Why eat less meat?
Eating lower on the food chain is probably
the single most important thing you can do to help the environment. If the
whole world stopped driving cars and SUVs, shipping goods in tractor trailers,
flying planes, sending freighters across the ocean and all other transportation
activity, it wouldn't do as much as if we all just stopped eating beef.
Livestock
accounts for 18% of the world's greenhouse gas emissions, according to the
United Nations. That includes clearing land for grazing, raising grains for feed
(often with the help of fossil fuel fertilizers) -- and the not insignificant burping of cows.
All the fertilizer and pesticides used to grow grain, the antibiotics and
hormones (often) used to speed up livestock growth on feed lots and the copious
manure all add to the environmental impact of raising livestock.
When
you do eat meat, look for ethically raised animals, raised locally on natural diets
whenever possible.
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