We are
exposed to a virtual torrent of contradictory data and statements about the
contribution of food and agriculture to global warming. Depending on what you
count and how you count, tree-huggers, vegans, biofuelers, proponents of organic,
locavores, industrial agriculture, free-traders, the fertilizer industry, regenerative
ranching and others can present figures defending their case.
There are
several reasons for why figures differ. Sometimes it is simply because
uncertainties are big when we discuss biological system and depending on
methodology and assumptions results will
differ. This
is particularly the case for methane and nitrous oxide emissions, where figures
used mostly are guesstimates built on crude models. In addition, in the
climate debate, only anthropogenic emissions “count”, despite the fact that all
emissions have the same effect and that the classification is much less
straight forward than mostly understood. The methane emissions from a wetland which is
converted to rice production will suddenly become anthropogenic even if the methane
emissions might have been even higher earlier.
Local and
global figures are often mixed up. While
in absolute numbers, emissions from the food chain is considerably higher in rich
industrial countries, their share of emissions is much lower than in poor
countries, where food emissions can be more than half of all emissions. Another
example is when global figures for emissions of livestock enters domestic
debates and livestock emissions suddenly equals emissions from “meat”. But livestock
provide people with many
other goods, services and values than meat (milk, leather, skin, horn, savings
account, draught power, building materials, wool, fuel, cultural meaning etc.).
Media likes
graphs where emissions from food are compared with emissions from transport.
But the figure for “food” might include every step and aspect of food
production up to final consumption, or even include the waste, while the figure
for “transport” only include emissions from the exhaust pipe and not the
emissions to build roads, cars, garages nor emissions included in maintenance
and repair, tires, lubricants, car washes etc. Mostly it doesn’t even include
the massive emissions involved in extracting and processing petroleum oil into
diesel or gasoline.
Sometimes
emissions for agriculture include changes in land use caused by deforestation
and loss of carbon from soils. While this has some merit it is inconsistently
done and it is not at all clear for how long period the emissions should be
counted for. When it is translated into statements of emissions per kg of a
certain product, be it palm oil, soybeans, cocoa or cattle meat it makes all
difference if the emissions are distributed over one year, twenty, hundred or
more years. This application recently reached a new high when a group of
researchers developed a “carbon
benefit index” which relates all land based production to a global average potential
carbon storage in forests. The index gives land use such a prominence that it basically
overpowers any other greenhouse gas emission factor. Using their index, land
use of the average European’s food cause much more emissions than all their
other emissions counted together. The net result of this is that further
intensification of land use with more inputs is the way ahead, and that we don’t
have to bother much about fossil fuels if we just produce more per land unit
and plant forests on what ever land that is spared.
Mostly,
calculations for agriculture are used to discuss food. In average, farm
production has the heaviest footprint of all steps in the food chain, but the
total emissions post farm are substantial, possibly
as big as the totals on farms. But emissions differ depending on whether a
product is cooled or frozen, airfreighted, heavily processed or just a dried
stuff like nuts or flour. Then again, when it comes to preparation you mostly
eat nuts as they are or just lightly crushed, but flour is mostly made into
bread, and baking is very energy consuming.
The figures
for agriculture are calculated in many different ways. In the IPCC methodology
most of the emission sources from agriculture operations are not included in
the agriculture sector emissions (and IPCC has no “food” category). Recent
research, Chinese cropping systems are a net source of greenhouse gases despite
soil carbon sequestration, by Gao
et al 2018 published in Global Change Biology came to the conclusion that the
16 most prominent production systems, comprising some 85 % of Chinese cropping
cause a total of half a billion tons of greenhouse gas emissions annually. The
major sources were nitrogen fertilizers (30%) methane emissions from cropland,
mainly paddy rice (26%) and irrigation (20%). Other sources of emissions were irrigation,
fuel for tractors and other machinery, pesticides, and plastic films in
horticulture (see graph). Of the total emissions, only methane emissions from
paddy rice and nitrous oxide emission from land and manure are part of IPCC’s “agriculture”
emissions. Two thirds of the emissions from Chinese cropping are thus not
counted under “agriculture” in the IPCC methodology. They all fall under
“industry”, “power generation” or any other category. The transportation
involved in farming for inputs and outputs (not included in the Chinese figures
either) are also not included but booked under “transport”. Essentially this
means that no CO2 emissions at all are attributed to farming in
the IPCC classification, but only methane and nitrous oxide. This
also means that livestock’s share of agriculture emissions is grossly
exaggerated and that the opportunities to reduce agriculture emissions through
de-carbonization is neglected.
Conclusion?
With these
conditions in mind it is apparent that almost any interest group can use the
climate argument to promote their vision of the future food and agriculture
system, just by selecting the right parameters. Media and climate activists
should be much more critical to new research and claims that one method or one
food is superior (or inferior).
We need to adopt
a much broader and systems-oriented perspective on our food systems. They are a
part of a number of human socio-ecological systems with multiple functions. We
should be wary of simplistic global solutions for reducing the food systems
climate impact. There are hotspots and levers to consider, such as ruminants’
methane emissions, land use, global trade, synthetic nitrogen fertilizers, cool
chains, fossil fuels in all its functions in the food system and food waste. To
focus only on one of them is mostly mistaken.
Being a grower and farmer since forty years, I am inclined to look to the soil, the microbes, the plants and the animals for guidance, and build a sustainable food system from the bottom up. I believe we already know, by and large, how such a farming system will look like. Recognizing the immense challenge of global warming, there is certainly a need for a top-down approach as well. For me, reducing the use of fossil fuels and nitrogen fertilizers are the primary candidates for policy driven reductions of greenhouse gas emissions from the food system. That will have cascading effects and influence the global trading system, nutrient cycles and diets, and make the transition to local food systems easier. Will it suffice? Will it happen? I have no idea.
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