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"Environmentally Friendly" Food Myths Debunked

11/05/2009 10:50AM

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As consumers increasingly aim to make environmentally responsible food purchases, they need to base their decision on sound science. However, according to a presenter at the 71st Cornell Nutrition Conference held in Syracuse, N.Y., the ‘intuitively correct’ food choice is often the least environmentally friendly option.
Jude Capper, Ph.D., assistant professor of dairy sciences at Washington State University, told the audience of animal nutrition specialists that, "as a food industry, we must use a whole-system approach and assess environmental impact per gallon of milk, pound of beef or dozen eggs, not per farm or per acre." This important distinction is the basis of a ‘life-cycle assessment’ (LCA) approach, which evaluates all inputs and outputs within the food-production system, and allows us to correctly compare different production systems. The paper was co-authored by Roger Cady, Ph.D., senior technical consultant at Elanco, and Dale Bauman, Ph.D., Liberty Hyde Bailey Professor at Cornell University.

"Consumer demand for milk, meat and eggs is going to increase as the population continues to grow," Capper says. "Therefore, the vital role of improved productivity and efficiency in reducing environmental impact must be conveyed to government, food retailers and consumers."

Intuitively, today’s modern production practices often seem to have a higher environmental impact than the "idyllic" management practices of the 1940s. Nonetheless, when assessed on a whole-system basis, greenhouse gas emissions per gallon of milk produced are 63 percent lower. In 2007, the U.S. dairy industry produced 8.3 billion more gallons of milk than in 1944, but due to improved productivity, the carbon footprint of the entire dairy farm industry was reduced by 41 percent during the same time period.

Pasture- or grass-fed meat also is growing in popularity, with the perception that it is more eco-friendly than conventionally produced beef. However, the time needed to grow an animal to slaughter weight is nearly double that of animals fed corn. This means that energy use and greenhouse gas emissions per pound of beef are increased three-fold in grass-fed beef cattle. In total, finishing the current U.S. population of 9.8 million fed-cattle on pasture would require an extra 60 million acres of land. Again, the intuitively environmentally friendly option has a far higher resource and environmental cost.

Another emerging trend among American consumers is the desire to purchase food grown locally. "Often ‘locally grown’ food is thought to have a lower environmental impact than food transported over long distances due to carbon emissions from fuel," explains Capper. The phrase "Food Miles" has become a popular buzzword, defined simply as the distance that food travels from its place of origin to its place of final consumption.

="Although well-intentioned, it is incorrect to assume that the distance that food travels from point of origin to point of consumption is an accurate reflection of environmental impact," Capper says. "This simplistic approach fails to consider the productivity of the transportation system, which has tremendous impact on the energy expended per unit of food."

As an example, one dozen eggs, transported several hundred miles to a grocery store in a tractor-trailer that can carry 23,400 dozen eggs is a more fuel-efficient, eco-friendly option than a dozen eggs purchased at a farmers’ market (4.5 times more fuel used) or local farm (17.2 times more fuel used).

"The high-capacity vehicles used in modern transportation systems improve productivity, allowing food moved over long distances to be highly fuel-efficient and environmentally friendly compared to locally grown food," Capper explains.

The desire to protect the environment and to do so, in part, by altering personal behaviors, is admirable, says Capper. However, she emphasizes that those personal decisions must be based on logic rather than intuition.

"Consumers might think they are making the responsible, virtuous food choices, when, in truth, they are supporting production practices that consume more natural resources, cause greater pollution and create a larger carbon footprint than more efficient, technology-driven, conventional methods," she concludes.

The annual Cornell Nutrition Conference is held in Syracuse, N.Y., each fall and is the premier nutrition conference in the United States. To receive a copy of Capper’s paper from the 2009 Cornell Nutrition Conference, please contact: capper@wsu.edu.
4 Comments
AWANovember 17, 2009 07:27
On November 5, a “news article” appeared word-for-word across countless livestock-related websites – including Drovers, Dairy Herd, Cattle Network, AgWired, DairyLine, Beef Magazine, and so on. No journalist is cited as the author on any of the sites where it is published, an indication that the piece was not a ”news article” at all but a press release issued by an unidentified source.

Entitled “Environmentally Friendly Food Myths Debunked,” the news article provided coverage of a presentation given by Dr. Jude Capper at the 71st Cornell Nutrition Conference in October 2009. Her presentation reported findings from a recent paper co-authored with R.A. Cady and D.E. Bauman, entitled, “Demystifying the Environmental Sustainability of Food Production.”

The article quotes Dr. Capper – who is assistant professor of dairy sciences at Washington State University – as claiming that the “intuitively correct” food choice made by today’s consumers is actually often the least environmentally friendly option. The article went on to justify the paper’s position:

“Pasture- or grass-fed meat is growing in popularity, with the perception that it is more eco-friendly than conventionally produced beef. However, the time needed to grow an animal to slaughter weight is nearly double that of animals fed corn. This means that energy use and greenhouse gas emissions per pound of beef are increased three-fold in grass-fed beef cattle. Again, the intuitively environmentally friendly option has a far higher resource and environmental cost.”

Dr. Capper went on to rally the delegates present (who were mostly animal nutritionists), calling for the food industry “to use a whole-system approach and assess environmental impact per gallon of milk, pound of beef or dozen eggs, per farm or per acre.”

Read more... http://www.animalwelfareapproved.org/2009/11/16/beware-of-bad-science/
PeteNovember 06, 2009 10:09
Laughable. And you were paid to do this research?!?
BScanadaNovember 05, 2009 03:14
What kind of Bullshit is this! So you tell us that it is better to buy processed and GMO food from the Supermarket and saying that local food farmers are not the option. You either are stupid or belong to a GMO company. Fuck you!
LauraBC CanadaNovember 05, 2009 01:44
I don't agree. You're comparing only the fuel consumption. What about the manure that pollutes the waters from big meat-factories? Organic farming uses all manure to put on fields and grow vegetables..
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