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Walking does more than driving to cause
global warming, a leading environmentalist has calculated.
Food production is now so energy-intensive that more carbon is
emitted providing a person with enough calories to walk to the shops
than a car would emit over the same distance. The climate could
benefit if people avoided exercise, ate less and became couch
potatoes. Provided, of course, they remembered to switch off the TV
rather than leaving it on standby.
The sums were done by Chris Goodall, campaigning author of How to
Live a Low-Carbon Life, based on the greenhouse gases created by
intensive beef production. “Driving a typical UK car for 3 miles
[4.8km] adds about 0.9 kg [2lb] of CO2 to the atmosphere,” he said,
a calculation based on the Government’s official fuel emission
figures. “If you walked instead, it would use about 180 calories.
You’d need about 100g of beef to replace those calories, resulting
in 3.6kg of emissions, or four times as much as driving.
“The troubling fact is that taking a lot of exercise and then eating
a bit more food is not good for the global atmosphere. Eating less
and driving to save energy would be better.”
Mr Goodall, Green Party parliamentary candidate for Oxford West &
Abingdon, is the latest serious thinker to turn popular myths about
the environment on their head.
Catching a diesel train is now twice as polluting as travelling by
car for an average family, the Rail Safety and Standards Board
admitted recently. Paper bags are worse for the environment than
plastic because of the extra energy needed to manufacture and
transport them, the Government says.
Fresh research published in New Scientist last month suggested that
1kg of meat cost the Earth 36kg in global warming gases. The figure
was based on Japanese methods of industrial beef production but Mr
Goodall says that farming techniques are similar throughout the
West.
What if, instead of beef, the walker drank a glass of milk? The
average person would need to drink 420ml – three quarters of a pint
– to recover the calories used in the walk. Modern dairy farming
emits the equivalent of 1.2kg of CO2 to produce the milk, still more
pollution than the car journey.
Cattle farming is notorious for its perceived damage to the
environment, based on what scientists politely call “methane
production” from cows. The gas, released during the digestive
process, is 21 times more harmful than CO2 . Organic beef is the
most damaging because organic cattle emit more methane.
Michael O’Leary, boss of the budget airline Ryanair, has been widely
derided after he was reported to have said that global warming could
be solved by massacring the world’s cattle. “The way he is running
around telling people they should shoot cows,” Lawrence Hunt, head
of Silverjet, another budget airline, told the Commons Environmental
Audit Committee. “I do not think you can really have debates with
somebody with that mentality.”
But according to Mr Goodall, Mr O’Leary may have a point. “Food is
more important [to Britain’s greenhouse emissions] than aircraft but
there is no publicity,” he said. “Associated British Foods isn’t
being questioned by MPs about energy.
“We need to become accustomed to the idea that our food production
systems are equally damaging. As the man from Ryanair says, cows
generate more emissions than aircraft. Unfortunately, perhaps, he is
right. Of course, this doesn’t mean we should always choose to use
air or car travel instead of walking. It means we need urgently to
work out how to reduce the greenhouse gas intensity of our
foodstuffs.”
Simply cutting out beef, or even meat, however, would be too modest
a change. The food industry is estimated to be responsible for a
sixth of an individual’s carbon emissions, and Britain may be the
worst culprit.
“This is not just about flying your beans from Kenya in the winter,”
Mr Goodall said. “The whole system is stuffed with energy and
nitrous oxide emissions. The UK is probably the worst country in the
world for this.
“We have industrialised our food production. We use an enormous
amount of processed food, like ready meals, compared to most
countries. Three quarters of supermarkets’ energy is to refrigerate
and freeze food prepared elsewhere.
A chilled ready meal is a perfect example of where the energy is
wasted. You make the meal, then use an enormous amount of energy to
chill it and keep it chilled through warehousing and storage.”
The ideal diet would consist of cereals and pulses. “This is a route
which virtually nobody, apart from a vegan, is going to follow,” Mr
Goodall said. But there are other ways to reduce the carbon
footprint. “Don’t buy anything from the supermarket,” Mr Goodall
said, “or anything that’s travelled too far.”
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