January is generally the time to guilt-trip yourself into making new year’s resolutions, promising this time you’ll be a better human.
This often means giving up drinking or giving up sugar; and the latest craze, “Veganuary”, means going vegan for the month of January.
The movement has more than 370,000 people formally signed up worldwide, which made Crikey wonder: just what would happen to Australia’s economy if every resident suddenly gave up meat, eggs and dairy?
Exactly how much would it benefit the climate, and how much would it hurt the collective hip pocket?
What would happen to the farmers?
Farming is big business. The agriculture sector represents around 3% of gross domestic product and is worth around $59 billion (crops and livestock have almost equal value).
So if we decided to ditch the burgers, sausages and steaks, what would happen to the cows and the money that they bring in? According to Deakin University research fellow Dr Michalis Hadjikakou: nothing much. We’d just ship it abroad.
“The agriculture sector is export-driven, with 65% of what is produced exported rather than consumed domestically,” he told Crikey. A good price in the global market, coupled with high demand in Asian markets for Australian livestock, means “there’s still an incentive to continue livestock production”.
And as Australian production isn’t overwhelmingly huge, there’s little risk of flooding the market and lowering the price.
Would farm unemployment increase?
Agriculture, Forestry and Fishing employ 2.5% of the workforce, with most working as livestock and crop farmers/workers. There are 78,700 livestock farmers alone.
Farmers aren’t likely to give up their livestock just because domestic demand drops. But what if there was some incentive to stop farming animals — say, if the government put a cap on livestock to reduce greenhouse gas emissions? Farmers’ focus would have to shift.
“We still need to meet the demand for food,” Hadjikakou said. “There’d be more demand for other products such as plant-based protein.”
But it’s not as simple as switching from cows to crops. “Land quality and suitability differ tremendously,” he said. A paddock might not have fertile soil, and farmers could find themselves unemployed if their land isn’t suitable for anything but grazing.
Equally importantly, a farmer might not have the skills and resources to switch from one product to another. “There’s training costs, infrastructure such as irrigation and changes in the main inputs to production,” Hadjikakou said. “The agricultural system is so complex with so many intertwined flows and processes. Taking livestock out of the equation means everything would need to be reconfigured.”
What about the nation’s health?
Let’s not sugarcoat it: almost everything we eat is coated in sugar. Two-thirds of Australian adults are overweight or obese. It’s a key risk factor for preventable disease, and one factor (of many) which contributes to this is how much meat we eat.
The average Aussie eats 95kg of meat each year, well above the OECD average of 69kg. Given that a lot of this is in the form of high-calorie and carcinogenic processed meat, it’s not good for our health.
But, according to Professor in Nutrition and Dietetics at the University of Newcastle Clare Collins, the entire country turning vegan would actually be worse for public health. From osteoporosis to anemia to terrible immunity, Collins said the health costs would skyrocket.
“You’d need to check people more rigorously for [nutrient deficiencies in calcium, iron, B12 and iodine],” she said. Calcium deficiencies lead to low bone density; a lack of the others leads to lethargy, impaired brain function, muscle weakness and low immunity.
“If you’re going to go vegan, do it amazingly well,” Collins said. But, given Australians can’t even stick to the Australian Dietary Guidelines (which let’s be honest, are pretty straightforward), there’s no way most of us would be able to successfully navigate a healthy vegan lifestyle.
Would the earth benefit?
This is a tricky one. Generally yes, cutting meat is good for the environment. Some studies estimate that vegan diets would cut food-related emissions by 70%, and the CSIRO found that eating vegan proteins generated $3.1 billion in environmental savings to emissions, water and land use in Australia in 2018.
But if we’re replacing meat with rice, almond milk or even cereal, we’re not doing the planet any favours. Rice farming is a major contributor to climate change, using ludicrous amounts of water and producing methane and nitrous oxide. It’s estimated that global rice farming has the same effect on global warming as 1200 coal power plants.
Popular vegan butter brand Nuttelex uses palm oil in most of its products, the procurement of which often involves mass deforestation and the endangerment of orangutans; one litre of almond milk requires 6098 litres of water to produce; in-demand products like quinoa are shipped in from around the world; and wheat fertiliser produces a huge amount of greenhouse gases.
But meat is worse. Livestock decimates the soil, crapping out all the chemicals and antibiotics fed to them; trees are razed to make room for them, exterminating local wildlife; and a single cow farts and burps out between 70kg and 120kg of methane a year.
So, yes, going vegan is good for the planet — provided you’re eating plenty of locally produced fruits, veggies and legumes. But real, lasting change isn’t quite as simple as everyone going cold turkey.
Just some things to put out there. Meat is supposed to be a part of the human diet. We need that protein, B12 etc. To replace it as was pointed out here is really hard.
We definitely have to eat less red meat in particular, and cattle definitely can do harm. But mainly when they are in the wrong place. Cattle that free range don’t have the same methane problems as feedlot. There are also trials of feeding cattle to produce less methane. In the right place they fertilise and provide a lot their own feed. Australians don’t seem to register just how many feedlots we have. Cattle can be circular. We already use many meat by productions. Leather is a big one. What will producing all the pleather needed to replace leather cost the planet. ???
Our desire for all things that aren’t actually milk is leading to the extinction of bees. In fact all this single product farming is causing a collapse of insects everywhere. What palm oil is doing to the planet is terrifying.
It’s not what we eat so much as how we produce it, which is badly.
If we have to go into the laboratory for our food something is very, very wrong. !!
Dead right.
So much of the criticism of meat eating is cut-and-paste from North America. As are so many of our fads. It’s imbecilic (seriously) to imagine that ideology, compassion, climate science or virtue-signalling can guide us in any way as to the best diet for our particular form of the mammalian physiology.
And, as you say meat eating as such does no harm to the environment; it’s the type of food production that is the problem.
I eat about 40kg of kangaroo and venison annually (shot by me or my family + occasional road kill). Where’s the environmental harm in that?
Be Australian. In Australia eat Australian grass-fed red meat with a clear conscience.
And, just a thought. Why do we need milk at all? Either plant based or animal based, I can’t understand why adult humans require baby animal juice or a plant based liquid that mimics it? Get soy milk for your cafe’latte if needed or grow a pair and have black coffee or tea like the real experts.
Soy is another of the problematic crops.
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2020/jan/07/honeybees-deaths-almonds-hives-aoe?utm_term=RWRpdG9yaWFsX0dyZWVuTGlnaHQtMjAwMTEz&utm_source=esp&utm_medium=Email&CMP=greenlight_email&utm_campaign=GreenLight
This is a brilliant article, and she copped a real hiding for it. 🙂
https://www.theage.com.au/national/thinking-of-going-vegan-for-the-new-year-think-again-20181227-p50ohk.html
80% of the world’s soybean crop is fed to livestock.
That’s a new phenomena Amy and relates directly back to how Developed Northern Hemisphere countries and some isolates have changed their agricultural practices. Livestock have always been housed throughout the Northern winters but the feed came off the farm not from a far away monoculture. We are back to the unsustainability of Industrial Agriculture as currently practiced profitable though it may be.
Which is another part of what we are doing wrong . See Johnb 🙂
Very interesting article.
Personally I find some of the claims of the benefits about moving away from meat as lacking in quality. Claim such as “replacing one weekly steak with beans saves the equivalent of 144 litres of petrol consumption a year” or “54 kilograms of fodder to produce a kilogram of beef” or “20,000 litres of water to produce a kilogram of beef” seem to be somewhat made up
It might be the case with cattle in feedlots. Which is part of the wrong way we are doing things. 🙂
It’s a superficial article that doesn’t consider the different ways that meat is produced, from feedlots to regenerative landscape management. Nor the variety of meats there are, with differing effects on environment and us. Consider how many chickens die for us and our animals every year. No these less researched articles usually focus on cattle, then sheep, never kangaroo or venison. And they assume that if it’s a plant it’s production doesn’t harm the environment.
Pity drought assistance doesn’t favour farmers prepared to take the trouble to drought proof their land, safeguarding soil and its water retaining properties. The dust that left western NSW yesterday wasn’t all kicked up by cattle.
Yes.
Matthew Evans has written a good article in a borrowed (and returned) magazine Field and Game (I think) on this topic. His conclusion is that it is better for everything from the economy to the environment to stick to eating meat. Growing crops is far more expensive and damaging to the land than free ranging animals, with details to back his argument up, unlike this article.
the same guy with the sbs cooking and farmer show from tasmania ?
Thanks for the info !!
I didn’t find that particular article , but found Mathew Evans. Yes Amark he is on SBS 🙁
He has many excellent articles this is one https://www.sbs.com.au/food/article/2016/09/12/need-ethical-omnivore?cid=inbody:do-we-eat-too-much-meat
This is another he directed me to. https://theconversation.com/ordering-the-vegetarian-meal-theres-more-animal-blood-on-your-hands-4659
As I keep saying there is sooo much more to this issue.
Nuttelex says it uses small amounts of “sustainable” palm oil in its products with the exception of its “Nuttelex with Coconut Oil” product which it claims is the only spread in Australian supermarkets not using palm oil. I mention this because as a regular customer of theirs I don’t want their products to disappear from the market.
Sustainable palm oil ? Now what does that actually mean beyond the marketing. The palm that produced this oil will be there next year and the year after ?
I’m just an ordinary grocery shopper, I don’t know what they mean. This is what Unilever says it means: https://greenpalm.org/about-palm-oil/sustainable-palm-oil
Yes, I know. Unilever. Short of giving up on spreads altogether I don’t know what an ordinary pensioner consumer can do.
Just eat a good balanced diet and if you have any medical dietary recommendations follow them as best you can is how I go about it.
Try to keep clear of heavily processed foods as generally they are marketed for profit maximisation more than nutrition from my observation. If you can avoid putting on weight as a pensioner you are doing really well, I know my activity levels are falling so burning fewer calories.
There is also a version which uses olive oil. We have it in our office fridge.
The Nuttelex website says that because they don’t use any dairy products in their spreads they have to use a little palm oil in all their spreads, otherwise the product would remain liquid. Except for their coconut oil based spread.
If it gives you pleasure using it, stick with it. It’s the small pleasures in life that increasingly count is what I have found.
ingredients found in Nuttelex Original:
Vegetable Oil (containing sunflower oil 41%), water, salt, emulsifiers (471, sunflower lecithin), natural flavour, vitamins A, D2, E, natural colour (beta carotene).
OLIVE OIL NUTTELEX: Vegetable oils 65% (olive oil 21%), water, salt, emulsifiers (471, sunflower lecithin), natural flavour, vitamins A, D2, E, natural colour (beta carotene).
NOTE: Olive oil is only 21% of the vegetable oil content. That means the remaining 79% is from one of the other sources i.e. canola oil, sunflower oil or palm oil.
NUTTELEX with Coconut Oil: Vegetable oil (containing 18% coconut oil), water, coconut oil, salt, emulsifiers [non-palm] 471 sunflower lecithin, natural flavour, vitamin D, E, natural flavour (beta carotene).
NOTE: Coconut Oil is only 18% of the vegetable oil content. That means the remaining 82% is from one of the other sources i.e. canola oil, sunflower oil or palm oil.
the amount of any fibre is not specified, their possible positive contribution to the grade could not be taken into account.
the amount of any fruits, vegetables and nuts is not specified, their possible positive contribution to the grade could not be taken into account.