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Changes to food system needed to slow global warming

| 5 min read

UC Santa Barbara – Changes to world agricultural production will be needed to slow global warming, as reducing the usage of fossil fuels will not be enough to meet targets, according to research from the University of California, Santa Barbara (UCSB). Reductions in meat consumption and fertilizer usage were two of the strategies highlighted in the study.

While burning fossil fuels accounts for the majority of greenhouse gas emissions, stopping the burning of all fossil fuels would not be enough to meet the Paris Climate Agreement and keep world temperatures from rising by 1.5 to 2 degrees Celsius above preindustrial levels.

Even in the absence of fossil fuels, cumulative greenhouse gas emissions could still cause global temperatures to exceed climate change targets in just a few decades, according to a paper published in the journal Science by UCSB ecology professor David Tilmon and colleagues.

“Global food demand and the greenhouse gases associated with it are on a trajectory to push the world past the one-and-a-half degree goal, and make it hard to stay under the two degree limit,” said Tilman, who holds a dual appointment at UCSB’s Bren School of Environmental Science & Management and at the University of Minnesota.

The world’s growing population as well as its diet are driving food production practices that generate and release massive and increasing amounts of carbon dioxide, methane and other greenhouse gases into the atmosphere. According to the paper, left unchecked, agricultural emissions alone could exceed the 1.5°C limit by about 2050.

These findings are especially concerning given that we haven’t stopped using fossil fuels, Tilman said. And with a 1°C average increase in global temperature since 1880, there is only a slim margin before global warming results in widespread sea level rise, ocean acidification, biodiversity loss and other effects that will change life as we know it.

“All it would take for us to exceed the two degree warming limit is for food emissions to remain on their path and one additional year of current fossil fuel emissions,” Tilman said. “And I guarantee you, we’re not going to stop fossil fuel emissions in a year.”

Reducing the emissions from food production, “will likely be essential” to keeping the planet livable in its current state, according to the scientists.

“It’s well known that agriculture releases about 30% of all greenhouse gases,” Tilman said. Major sources include deforestation and land clearing, fertilizer overuse and gassy livestock, all of which are increasing as the global population increases. In “high-yield” countries such as the U.S., which have the benefit of large scale modern agriculture, intensive animal farming and heavy-handed fertilizer use are major contributors of greenhouse gases.

Meanwhile, in “low yield” countries such as those in sub-Saharan Africa, population growth and increasing affluence are driving demand for more food, and toward more “urban” diets that are richer in meat and meat products, said Tilman.

“Their demand for food is going up, but the farmers don’t have the resources to have high yields, so they just clear more and more land,” he said.

And yet, it isn’t as though we can just stop producing food, which is perhaps the main reason why agricultural emissions have received less attention than fossil fuels as a target for reduction, according to the researchers.

“You can’t look at agriculture as if we can somehow get rid of it,” said Tilman, whose research focuses on the environmental impacts of agriculture, as well as the links between diet, environment and health. “We need it; it’s essential for society.”

But, according to the paper’s authors, global warming does not have to be an unavoidable impact of feeding the world. Through early and widespread adoption of several feasible food system strategies, it is possible to limit emissions from agriculture in a way that keeps us from exceeding the 2°C limit by the end of the century while feeding a growing population.

Eat less meat

The most effective, according to the paper, is a switch toward more plant-rich diets, which reduce the demand for beef and other ruminant meats. That, in turn, reduces the pressure to clear for grazing land or produce the grains and grasses (more farming, more fertilizer) required to feed them.

“We’re not saying these diets have to be vegetarian or vegan,” Tilman said. Widespread reduction of red meat consumption to once a week and having protein come from other sources such as chicken or fish, while increasing fruits and vegetables, in conjunction with decreasing fossil fuel use, could help keep the planet livably cool in the long run.

Ease up on fertilizer.

“Many countries have high yields because from 1960 until now they have been using more and more fertilizer,” he said. “But recent research has shown that almost all of these countries are actually using much more than they need to attain the yield they have.” A drop of roughly 30% in fertilizer use would not only save the farmer money for the same yield, it prevents the release of nitrous oxide that occurs when excess fertilizer goes unused.

“About 40% of all future climate warming from agriculture may come from nitrous oxide from fertilizer,” Tilman added. “So adding the right amount of fertilizer has a large benefit for climate change and would save farmers money.”

Other strategies the researchers explored included adjusting global per capita calorie consumption to healthy levels; improving yields to help meet demand where it may reduce the pressure to clear more land; and reducing food waste by half.

“The nice thing is that we can do each of these things sort of halfway and still solve the problem,” Tilman said. The sooner we employ these strategies, the closer we can get to keeping the Earth cool and avoiding the wholesale changes we would have to adopt if we wait too much longer, he added.

“I’m optimistic,” he said. “We have a viable path for achieving global environmental sustainability and better lives for all of us.”