-affairs/use-it-or-lose-it-miners-warned-by-coalition/story-fn59niix-1226721368923

Associated Press, The Guardian, Climate change fears overblown, says ExxonMobil boss, 28 June, 2012, http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2012/jun/28/exxonmobil-climate-change-rex-tillerson

Skeptical Science,Exxon-Mobil CEO Downplays the Global Warming Threat“, 13th July, 2012, http://www.skepticalscience.com/exxon-mobi-ceo-denies-climate-threat.html

Gail Whiteman, Chris Hope, & Peter Wadhams, “Climate science: Vast costs of Arctic change”, Nature 499, 401–403 (25 July 2013) doi:10.1038/499401a, published online 24 July 2013, http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v499/n7459/full/499401a.html, cited in Environmental News Network, Institute for Governance & Sustainable Development, “Damage from Methane Release by Arctic Permafrost Could Cost $60 Trillion: World’s poorest would bear 80% of costs”, 26 July, 2013 and Vidal, J., “Rapid Arctic thawing could be economic timebomb, scientists say”, The Guardian, 25 July, 2013, http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2013/jul/24/arctic-thawing-permafrost-climate-change

Image:

Tranquil River  © Robyn Mackenzie | Dreamstime.com

Author:

Paul Mahony. Also on Twitter, Slideshare and Sribd.

Edited with the inclusion of “Another Example” and references on 13 October, 2013.

Opening paragraph modified slightly on 27th April, 2016

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A key aspect of The Australian Youth Climate Coalition’s (AYCC) efforts during the 2010 federal election campaign was the involvement of a character known as “Ellie the Climate Elephant“, undertaking various activities in order “to get climate change back on the political agenda” [1]. However, in relation to climate change itself, there’s another elephant in the room, in the form of livestock.

In July, 2013, AYCC held a two-and-a-half day “Power Shift” conference in Melbourne. High profile climate change campaigners involved in the event (not all in person) included: Dr James Hansen, former head of NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies; Professor Tim Flannery, Australia’s Chief Climate Commissioner; and Bill McKibben, founder of 350.org.

The program indicated that the conference was “packed full of inspiring panels, workshops, masterclasses and performances”. Apart from plenary sessions, it involved sixty-nine such activities covering topics such as “dismantling racism”, “deeper theories of change” and “diversity in movement”.

A glaring omission from the program was the issue of animal agriculture’s massive impact and the critical role that addressing that issue can play in tackling the crisis.

James Hansen has said that we need to massively reforest in order to reduce CO2 emissions to 350 ppm (parts per million), the figure adopted by Bill McKibben for his campaigning organisation [2, 3].

AYCC has confirmed in its 2012-2015 strategic plan that it is aiming for the same figure.

As I have stated in various presentations and articles, including Omissions of Emissions: A Critical Climate Change Issue and Do the math: There are too many cows! the extent of reforestation required will not be possible without a general move towards a plant-based diet.

I have referred (amongst other sources) to a report from the PBL Netherlands Environmental Assessment Agency in 2009, which stated [4]:

“. . . a global food transition to less meat, or even a complete switch to plant-based protein food [was found] to have a dramatic effect on land use. Up to 2,700 Mha of pasture and 100 Mha of cropland could be abandoned, resulting in a large carbon uptake from regrowing vegetation. Additionally, methane and nitrous oxide emissions would be reduced substantially.”

They said a plant-based diet would reduce climate change mitigation costs by 80%. A meat-free diet would reduce them by 70%. Their assessment was based on a target of 450 ppm. The issue is even more critical when aiming for 350 ppm.

Although it is important to reduce our personal usage of energy, transportation and the like, Hansen has suggested that those issues rate below diet in regard to personal action. He has said:

“If you eat further down on the food chain rather than animals, which have produced many greenhouse gases, and used much energy in the process of growing that meat, you can actually make a bigger contribution in that way than just about anything. So that, in terms of individual action, is perhaps the best thing you can do.”  [5]

AYCC is aware of the issue, but has effectively chosen to ignore it. I understand that the organisation aims to empower young people to create cultural and political change, and that each year it focuses on key policy areas it believes are most likely to have a major impact on the climate. Examples have been a focus on the Clean Energy Finance Corporation and building community support for 100 percent renewable energy through AYCC’s Repower campaign.

To ignore animal agriculture as a major annual campaign is a concern, but to do so amongst sixty-nine panel discussions, workshops and masterclasses at the Power Shift conference is astounding.

AYCC may satisfy sections the media’s desire to portray enthusiastic young people seeking to save the planet. However, that doesn’t count for much when they ignore essential components of the overall solution.

AYCC says in its values statement, “We focus on what’s needed to solve the climate crisis, not what’s politically expedient or easy.” A general move towards a plant-based diet matches such an approach perfectly.

AYCC, Aluminium and Beef

Justifiably, AYCC has highlighted the extraordinary level of emissions produced by Australia’s aluminium industry. In a 2011 “Polluter Watch Fact File“, issued in conjunction with the Australian Conservation Foundation, Environment Victoria and Greenpeace, AYCC cited “a 2010 Grattan Institute report that found the nation’s aluminium smelting trade produces about twice as much pollution as the world industry average. The same report asserted that Alcoa’s Australian smelters at both Portland and Point Henry generated three times the volume of greenhouse gases per tonne of aluminium produced than that of their foreign counterparts.” [6]

Aluminium-smelting

Aluminium smelting

AYCC were mentioned in Australia’s federal parliament in relation to the fact sheet:

Member for Wannan, Dan Tehan, questioning Treasurer Wayne Swan on the fact sheet issued by AYCC and other environmental groups

I referred to similar figures (obtained from The Australia Institute) in my 2011 “Solar or Soy” presentation and elsewhere.

Some key points to note from that presentation are as follows:

  • Aluminium smelting consumes around 16% of Australia’s electricity. [7]
  • Aluminium’s emissions intensity (kilograms of emissions per kilogram of product) in Australia is around 2.5 times the global average due to the fact that most of our electricity used is generated by coal-fired power stations. [8, 9]
  • “Aluminium is the ultimate proxy for energy.” (Marius Kloppers, former BHP Billiton CEO) [10]

So how does beef compare?

The chart below depicts figures from an “end use” report commissioned by the Australian Greenhouse Office (now the Department of Climate Change and Energy Efficiency) on the greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions intensity of various commodities in Australia, including cement, steel, beef and aluminium. [11]

At the time, beef was more than 2.5 times as emissions intensive as aluminium smelting!

Figure 1: Comparative Greenhouse Gas Emissions Intensity

Image-2

The comparison in absolute terms was also dramatic, as our annual tonnage of beef production is around 10% higher than that of aluminium. [12, 13].  The following chart (including aluminium within the category “basic non-ferrous metals”) from the same report compares emissions in absolute terms [14]:

Figure 2: Comparative emissions in absolute terms

Image-3

The key reasons for beef’s high level of emissions in the figures are:

(a)   deforestation for grazing and feed crop production;

(b)   enteric fermentation within the animals’ digestive system, producing methane which is predominantly released through belching; and

(c)   excrement which releases methane and nitrous oxide.

The figures do not take into account factors such as black carbon from livestock-related savanna burning or tropospheric ozone.

The extent of any sector’s contribution to deforestation will vary over time, and it is possible that the beef industry’s share of deforestation has reduced from the figure of 85.1% used in the analysis, due to a ban on broadscale land clearing in Queensland with effect from January, 2007.

However, the current Liberal National Party government led by Premier Campbell Newman has introduced new legislation to again allow significant levels of land clearing. Land that was protected under Labor’s legislation can now be cleared if deemed to be of “high agricultural value”. [15]

Also, the results were based on the carcass weight of beef. As only around 55% of the carcass is used for meat, the emissions intensity based on served meat would have been around 93kg, rather than the reported figure of 51kg.

It is also critical to note that while cleared land continues to be used for cattle grazing, it cannot be re-forested.  Since European settlement of Australia, livestock are responsible for approximately 70 percent of land clearing. [16]

In Queensland alone, from 1988 to 2008, around 78,000 square kilometres of land were cleared for livestock. That’s equivalent to a 33 kilometre tract of land between Melbourne and Cairns (distance 2,317 km). [17]

Figure 3: Depicting the extent of Queensland land clearing

Australia-map-480

Much of the deforestation associated with livestock results from the grossly inefficient nature of meat as a food source.  For example, it takes around 13 kilograms of grain, fed to a cow, to produce 1 kilogram of meat. [18]

When animals graze, or when we convert foods like soy or corn to meat via the digestive system of animals, far more land is required than if we relied directly on plants as our food source.

If anyone is concerned about their ability to obtain (for example) protein, they only need to look at herbivores such as elephants, cows and gorillas, who obtain ample protein from their plant-based diets.

In early 2012, AYCC campaigned against a call by federal member of Parliament, Rob Oakeshott, when he intended supporting a motion calling for the burning of native forests to qualify for renewable energy subsidies. What about forest destroyed for livestock?

“Brightsiding” Climate Change

Australian author and climate change researcher, David Spratt, has written of the dangers of “brightsiding” climate change. He uses the term to describe the tendency of many environmental NGOs to act on the belief that only positive “good news” messages work, thereby avoiding “bad news” such as climate change impacts. The “good news” stories are “first and foremost” about renewable energy. [19]

AYCC seems to fall into the “brightsiding” camp, although it claims to “talk about the problem and climate change impacts where necessary”. It prefaced those words by saying “the climate crisis can ignite fear and often paralyse people, so we must remain positive and solutions-focused to motivate people to act . . .”

AYCC may be unwilling to highlight measures that it believes would not be readily accepted by its supporters, despite saying “we believe the climate crisis can be solved and will not shy away from the big ideas that are necessary for a sustainable future”. The organisation’s leaders may find the livestock issue too inconvenient a truth to tackle in their own lives.

If AYCC wants to lead in this area, I believe it should adopt the approach of Grist’s David Roberts, quoted by David Spratt: “If you think there’s an existential danger facing the country, you say so. That’s part of what it means to be a leader.”

I am unaware of David Spratt himself tackling the livestock issue, and am hoping that he will do so at some stage.

Conclusion

I have written before that we can no longer regard food choices as being personal when the impacts of those choices have far-reaching consequences for our environment and in other respects.

AYCC describes itself as “a real force to be reckoned with”. Why not use the power implied by that statement where it can be most effective?

Offering vegan and vegetarian options at AYCC functions does not represent meaningful action on this issue.

Blog Author: Paul Mahony (also on Twitter, Slideshare and Sribd)

References:

[1] AYCC Strategic Plan 2012-2015

[2] Hansen, J, Kharecha, P, Sato, M, Ackerman, F, Hearty, PJ, Hoegh-Guldberg, O, Hsu, SL, Krueger, F, Parmesan, C, Rahmstorf, S, Rockstrom, J, Rohling, EJ, Sachs, Smith, P, Konrad, S, Van Susteren, L, von Schuckmann, K, Zachos, JC, “Scientific Case for Avoiding Dangerous Climate Change to Protect Young People and Nature” http://arxiv.org/ftp/arxiv/papers/1110/1110.1365.pdf

[3] Hansen, J; Sato, M; Kharecha, P; Beerling, D; Berner, R; Masson-Delmotte, V; Pagani, M; Raymo, M; Royer, D.L.; and Zachos, J.C. “Target Atmospheric CO2: Where Should Humanity Aim?”, 2008. http://www.columbia.edu/~jeh1/2008/TargetCO2_20080407.pdf

[4] Stehfest, E, Bouwman, L, van Vuuren, DP, den Elzen, MGJ, Eickhout, B and Kabat, P, Climate benefits of changing diet Climatic Change, Volume 95, Numbers 1-2 (2009), 83-102, DOI: 10.1007/s10584-008-9534-6 (Also http://www.springerlink.com/content/053gx71816jq2648/)

[5] Russell, G, “Dietary Guidelines Committee ignores climate change”, 24 March 2012, http://bravenewclimate.com/2012/03/24/dietary-gc-ignores-cc/

[6] Weaver, A, 23 June, 2011, “Jobs could be lost”, The Standard, http://www.standard.net.au/story/793254/jobs-could-be-lost/

[7] Hamilton, C, “Scorcher: The Dirty Politics of Climate Change”, (2007) Black Inc Agenda, p. 40

[8] Turton, H. “The Aluminium Smelting Industry Structure, market power, subsidies and greenhouse gas emissions”, The Australia Institute, Discussion Paper Number 44, January 2002, ISSN 1322-5421, p. ix, https://www.tai.org.au/documents/dp_fulltext/DP44.pdf (accessed 16 July 2010 and 3 May, 2012)

[9] Turton, H. “Greenhouse gas emissions in industrialised countries Where does Australiastand?”, The Australia Institute, Discussion Paper Number 66, June 2004, ISSN 1322-5421, p. viii, https://www.tai.org.au/documents/dp_fulltext/DP66.pdf (accessed 16 July 2010 and 3 May, 2012)

[10] Campbell, K., “If we had the electricity, we could go ahead with Mozal III and Hillside III+”, 24 February, 2006, http://www.miningweekly.com/article/if-we-had-the-electricity-we-could-go-ahead-with-mozal-iii-and-hillside-iii-2006-02-24 (accessed 22 March, 2009 and 3 May, 2012)

[11] George Wilkenfeld & Associates Pty Ltd and Energy Strategies, National Greenhouse Gas Inventory 1990, 1995, 1999, End Use Allocation of Emissions Report to the Australian Greenhouse Office, 2003, Volume 1, Table S5, p. vii

[12] Knapp, Ron, Australian Aluminium Council, Letter 10 April 2008 to Prof Ross Garnaut, Garnaut Climate Change Review (Table 3),

Click to access D08%2046236%20ETS%20Submission%20-%20Australian%20Aluminium%20Council.pdf

[13] Australian Bureau of Statistics, “Report 7215.0 – Livestock Products Australia”, Dec 2006, p. 20

[14] George Wilkenfeld & Associates Pty Ltd and Energy Strategies, ibid,  Volume 1, Figure 7.7, p. 111

[15] Roberts, G, “Campbell Newman’s LNP bulldozing pre-election promise”, The Australian, 1 June, 2013, http://www.theaustralian.com.au/national-affairs/campbell-newmans-lnp-bulldozing-pre-election-promise/story-fn59niix-1226654740183

[16] Derived from Russell, G. “The global food system and climate change – Part 1”, 9 Oct 2008, (http://bravenewclimate.com/2008/10/09/the-global-food-system-and-climate-change-part-i/) and “Bulbs, bags, and Kelly’s bush: defining `green’ in Australia”, 19 Mar 2010 (p. 10) (http://hec-forum.anu.edu.au/archive/presentations_archive/2010/geoffrussell-hec-talk.pdf), which utilised: Dept. of Sustainability, Environment, Water, Population and Communities, State of the Environment Report 2006, Indicator: LD-01 The proportion and area of native vegetation and changes over time, March 2009; and ABS, 4613.0 “Australia’s Environment: Issues and Trends”, Jan 2010; and ABS 1301.0 Australian Year Book 2008, since updated for 2009-10, 16.13 Area of crops

[17] Derived from Bisshop, G. & Pavlidis, L, “Deforestation and land degradation in Queensland – The culprit”, Article 5, 16th Biennial Australian Association for Environmental Education Conference, Australian National University, Canberra, 26-30 September 2010

[18] Derived from W.O. Herring and J.K. Bertrand, “Multi-trait Prediction of Feed Conversion in Feedlot Cattle”, Proceedings from the 34th Annual Beef Improvement Federation Annual Meeting, Omaha, NE, July 10-13, 2002, http://www.bifconference.com/bif2002/BIFsymposium_pdfs/Herring_02BIF.pdf, cited in Singer, P & Mason, J, “The Ethics of What We Eat” (2006), Text Publishing Company, p. 210

[19] Spratt, D. “Always look on the bright side of life: Bright-siding climate change advocacy and its consequences”, April 2012, http://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/75392680/brightsiding-climate-3.pdf

Images:

Tropical Rainforest © Naypong | Dreamstime.com

Molten metal poured at foundry © StevenGullen | iStockphoto

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Bill McKibben, founder of US-based climate change campaign group 350.org, recently visited Australia for a series of presentations and media appearances. McKibben appears to have been extremely effective in mobilising people around the world, who are demanding meaningful action on climate change. The group’s mission statement states that 350.org is “building a global grassroots movement to solve the climate crisis”.

In his 2009 book, “Storms of my Grandchildren“, the former head of NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies, Dr James Hansen, described how the organisation’s name came about [1]:

“In 2007, the environmentalist and writer Bill McKibben began bugging me, very politely, to either confirm 450 parts per million as the appropriate target level of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere or else to define a more appropriate one. He was developing a Web site to draw attention to this target limit and was thinking of calling it 450.org.”

Hansen eventually settled on a figure of 350. He and his colleagues explained the scientific basis for the number in a paper published in The Open Atmospheric Science Journal in 2008, titled “Target Atmospheric CO2: Where Should Humanity Aim?“. [2]

I attended McKibben’s Q&A session in Melbourne, and asked for his views on animal agriculture, given what I suggested were its massive impacts in relation to climate change.

McKibben’s main focus is fossil fuels, and I agree it’s essential that we deal with them. However, I also argue that we will not overcome climate change without a general move away from animal agriculture.

On the basis of McKibben’s response to my question and another question asked that day, along with the contents of his Orion Magazine article of 2 April, 2010 “The Only Way to Have a Cow“, I am concerned that he is dangerously under-estimating animal agriculture’s impact. [3]

Why do I use the word “dangerously”?

Firstly, because of the seriousness of the climate change crisis we are facing, which he understands very clearly.

Secondly, because McKibben has established a very large and loyal following, many of whom may readily accept what he says on most aspects of the issue.

The respect held for McKibben was epitomised by Melbourne academic, Robert Manne, at a presentation on the same day as the Q&A session. He told McKibben and the audience that there have been three names that stand out in the history of the climate movement: James Hansen; Al Gore; and Bill McKibben.

McKibben’s key focus in his responses and in the article were:

  • animal agriculture’s share of greenhouse gas emissions
  • grazing practices
  • factory farming
  • food miles

It seems that his position can be paraphrased as:

“If we want to reduce emissions from animal agriculture, we need to move away from factory farming, adopt a modified form of grazing, and buy locally.”

Let’s look at each of those issues.

1. Animal agriculture’s share of greenhouse gas emissions

1.1 Some Published Measures of Emissions: Goodland & Anhang and UN FAO’s “Livestock’s Long Shadow” Report

Purely as an example, I referred in my question to an article by Robert Goodland and Jeff Anhang in the November/December 2009 edition of World Watch Magazine, in which they estimated that livestock are responsible for around 51% of global greenhouse gas emissions. Goodland is a former lead environmental adviser to the World Bank, and Anhang is a research officer and environmental specialist at the World Bank’s International Finance Corporation. [4]

McKibben responded by refuting the suggestion of 51%, and saying that the correct figure is around 20%. He did not explain that view, but it may be based on the widely quoted estimate of 18% from the UN Food & Agriculture Organization’s (FAO) 2006 “Livestock’s Long Shadow” report. [5]

McKibben mentioned the 18% and 51% figures in his Orion Magazine article, referred to earlier.

In that article, McKibben stated that the “51%” study (presumably the Goodland and Anhang study but he provided no details) was “quickly discredited”. He did not support that claim with evidence.

Philanthropist and Microsoft co-founder, Bill Gates, seems to respect the Goodland and Anhang study, as he referred to it in calling for a move away from meat consumption in a “Mashable” blog post earlier this year. [6] Gates has also highlighted the issues on his own website. [7]

The FAO thought enough of the paper to invite Goodland to address its December, 2009 expert consultation on greenhouse gas emissions and mitigation potentials in the agriculture, forestry and fisheries sectors. [8]

Some may argue that the respiration issue (refer below) should not have been included by Goodland and Anhang. However, even if we were to remove that factor, the analysis would have indicated that livestock would be responsible for around 43% of emissions.

Goodland and Anhang highlighted many issues, which were reviewed in the context of “Livestock’s Long Shadow”. Two key issues were: (a) 20 year “global warming potential” (GWP) of methane; and (b) land use.

1.1.1 20-Year “Global Warming Potential” (GWP) of Methane:

If you’re not familiar with the GWP concept, you can find an explanation below. [9, 10, 11, 12] If you’d rather not read the details, the key point to note is that conventional measures of methane’s global warming impact measure it over a 100-year timeframe. However, methane breaks down in the atmosphere in around 12 years. That means the 100-year measure greatly understates its shorter-term impact, as it provides an average figure over a 100-year period, when the methane effectively did not exist during the final 88 years of that period.

Although methane may have a shorter life than carbon dioxide (which remains in the atmosphere for many hundreds of years), its impact can be long-term if it contributes to us reaching tipping points that result in positive feedback loops with potentially irreversible and catastrophic consequences. On the positive side, the relatively short-term nature of methane’s impact means that action on livestock production can be one of the most effective steps available to us in dealing with climate change.

GWP-Explained-5

The significance of methane in relation to livestock derives from the process of enteric fermentation, which causes the gas to be released through belching or burping. It is explained on the US Environment Protection Agency’s website [13]:

“Enteric fermentation is fermentation that takes place in the digestive systems of animals. In particular, ruminant animals (cattle, buffalo, sheep, goats, and camels) have a large ‘fore-stomach’ or rumen, within which microbial fermentation breaks down food into soluble products that can be utilized by the animal. Approximately 200 species and strains of microorganisms are present in the anaerobic rumen environment, although only a small portion, about 10 to 20 species, are believed to play an important role in ruminant digestion.  The microbial fermentation that occurs in the rumen enables ruminant animals to digest coarse plant material that monogastric animals cannot digest. Methane is produced in the rumen by bacteria as a by-product of the fermentation process. This CH4 is exhaled or belched by the animal and accounts for the majority of emissions from ruminants. Methane also is produced in the large intestines of ruminants and is expelled.”

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has reported, “Globally, ruminant livestock produce about 80 million metric tons of methane annually, accounting for about 28% of global methane emissions from human-related activities.” [14]

Here’s the trend in global methane emissions over the past few decades [15]:

Figure 1: Global methane emissions

Methane-emissions-global

1.1.2 Land Use

Another critical issue is land use, including foregone sequestration on land previously cleared.

The report highlighted the fact that “Livestock’s Long Shadow” did not allow for foregone sequestration on land cleared in the years prior to the reporting period, although Goodland and Anhang did not fully incorporate the impact of such foregone sequestration, as referred to below.

Australia’s National Greenhouse Inventory, like most international measures, also does not allow for such foregone sequestration in any of its emissions figures.

Goodland and Anhang suggest the possibility of allowing land that has been cleared for livestock grazing or feed crop production to regenerate as forest, thereby mitigating “as much as half (or even more) of anthropogenic GHGs” [greenhouse gases]. Such an approach is consistent with studies from the PBL Netherlands Environmental Assessment Agency and the Centre for Alternative Technology in Wales (responsible for the Zero Carbon Britain 2030 plan), referred to in my article “Prince Charles on Climate Change and Deforestation“. [16]

Goodland and Anhang suggest that the land could, alternatively, be used to grow crops for direct human consumption or crops that could be converted to biofuels, thereby reducing our reliance on coal. They have used the biofuel scenario in their calculations, allowing for the greenhouse gas emissions from the coal that is continuing to be used in lieu of the biofuels.

1.1.3 Other Issues

Other issues referred to in Goodland and Anhang’s report:

  • Livestock respiration overwhelming photosynthesis in absorbing carbon, due to the massive human-driven increase in livestock numbers.
  • Increased livestock production since 2002.
  • Corrections in documented under-counting.
  • More up to date emissions figures.
  • Corrections for use of Minnesota for source data.
  • Re-alignment of sectoral information.
  • Fluorocarbons for extended refrigeration.
  • Cooking at higher temperature and for longer periods.
  • Disposal of waste.
  • Production, distribution and disposal of by-products and packaging.
  • Carbon-intensive medical treatment of livestock-related illness.

1.2 Australian Emissions

For Australia, I reported in my article “Omissions of Emissions: A Critical Climate Change Issue” on the Department of Climate Change and Energy Efficiency’s figure of around 10% for animal agriculture’s share of emissions, comparing that to an estimate by campaign group Beyond Zero Emissions (BZE) of around 50%. [17] Additional factors considered by BZE relate to deforestation, grassland emissions and savanna burning, including the role of tropospheric ozone.

In that article, I argued that Australia’s official figures, in many respects, understate livestock’s true impact. The under-reporting has occurred because relevant factors are:

  • omitted entirely from official figures, e.g. tropospheric ozone;
  • classified under different headings, e.g. livestock-related land clearing reported under “land use, land use change and forestry” (LULUCF);
  • considered but with conservative calculations, e.g. methane’s impact based on a 100-year, rather than 20-year, “global warming potential” (as referred to above).

It is clear that many factors can be taken into account when measuring the climate change impact of different sectors. I believe McKibben is wrong to effectively ignore valid alternatives to conventional measures of livestock’s impact. Particularly in relation to methane, it is difficult to understand why he would ignore as critical a factor as the 20-year global warming potential.

2. Grazing Practices

The second question at the Q&A session relating to animal agriculture referred to the March, 2013 TED presentation by Alan Savory, which was the subject of my article “Livestock and climate: Why Allan Savory is not a saviour“. [18]

In responding to my question, McKibben spoke favourably of Savory’s approach, and recommended that those at the session view the presentation.

I disagree with his views on that approach. In my view, Savory’s belief that we can achieve sustainable grazing practices on the scale needed to feed the masses is misguided. A move to such practices, along with a return to traditional farming practices and local food sourcing (referred to earlier), will not enable us to overcome catastrophic climate change, even if we also end our addiction to fossil fuels. (Information from James Hansen and colleagues on the critical role of reforestation can be found in section 2.6.)

Savory’s key claim is that livestock can be controlled through a planning process he called in the presentation “holistic management and planned grazing”, so as to be “a proxy for former herds and predators”, in trampling dry grass and leaving “dung, urine and litter or mulch”, enabling the soil to “absorb and hold rain, to store carbon, and to break down methane”.

He argues that we need to increase livestock production, rather than reduce it, in order to reverse desertification and overcome climate change.

In my “Savory is not a Saviour” article, I referred to (amongst other evidence) a study by Emma R.M. Archer of the University of Capetown, published in a 2004 edition of the Journal of Arid Environments, investigating the effect of commercial stock grazing practices on vegetation cover in an eastern Karoo study site in South Africa. Based on 14 years of satellite imaging data and objective assessment methods, the researchers reported that “holistic resource management” strategies of the type advocated by Savory resulted in lower levels of vegetation than more traditional approaches. [19]

I also referred to a study published in the journal Nature in 2005, indicating the massive potential for reforestation (as opposed to desertification) in Africa if livestock were removed and the related savanna burning ceased. [20]

McKibben’s comments at the presentation were consistent with those in his Orion Magazine article, in which he described a system that appeared to be Savory’s, although he did not provide a source for the information he presented.

Some key points in relation to these issues:

2.1 Animal Populations

McKibben indicated at the presentation and in the article that large numbers of ungulate animals (hoofed mammals) had not caused problems in the past.  However methane, nitrous oxide, carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases do not respect national borders. Let’s consider global (as opposed to North American) animal populations.

More than 3.5 billion cows, sheep, goats, camels, other camelids and buffalo (which are all ruminants) are now kept at any one time as livestock globally, which is around 22 times the number of North American bison and antelope in earlier times, as referred to by McKibben. In just the fifty years to 2011, the combined number of such animals increased globally by around 1.15 billion, which itself is around seven times the number of McKibben’s bison and antelope. [21] [Footnote 2]

Figure 2: Number of Specified Animals

Chart-Bill-McKibbens-comparison-2

Australian researcher Geoff Russell has written of the massive increase in the number of animals since the year 1500, due to manipulation of breeding habits. Russell has stated:

“Wildlife rates of conception, growth, and the like don’t match what can be achieved by artificial selection, artificial insemination, good fences, irrigated feed production, predator extermination and all the other paraphernalia of modern agriculture. These have produced a totally unnatural and unprecedented explosion in numbers of those animals which people have designated as livestock.”

Russell’s table comparing global numbers from the year 1500 with those from 2004 can be seen below. [22]

Figure 3: Growing dominance of livestock biomass

Growing-dominance-livestock-biomass

2.2 Methane absorption

In supporting Savory’s intensive grazing practices, McKibben says:

” . . . recent preliminary research indicates that methane-loving bacteria in healthy soils will sequester more of the gas in a day than cows supported by the same area will emit in a year.”

He is assuming that Savory’s approach will result in healthier soils than would otherwise exist. That claim is incorrect in relation to large-scale agriculture. However, the key problem with the statement is that the preliminary research on which it appears to have been based was subsequently found to be subject to a critical and massive error.

As with most of McKibben’s arguments in the Q&A session and his Orion Magazine article, no studies or research were cited. However, the comparison used, and the timing of the article, make it likely that it was based on the work of Professor Mark Adams and colleagues from the University of Sydney.

On 3 September, 2009, an article by Matt Cawood was published in “The Land” and “The Australian Dairy Farmer“. The article stated that the research of Adams and his colleagues found that certain “high country soils oxidise methane at a rate of . . . 8,760 kilograms per hectare per year. . . . By contrast, 100 head of cattle produce about 5,400 kg/ha of methane a year”. [23, 24]

On the basis of those figures, a hectare of land in the Snowy Mountain region of Australia could support 162 head of cattle and be methane neutral. That figure is derived by dividing the amount of methane said to be absorbed by a hectare of land (8,760kg) by the methane emissions per cow (54kg).  That is:

  • 8,760kg/54kg = 162

The research was subsequently reported by Adam Sacks on the US environmental website Grist on 31 January, 2010. [25]

Sacks wrote, ” . . . one cow’s worth of healthy land actually absorbs one hundred times the methane emitted by that cow in any given year”.

Sacks also wrote: “The current orthodoxy tells us that because of digestive methane emissions, raising animals for food is a global warming problem, not solution.  This is true given current practice: crowded feedlots with grain-fed, drugged cattle and manure lagoons on devastated lands, shipped long distances. “

That sounds very much like Bill McKibben (to repeat my paraphrase): “If we want to reduce emissions from animal agriculture, we need to move away from factory farming, adopt a modified form of grazing, and buy locally.”

In response to queries from Australian author and mathematician Geoff Russell (also referred to earlier), Sacks said that the source used for his article was an article in the Australian newspaper of 26 October, 2009, titled “A hiccup in the cow burp theory“. [26]

Sacks wrote, “A recent study points to oxidation of 8,760 kg per hectare per year – whereas a cow emits something in the neighborhood 54 kg per cow per year (i.e., 162 cows/hectare).”

Russell referred to the Grist and Australian articles in his article “Balancing carbon with smoke and mirrors” of 31 July, 2010 on the Brave New Climate website. He had been in touch with Professor Mark Adams, following which it seems the error in the calculations was discovered. [27]

A figure in micrograms had mistakenly been represented as milligrams within the calculations, meaning that the original “preliminary research” had overstated the relevant land’s methane absorption rate by a factor of 1,000. The result was that the high country soil’s methane oxidisation rate was only 8.76 kg per hectare per year, rather than 8,760 kg.

That hectare of land would not support 162 cows in a carbon neutral manner, but 0.162 of a cow. That is:

  • 8.76kg/54kg = 0.162 (Corrected)

Matt Cawood reported the error in The Land on 16 July, 2010 [28]. He said, “Dr Robert Simpson, a post-doctoral research fellow who supplied the corrected values, said the methane oxidation rate measured by University researchers is actually 8.75 kilograms per hectare per year.”

The reference to a figure of 8,750kg in that article, compared to the original figure of 8,760kg, was not explained. However the difference is immaterial, and still generates a figure of 162 head of cattle per hectare.

Despite the error being discovered, the myth has lived on. As recently as 20th March, 2012, agricultural scientist Fiona Chambers said in a debate at a packed Melbourne Town Hall in Australia (commencing at around the 22 minute mark) [29]:

“Research undertaken recently at Sydney University has shown that just one hectare of pasture has enough potential for these methane-loving bacteria to actually extract methane out of the environment that could be produced by 162 head of cattle. Now that’s more than you could run on a hectare, so it makes it methane-neutral.”

The host organisation’s website confirms that Ms Chambers is a lecturer at Marcus Oldham Agricultural College in Geelong. She holds a Diploma of Applied Science in agriculture, specialising in animal health, nutrition and genetics and is undertaking a Master of Animal Breeding Management at Sydney University. [30]

At the end of the debate, the then Executive Director of climate change campaign group, Beyond Zero Emissions, Matthew Wright challenged Chambers on the veracity of the research by suggesting it had not been peer-reviewed. She confirmed that she had not seen a peer-reviewed journal article supporting the research. [31] However, the problems with the research went much further than Matthew Wright had indicated, as he did not refer to the massive over-statement of the soil’s methane absorbing capacity.

2.3 Manure Management

As referred to earlier, McKibben asked the following in relation to bison and antelope roaming across North America in earlier times:

“Why wasn’t their manure giving off great quantities of atmosphere-altering gas?”

Any soil’s supposed ability to absorb methane will have relatively little impact on overall greenhouse gas concentrations to the extent that those concentrations relate to gases emitted by manure. The first reason is that the amount of methane emitted by manure is very small compared to the amount emitted through enteric fermentation. For example, in Australia in 2011, emissions from manure management represented 3.9% of reported agricultural emissions, compared to enteric fermentation 65.1%. Methane represented just over half of the manure management emissions, with the balance being nitrous oxide. [32]

Emissions from agricultural soils (17.8%) and prescribed burning of savannas (12.3%) accounted for most of the remaining emissions. Animal agriculture has previously been reported to be responsible for nearly 60% of savanna-burning emissions. [33]

2.4 Fencing

McKibben suggests that the key technology in adopting alternative grazing practices is the single strand electric fence, for improved control of cattle. Here are some thoughts from Gerard Wedderburn-Bisshop on that issue from the TED website, in response to Allan Savory’s presentation:

“What Savory does not mention is that intensive (cell) grazing is only viable where water points are close and labour is cheap. Temporary or permanent fencing is labour intensive, moving herds daily requires far more labour input than most operations can afford.”

Wedderburn-Bisshop is a former Principal Scientist with the Queensland Government Department of Environment and Resources Management Remote Sensing Centre. He was responsible for assessing and monitoring vegetation cover, structure and trend across the state. This involved leading a team of remote sensing scientists to develop satellite monitoring methods to cover an area of 1.7 million square kilometres each year.  He is currently a Director and Lead Scientist with the World Preservation Foundation and a researcher on Beyond Zero Emission’s Land Use Plan as part of its ZCA2020 project.

2.5 Native Grasslands and Mimicking Natural Processes

McKibben talks of “old-school ungulates” continually moving in order to avoid predators. He has stated that the grasslands they grazed “covered places that don’t get much rain”, including Australia. However, Australia “is the only continent other than Antarctica to NOT have native hoofed animals”, so those “old-school ungulates” did not exist there in the timeframe being considered by McKibben. [34]

In any event, his suggestion of “mimicking those systems with cows” is verging on the absurd when one considers the massive discrepancy between animal populations in earlier times and livestock numbers now, as referred to it item 2.1.

2.6 The critical role of reforestation and soil carbon

If we are to have any chance of reaching McKibben’s 350 ppm target, then we must objectively and realistically address the issues of reforestation and soil carbon. The essential role of those factors in achieving the target is demonstrated in this image from Hansen’s “Target Atmospheric CO2: Where Should Humanity Aim?” paper.

Figure 4: CO2 Emissions and Atmospheric Concentration with Coal Phaseout by 2030

Hansen-chart-amended-sharpened024-Jul-2013

By the time the 350 ppm target could be achieved with action on land clearing and soil carbon (around 2090 based on IPCC’s estimates of oil and gas reserves and assuming an end to non-sequestered coal use by 2030), it would fall short at around 380 ppm if we were to ignore those factors. If we did so, then the target would not be achieved until well beyond 2150.

To rely on an approach lacking scientific credibility, such as Allan Savory’s, would be a grossly irresponsible step at this critical point in the history of climate change.

[Please see Note 3 below, being a postscript regarding additional articles commenting on Allan Savory’s work.]

3. Factory Farming

In his Orion Magazine article, McKibben stated (with my bold highlights):

Industrial livestock production is essentially indefensible—ethically, ecologically, and otherwise. We now use an enormous percentage of our arable land to grow corn that we feed to cows who stand in feedlots and eructate until they are slaughtered . . . We should simply stop eating factory-farmed meat and the effects on climate change would be but one of the many benefits.”

He refers to feedlots, with cattle fed on corn, along with cattle standing still “in big western federal allotments overgrazing the same tender grass”, as factory farming. He seems to ignore the impact of traditional grazing (including the related enteric fermentation) and grazing-related land-clearing and soil emissions. Those factors are related to (amongst others) the gross and inherent inefficiency of animals as a food source. For example, we currently use far more land due to grazing (and feed crop production) than would be the case if plant nutrition was accessed directly, rather than via the digestive systems of animals.

In Australia, feedlots represent only a small percentage of the beef industry. According to the Australian Lot Feeders Association, “The Australian beef feedlot industry plays a complementary role to the larger extensive grass fed cattle sector given that feedlot cattle spend 85-90% of their lives in a pasture based environment.” [35]

Despite the relatively small role of feedlots, as mentioned earlier and in my “Omissions of Emissions” article, the livestock sector is estimated by Beyond Zero Emissions to be responsible for around 50% of Australia’s total greenhouse gas emissions. That figure is significant for a country that, even using more conservative estimates of livestock’s impact, vies with the United States for the highest per capita emissions among developed nations.

Even in the United States, beef industry feedlots are generally only used for the final 3-5 months of an animal’s typical 15-24 month lifespan.

It is important to note that cattle emit considerably more methane when consuming grass than when consuming grain. Professor Gidon Eshel of Bard College, Annandale-on-Hudson, New York has reported, “since grazing animals eat mostly cellulose-rich roughage while their feedlot counterparts eat mostly simple sugars whose digestion requires no rumination, the grazing animals emit two to four times as much methane”. [36]

In 2007, writing in the medical journal The Lancet, a team of international health experts led by Australian National University professor Tony McMichael warned that the world’s growing appetite for meat was increasing greenhouse gas emissions as (amongst other problems) vast areas of rainforest were bulldozed for grazing land.

In its article on the Lancet report, The Age newspaper in Melbourne provided the following estimated breakdown of livestock-related greenhouse gas emissions [37]:

  • Deforestation and desertification 35.4%
  • Manure 30.5%
  • Methane emissions, mainly burping 25.0%
  • Artificial fertilisers 3.4%
  • On-farm fossil fuel use 1.2%
  • Other 3.6%

4. Food Miles

At the Melbourne Q&A session, McKibben said that one of the most important measures for reducing the climate change impact of animal agriculture was to buy locally. He said that when he is home, he tries to eat nothing produced outside the valley in which he lives.

In his Orion Magazine article, he referred to “the truck exhaust from shipping cows hither and yon”.

Is his concern over transportation vindicated by the evidence?

A comprehensive study of the emissions intensity of different food products in Sweden was undertaken by Annika Carlsson-Kanyama and Alejandro Gonzalez in 2009, and published in The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. [38] The study authors are from the Division of Industrial Ecology, Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, Sweden, and the Research Institute on Biodiversity and Environment (Inibioma-Conicet), Bariloche, Argentina respectively.

Emissions intensity represents the kilograms of greenhouse gas emissions per kilogram of product.

The study included a wide range of foods, including legumes, fruit and vegetables, commodities which are often overlooked in reports on  this subject. It  included CO2-e emissions  involved  in  farming,  transportation, processing, retailing, storage and preparation.

A key point from the study was that beef is the least climate efficient way to produce protein, less efficient than vegetables that are not recognised for their high protein content, such as green beans and carrots. Its emissions intensity (“Beef: domestic, fresh, cooked”) is 30, as shown in the following chart, which compares it to various other products:

Figure 5: Emissions Intensity of specified food products

Emissions-Intensity-Sweden-24-Jul-2013-sharpened

As a comparison, in 2003, the Australian Greenhouse Office reported a figure of 51.7kg for beef [39]. That figure was based on carcass weight. As only around 55% of a carcass is used for meat, the figure for beef based on a kilogram of served meat at that time would have been approximately 94 kg. The level of livestock-related land clearing has since reduced. Taking those factors into account, the Carbon Neutral group in Perth, Western Australia, has more recently estimated an emissions intensity figure for beef of 30.9.

Further comparisons are as follows, along with beef for ease of reference (with reference numbers in brackets):

Wheat and other grains: 0.4 [39]
Fruit and vegetables: 0.48855 [40]
Potatoes (Domestic, cooked): 0.45 [38]
Rice (Cooked): 1.3 [38]
Soy beans (Transported by boat and cooked): 0.92 [38]
Beef (Domestic, fresh, cooked): 30 [38]

So what is the contribution of transport to a product’s greenhouse gas emissions? Here’s what Carlsson-Kanyama and Gonzalez said on that matter:

“ . . .  to obtain emissions at Swedish household consumption level, the emissions from transport, packing, storage, retailing, and cooking are added considering their corresponding losses in the food chain. For example, land and sea transport accounts for 0.32 kg CO2/kg soy when transport overseas is included.”

The transportation component will be determined generally by weight, so its contribution should be the same for a kilogram of beef as for a kilogram of soy. In this case, unlike soy, there appears to be no sea transport involved in the beef figure. In the absence of a more precise figure, let’s assume that beef’s transport-related emissions per kilogram of product are the same as those of soy, even though they are likely to be less.

On that basis, of beef’s 30kg of emissions, around 0.32kg (1.1%) comes from transportation.

Figure 6: Beef’s emissions intensity including transportation (kg)

Beef-transporation-emissions-chart

Air transportation adds considerably to the emissions intensity of a product, but that was not a factor in the beef referred to in the Swedish study. The following extracts deal with that issue, and add further light on the extremely favourable results for plant products.

“For vegetables and fruits, emissions usually are less than or equal to 2.5 kg CO2 equivalents/kg product, even if there is a high degree of processing and substantial transportation. Products transported by plane are an exception because emissions may be as large as for certain meats.”

“Emissions from foods rich in carbohydrates, such as potatoes, pasta, and wheat, are less than 1.1 kg/kg edible food.”

“Plant foods based on vegetables, cereals, and legumes present the lowest GHG [greenhouse gas] emissions with the exception of those transported by airplanes.”

“Animal products, including dairy, are associated with higher GHG emissions than plant-based products, with the highest emissions occurring in meats from ruminants.”

On the basis of these findings, McKibben’s concerns over transportation are ill-founded relative to what seems to be a lack of concern over certain other aspects of animal agriculture’s impact.

Another Issue: Health

McKibben said in his Orion Magazine article: “Oh, and grass-fed beef is apparently much better for you – full of Omega 3s, like sardines that moo.”

Whether it comes from grass-fed or grain-fed cows, beef is responsible for serious health problems. My article “If you think it’s healthy to eat animals, perhaps you should think again” reported on the links between consumption of animals and cancer, heart disease, diabetes and other ailments, as documented by the likes of Harvard University, Cornell University, The World Cancer Research Fund and The National Cancer Institute. Red meat featured prominently in the findings. [41]

Conclusion

Without focussing on animal agriculture in addition to fossil fuels and other contributors to climate change, we will not overcome the crisis that we have created. Bill McKibben, like other prominent climate change campaigners, must not ignore what may be the most inconvenient truth of all.

Notes:

1. None of the information in this article is intended to represent health, medical, dietary, nutritional or similar advice.

2. Bill McKibben’s tour of Australia was part of his “Do the Math” campaign. For Australian audiences, the local term “Maths” was used.

3. Postscript 14th August, 2013: Two additional articles commenting on Allan Savory’s work have come from Robert Goodland (referred to above) and James McWilliams. Goodland’s article is “Meat, Lies & Videotape (a Deeply Flawed TED Talk)” from Planetsave, 26th March, 2013, while McWilliams has written “All Sizzle and No Steak: Why Allan Savory’s TED talk about how cattle can reverse global warming is dead wrong“, published on Slate, 22nd April, 2013. Included in the McWilliams article are these comments about algal growth and desertification, a key aspect of Savory’s TED presentation: “Further weakening Savory’s argument for the wholesale application of holistic management to the world’s deserts is his distorted view of desert ecology. There are two basic kinds of deserts: genuinely degraded landscapes in need of revival and ecologically thriving ones best left alone. Proof that Savory fails to grasp this basic distinction comes when, during his talk, he calls desert algae crust (aka “cryptobiotic crust”) a “cancer of desertification” that represses grasses and precipitate runoff.  The thing is desert algae crust, as desert ecologists will attest, is no cancer. Instead, it’s the lush hallmark of what Ralph Maughan, director of the Western Watersheds Project, calls ‘a complete and ancient ecosystem‘. According to the U.S. Geological Survey, ‘Crusts generally cover all soil spaces not occupied by green plants. In many areas, they comprise over 70 percent of the living ground cover and are key in reducing erosion, increasing water retention, and increasing soil fertility’. Savory, whose idea of a healthy ecosystem is one with plenty of grass to feed cattle, neglects the less obvious flora – such as, in addition to algae crust, blackbrush, agaves, and creosote – that cattle tend to trample, thereby reducing the desert’s natural ability to sequester carbon on its own terms. ‘It is very important,’ Maughan writes, ‘that this carbon storage not be squandered trying to produce livestock.'”

4. Postscript 1st February, 2014: Another article criticising Allan Savory’s TED presentation was published on the Real Climate website on 4th November, 2013. Real Climate “is a commentary site on climate science by working climate scientists for the interested public and journalists.” The article, from ecosystem scientists  Jason West and David Briske and titled Cows, Carbon and the Anthropocene: Commentary on Savory TED Video“, stated: “It is important to recognize that Mr. Savory’s grazing method, broadly known as holistic management, has been controversial for decades. . . . We focus here on the most dramatic claim that Mr. Savory made regarding the reversal of climate change through holistic management of grasslands. . . . While it is understandable to want to believe that such a dramatic outcome is possible, science tells us that this claim is simply not reasonable. The massive, ongoing additions of carbon to the atmosphere from human activity far exceed the carbon storage capacity of global grasslands.” (This note was added as a postscript to my article Livestock and climate: Why Allan Savory is not a saviour on 26th December, 2013.)

Blog Author: Paul Mahony (also on Twitter, Slideshare and Sribd)

Main Image: Poppy and Jarrah hold a 350 kick-board at the Great Barrier Reef | 350.org

Footnote 1 re Main Image: Increasing CO2 concentrations are adversely affecting coral reefs due to warming ocean temperatures and ocean acidification. Cattle grazing is also affecting the Great Barrier Reef off Queensland, Australia.

The journal Water Science and Technology has reported on the impact of run-off from areas used for cattle grazing to the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park (GBRMP) [42]:

“Grazing of cattle for beef production is the largest single land use on the catchment with cropping, mainly of sugarcane, and  urban/residential development considerably less in areal extent. Beef cattle numbers are approximately 4,500,000, with the highest stock numbers in the Fitzroy catchment.”

“Beef grazing on the large, dry catchments adjacent to the GBRMP (in particular the Burdekin and Fitzroy catchments) has involved extensive tree clearance and over-grazing during drought conditions. As a result, widespread soil erosion and the export of the eroded material into the GBR has occurred, and is continuing.”

Footnote 2: Various biomass figures have been removed due to difficulties in establishing accuracy.

References:

[1] Hansen, J. “Storms of my Grandchildren”, Bloomsbury, 2009, p. 140, http://www.bloomsbury.com/us/storms-of-my-grandchildren-9781608192571/

[2] Hansen, J; Sato, M; Kharecha, P; Beerling, D; Berner, R; Masson-Delmotte, V; Pagani, M; Raymo, M; Royer, D.L.; and Zachos, J.C. “Target Atmospheric CO2: Where Should Humanity Aim?”, 2008. http://www.columbia.edu/~jeh1/2008/TargetCO2_20080407.pdf

[3] McKibben, Bill, “The only way to have a cow”, Orion Magazine, Mar/Apr 2010, http://www.orionmagazine.org/index.php/articles/article/5339/

[4] Goodland, R & Anhang, J, “Livestock and Climate Change – What if the key actors in climate change are cows, pigs, and chickens?”, World Watch, Nov/Dec, 2009, pp 10-19, http://www.worldwatch.org/files /pdf/Livestock%20and%20Climate%20Change.pdf

[5] Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, 2006 “Livestock’s Long Shadow – Environmental Issues and Concerns”, Rome

[6] Gates, Bill, “Food is Ripe for Innovation”, Mashable, 22 Mar 2013, http://mashable.com/2013/03/21/bill-gates-future-of-food/

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[39] George Wilkenfeld & Associates Pty Ltd and Energy Strategies, National Greenhouse Gas Inventory 1990, 1995, 1999, End Use Allocation of Emissions Report to the Australian Greenhouse Office, 2003 (Table S5, p. vii)

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