Jun. 5--Opinion by Ronnie Cummins FINLAND, Minn. We are what we eat, not only in terms of our health but also the effect of our food choices on the environment. Regarding our health, the facts are clear, as any nutritionist will tell you. Most Americans are damaging their health and increasing their chances of getting cancer and heart disease by over-consuming meat and animal products, while under-consuming healthy and nutritious whole foods -- fresh fruits, vegetables, grains and beans. As health-minded consumers understand, if you are going to eat meat, consume it in moderate quantities, and limit your intake to organic products coming from healthy animals that are grass-fed and raised humanely on appropriately-scaled farms and ranches. If we need a reminder of just how important it is to raise farm animals humanely and naturally, keep in mind that the bird flu pandemic, looming ominously on the horizon, is a direct result of raising larger and larger numbers of poultry under unhealthy and inhumane conditions.
Every day, for example, several hundred chickens routinely are crammed into manure-saturated 8-by-8-foot cages on poultry farms across China and other Asian countries. Living in filthy conditions, reared on contaminated animal feed, laced with dioxin residues, antibiotics and slaughterhouse wastes; these animals are a biological time bomb waiting to explode. On the environmental and climate change front, the facts are equally clear. Unless the United States and other nations drastically reduce the amount of our climate destabilizing greenhouse gases by at least 75 percent over the next decade, our children and grandchildren will be condemned to living in a chaotic and dangerous world, where food and energy shortages will become the norm. To avoid climate chaos, Americans must change our lifestyles and diets. We must begin to 'power down' our consumption of fossil fuels, and decrease our consumption of energy and chemical intensive meat and animal products, along with highly processed and packaged convenience foods transported over long distances. In the United States today, about 25 percent of all climate destabilizing greenhouse gases come from energy-intensive, industrial-style agriculture and food processing, along with long-distance food transportation. A major factor in our energy-intensive farming system is the enormous overproduction and consumption of meat and dairy products, including the billions of pounds of soybeans and corn that are fed to these animals every year. On a conventional farm, it takes upward of 20 pounds of grain to produce one pound of meat -- as well as 12,500 gallons of water. Put simply but starkly, American livestock consume more grain than all of the humans on Earth combined. A recent study by the University of Chicago found that meat and animal products account for a full 28 percent of energy use in U.S. agriculture. In addition, belching and flatulence from our billions of cattle, pigs and chickens is a major source of methane, a potent greenhouse gas. Sixteen percent of all methane gas emitted in the world comes from livestock. Manure runoff from animal feedlots, now the dominant form of meat production in the United States, is a major source of groundwater pollution. Organic farms worldwide use 50 percent less petroleum-derived fuel and inputs than conventional farms, and the healthy soil and pastures on these farms absorb and store greenhouse gases, rather than release them into the atmosphere. We need to begin today to vote with our knives and forks to improve our health and to stabilize the climate for our children and grandchildren. Eating organic and avoiding factory-farmed meat is a good first step. global warming Ronnie Cummins is the national director of the Organic Consumers Association (www.organicconsumers.org).
Copyright (c) 2006, The Arizona Daily Star, Tucson
Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune Business
News.
For reprints, email tmsreprints@permissionsgroup.com, call 800-374-7985 or 847-635-6550, send a fax to 847-635-6968, or write to The Permissions Group Inc., 1247 Milwaukee Ave., Suite 303, Glenview, IL 60025, USA.