Ajakirjanduse artiklid

SOCIAL HYPERSENSITIVITY TO LIVESTOCK ISSUES

In today's society, there are increasingly controversial or taboo topics, whether due to purely...
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SOCIAL HYPERSENSITIVITY TO LIVESTOCK ISSUES In today's society, there are increasingly controversial or taboo topics, whether due to purely...

In today's society, there are increasingly controversial or taboo topics, whether due to purely ideological/sociological aspects (established beliefs or dogmas) or to trends or fashions widely accepted by society on increasingly unintellectual grounds. The livestock sector is no stranger to this and has positioned itself strongly in recent times as a standard-bearer of the "environmental struggle".

Returning to the concept of anti-intellectualism, as mentioned by ASEPRHU in the article "LIVESTOCK FARMING'S FUTURE", the reality is that we are all both ignorant and experts in whatever subject. The important thing is to be aware of which of the two parts dominates our intellect. If it is the first (ignorance), we should let ourselves be guided by the second (experts), and if this ignorance is voluntary, we should step aside and not be a hindrance or a driving force in a subject of which we do not want to learn the fundamentals or principles. As for the second (experts), it is essential to listen to what the ignorant (voluntarily or not) have to say, but it is your duty to respond with arguments on the principles that govern decision-making and to make people understand that a principle or foundation is not an opinion: it is a reality.

Purebred animals. Source: RFEAGAS

Also in the field of animal husbandry, it is our duty to inform about principles and not opinions. That is why we will now list ten principles that apply in nature and that concern the ethological behaviour of animals and the laws of nature, which we as a society must be aware of in order to make decisions.

The first principle is that there is no single species (animal or plant) in any environment, i.e. we will not see a single plant or animal (with nothing else coexisting) in an ecosystem. Sterile and/or monovarietal environments are utopian in nature.

The second principle is that there are no physical boundaries other than geographical elements such as rivers, seas, mountains, cuts or barriers that are physically impassable without external action, therefore, only these barriers will act as elements that impede the free or unrestricted movement of terrestrial animals and they are the ones that have governed and will continue to govern natural cycles.

The third principle is the respect and inviolability of the biological cycle of plants and animals, so that these times must be respected if we do not want to incur unrecoverable structural or biologically based deficiencies.

The fourth principle is that without death there is no life, so that life is irretrievably linked to death (whether natural or produced). This is true for animals and plants.

The fifth principle is that, if there is a proliferation of infections/diseases/pests/parasites, it is created due to an imbalance in the environment that favours their biological cycle and therefore the multiplication of the causative agent. In animals, this cycle is broken when animals are constantly on the move, a fact that is brought about by the sixth principle of prey/predator, which we will list later. Natural selection has allowed indigenous plants and animals adapted to the environment, which are more resistant to such diseases and pests, to survive.

The sixth is the prey/predator principle - large herds close together and constantly moving in search of food and protection from the predator - which favours the breaking or slowing down of infection (no host, no parasite). In plants, continuous movement is not possible, so ecosystemic balance must be used. This principle generates movement that produces per se an animal impact on the environment of high biological value, by spreading seeds and manure in a balanced way, and creates intensive grazing (non-selective grazing) that revitalises grass growth, selects the most adapted plants or grasses and promotes biodiversity, among other direct and indirect effects.

The seventh principle is that balanced ecosystems always have an abundance of native fauna and flora, the former always having a ruminant that takes care of recycling the grass, shrub and tree (plant) mass, thanks to rumen digestion (digestion, among others, of ingested fibre) being the management model that naturally controls excess vegetation on these lands. This allows the previously digested nutrients to be returned in the form of excrement and urine and reincorporated into the soil in the form of compound molecules that will be transformed or processed by insects and bacteria to make them assimilable by plants. These will be the precursors of plant food, created thanks to the systemic function of the soil microbiota complex (bacteria and fungi) and insects (Coleoptera, Diptera, Hymenoptera and Lepidoptera).

The eighth principle is that animals have been and will continue to be the cornerstone of nature's architecture, the ones in charge of recycling excess or surplus (grasses or undergrowth), of taking advantage of waste (coprophages, scavengers) or as a model for controlling trophic imbalances (insect infestation, overpopulation).

The ninth principle is that animals neither create nor eliminate available resources or raw materials, but rather transform them into different molecules and compounds called nutrients such as carbohydrates, lipids or nitrogenous materials (including different gases due to digestion), and what is not digested or assimilated are excretions or faeces. As heterotrophic beings, animals (including humans) consume existing organic matter, whether of plant (herbivores), animal (carnivores) or mixed (omnivores) origin, to obtain energy and food for vital functions. This organic matter has been created by means of autotrophic beings (such as plants), capable of creating organic compounds by means of mineral or inorganic compounds such as carbon dioxide, air, water or soil minerals using solar energy as a source of energy.

Purebred animals. Source: RFEAGAS

The tenth and last principle that we will address is the enormous resilience that ecosystem dynamics have acquired over the centuries and millennia to reach an appropriate balance between all the actors that coexist in the same environment and have been able to adapt to it. Therefore, we must assume that nature is the expert in the matter (due to experience and seniority) and humans the ignorant (in ecosystemic terms) in the equation.

Any decision, action, dissemination at the livestock farming level should contemplate at least several of these principles in order to be aligned with the ecosystemic reality and work in harmony with the principles of nature and not fight against it: we must, as a society, seek resilience as a foundation in the actions we carry out in livestock farming. Yes, we must take a humble step and rethink a livestock model that has demonstrated extreme productive efficiency and allowed access to nutritionally varied food at a reduced price, but which has systematically ignored the harmful effects of the green revolution, as well as the warning signals sent to us by Nature. It is time to go back to the basics of agriculture, and, without defending a model that is economically and socially efficient, it must also be environmentally efficient, as the animal is the most efficient and effective tool for coherently achieving (with good management of the animal/plant/soil ratio) the Sustainable Development Goals proposed by the United Nations and taken up by the EU in its strategic agenda for the year 2050. Will the livestock sector be hypersensitive to productive change between now and 2030? It will all depend on who prevails in the balance of anti-intellectualism on livestock production in global decision-making.

For pure livestock farming, free of dogmas and beliefs and in harmony with the fundamentals and principles of nature, animals and plants. The only desire should be to direct our efforts towards what sustains our life on this planet: a living and fertile soil, which feeds us and has also positioned itself as the most efficient and effective tool to sequester surplus CO2, being a sink source to counteract GHG emissions from other economic activities to reverse and slow down climate change.


Source: Real Federación de Asociaciones de Ganado Selecto (Royal Federation of Associations of Select Cattle)
Read the ES version here

UC study shows positive impact of seaweed on methane emissions in beef cattle

Seaweed in cattle feed could reduce methane emissions from beef cattle as much as 82%, according to a new paper from...
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UC study shows positive impact of seaweed on methane emissions in beef cattle Seaweed in cattle feed could reduce methane emissions from beef cattle as much as 82%, according to a new paper from...

Seaweed in cattle feed could reduce methane emissions from beef cattle as much as 82%, according to a new paper from researchers at the University of California (UC), Davis.

Read more here

Test Achats: Meat replacement products don’t always replace meat

Many of the meat replacement products on the market are not actually a replacement for meat at all, or are in some...
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Test Achats: Meat replacement products don’t always replace meat Many of the meat replacement products on the market are not actually a replacement for meat at all, or are in some...

Many of the meat replacement products on the market are not actually a replacement for meat at all, or are in some other way unhealthy, according to a survey carried out by the consumer group Test Achats. 

More and more people these days are looking for alternatives to meat, whether they adopt a fully vegan/vegetarian lifestyle or are simply looking to cut down on their consumption of meat.

The market has responded, with a growing number of products tailor-made for people who want to eat less meat but still have the feeling of eating meat. 

The trouble is, however, that many such products – meat-free burgers or meatballs, for example – are no substitute for meat from a nutritional point of view. 

Test Achats examined 37 different types of ready-made meat replacement products like hot dogs, burgers and mince, and looked at how healthy the product was in itself, as well as how effective it would be as a replacement for meat. 

Among the findings: many such products contain added saturated fat, brought in to try to mimic the texture and mouth-feel of actual meat. But saturated fat is unhealthy in itself, in quantities above 10g per 100g of meat.

Read more here

Beef is, and always will be sustainable

There is an ongoing conversation in consumer spaces about beef’s contribution to climate change. In many circles,...
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Beef is, and always will be sustainable There is an ongoing conversation in consumer spaces about beef’s contribution to climate change. In many circles,...

There is an ongoing conversation in consumer spaces about beef’s contribution to climate change. In many circles, beef is being painted as a villain that can be minimized and/or eliminated to help solve global climate issues. On the ground, as cattle producers, we know this isn’t accurate. In fact, we know it’s an outrageous lie that’s being used to sell consumers a fake meat product they don’t want or need and one that won’t do anything to solve climate problems. The reality is that we know cattle can be a part of the solution. We know that pasture and rangeland, through proper management, can actually reduce the amount of carbon and more than offset the short-lived methane emissions of our cattle.

Read more here

European Livestock Voice celebra un animado debate en torno a las demandas sobre bienestar animal

Un grupo de profesionales ha participado como ponentes en un webinario organizado por la European Livestock Voice en el...
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European Livestock Voice celebra un animado debate en torno a las demandas sobre bienestar animal Un grupo de profesionales ha participado como ponentes en un webinario organizado por la European Livestock Voice en el...

Un grupo de profesionales ha participado como ponentes en un webinario organizado por la European Livestock Voice en el que se han analizado las tendencias actuales en materia de bienestar animal.

La primera en intervenir ha sido .a gerente del equipo de la granja del Eurogroup for Animals, Inês Ajuda, que explicó que la salud animal, el bienestar y la capacidad de expresar comportamientos naturales y apropiados están interconectados y los 3 pilares deben incluirse cuando se habla de bienestar animal.

Trine Vig Tamstorf, asesora principal de políticas para la salud y el bienestar de los animales del Consejo Danés de Agricultura y Alimentación, que representaba al sector europeo de comercio de ganado y carne en este debate, agregó que el bienestar animal es una prioridad absoluta para los agricultores, no solo porque los animales son su fuente de ingresos, sino también porque es parte del ADN de su trabajo. Esto debe establecerse como la base de todas las discusiones.

Read more here

Opinion: How sustainable is our meat? Depends on the metrics

Livestock play a vital role in sustainability, but great care must be taken when developing and using metrics to ensure...
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Opinion: How sustainable is our meat? Depends on the metrics Livestock play a vital role in sustainability, but great care must be taken when developing and using metrics to ensure...

Livestock play a vital role in sustainability, but great care must be taken when developing and using metrics to ensure they are based on balanced evidence and proper scientific appraisal.

For example, scientists looking at the effect livestock consumption is having on the planet often use the single measure of carbon dioxide production per kilogram of food produced.

But this is not a fair comparison, as 1kg of beans is completely different to 1kg of beef in the nutrients it provides.

Read more here

Become a Beefatarian: Commission backs campaign promoting ‘balanced diet without deficiencies’

The European Commission is pumping €3.6m into a new campaign designed to ‘strengthen the knowledge and...
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Become a Beefatarian: Commission backs campaign promoting ‘balanced diet without deficiencies’ The European Commission is pumping €3.6m into a new campaign designed to ‘strengthen the knowledge and...

The European Commission is pumping €3.6m into a new campaign designed to ‘strengthen the knowledge and competitiveness’ of the European beef sector.

Read more on Food Navigator

FEFAC Feed Sustainability Charter

The sustainability of livestock and aquaculture production is a key business driver for the European feed industry....
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FEFAC Feed Sustainability Charter The sustainability of livestock and aquaculture production is a key business driver for the European feed industry....

The sustainability of livestock and aquaculture production is a key business driver for the European feed industry. FEFAC has been assisting its members in providing animal nutrition solutions that help to increase the sustainability of livestock farming operations, from the respective environmental, economic and social perspectives. Substantial progress has been achieved already over the past decades, but clearly, there are still many challenges for the livestock sector that require the continued European feed industry involvement and support.

FEFAC publication highlighting the key ambitions of the EU feed industry in the light of the implementation of the FEFAC Vision 2030: https://fefac.eu/resources/fefac-feed-sustainability-charter-2030/

Europe has forgotten the 'farm' in 'Farm to Fork'

The United States and Europe share a great history, a history that goes back centuries and will continue for centuries...
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Europe has forgotten the 'farm' in 'Farm to Fork' The United States and Europe share a great history, a history that goes back centuries and will continue for centuries...

The United States and Europe share a great history, a history that goes back centuries and will continue for centuries to come. 

This shared history has seen the advent of new technologies that have transformed life and bettered the human condition.

Read more on the EU Observer

Cows return to London park for first time in 150 years to act as natural lawnmowers

Cattle put out to graze as part of a two-month trial. Read more on The Telegraph
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Cows return to London park for first time in 150 years to act as natural lawnmowers Cattle put out to graze as part of a two-month trial. Read more on The Telegraph

Cattle put out to graze as part of a two-month trial.

Read more on The Telegraph

Le discours « anti-viande » des médias influence très peu le grand public

Entre les messages récurrents concernant la nocivité d'une surconsommation de viande et la visibilité donnée aux...
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Le discours « anti-viande » des médias influence très peu le grand public Entre les messages récurrents concernant la nocivité d'une surconsommation de viande et la visibilité donnée aux...

Entre les messages récurrents concernant la nocivité d'une surconsommation de viande et la visibilité donnée aux actions des organisations antispécistes, les médias traditionnels maintiennent une forte activité sur les sujets du flexitarisme et du véganisme. Bonne nouvelle pour les éleveurs : ce discours a très peu d'influence sur le grand public.

Read more on Web-Agri

New campaign champions environmental benefits of meat

With livestock ‘getting blamed for everything from cancer to climate change’, the British Meat Processors...
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New campaign champions environmental benefits of meat With livestock ‘getting blamed for everything from cancer to climate change’, the British Meat Processors...

With livestock ‘getting blamed for everything from cancer to climate change’, the British Meat Processors Association has launched a new website to promote the environmental benefits of eating beef and other animals.

Read more on Food navigator

‘2021 will be a difficult year’: Meat analyst concerned for poultry, beef, and pork markets in Europe

‘2021 will be a difficult year’: Meat analyst concerned for poultry, beef, and pork markets in Europe Industry...
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‘2021 will be a difficult year’: Meat analyst concerned for poultry, beef, and pork markets in Europe ‘2021 will be a difficult year’: Meat analyst concerned for poultry, beef, and pork markets in Europe Industry...

‘2021 will be a difficult year’: Meat analyst concerned for poultry, beef, and pork markets in Europe

Industry should be prepared for a ‘massive global financial crash’, says Gira Meat Director Rupert Claxton, who does not expect poultry, beef, and pork markets to be back at pre-COVID levels by next year.

Read the full article on Food Navigator

Lockdown proved that more of us want to buy British – with beef and chicken top of the shopping list

Lockdown proved that more of us want to buy British – with beef and chicken top of the shopping list In a...
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Lockdown proved that more of us want to buy British – with beef and chicken top of the shopping list Lockdown proved that more of us want to buy British – with beef and chicken top of the shopping list In a...

Lockdown proved that more of us want to buy British – with beef and chicken top of the shopping list

In a relatively short space of time, the coronavirus pandemic has drastically altered the way we eat and shop for food.

Read full article on The telegraph website

‘It is paramount the UN ensures a discussion on livestock that is based on facts’

‘It is paramount the UN ensures a discussion on livestock that is based on facts’ The Global Roundtable for...
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‘It is paramount the UN ensures a discussion on livestock that is based on facts’ ‘It is paramount the UN ensures a discussion on livestock that is based on facts’ The Global Roundtable for...

‘It is paramount the UN ensures a discussion on livestock that is based on facts’

The Global Roundtable for Sustainable Beef (GRSB) is writing today to voice our concerns over the misleading claims contained within the United Nations (UN) Act Now campaign, specifically regarding the “Eat Less Meat” initiative.

Read more on Beef Central website

Meat levy would hit vulnerable shoppers, dietitian says

Meat levy would hit vulnerable shoppers, dietitian says A proposed levy on unhealthy meat products has been rejected...
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Meat levy would hit vulnerable shoppers, dietitian says Meat levy would hit vulnerable shoppers, dietitian says A proposed levy on unhealthy meat products has been rejected...

Meat levy would hit vulnerable shoppers, dietitian says

A proposed levy on unhealthy meat products has been rejected by experts as failing to tackle obesity and health issues and limiting options for vulnerable consumers.

Read full article on Food Manufacture

Europe must resist attempts to use coronavirus as a Trojan horse against animal agriculture

Europe must resist attempts to use coronavirus as a Trojan horse against animal agriculture Of all the businesses...
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Europe must resist attempts to use coronavirus as a Trojan horse against animal agriculture Europe must resist attempts to use coronavirus as a Trojan horse against animal agriculture Of all the businesses...

Europe must resist attempts to use coronavirus as a Trojan horse against animal agriculture

Of all the businesses and enterprises impacted by the coronavirus outbreak, Europe’s farms are among the most vulnerable – and the most essential. At a time when demand for safe, affordable food is spiking, the pandemic has restricted access to agricultural workers, as well as disrupting processing operations on livestock farms.

And on top of these pressures, farmers are also facing attempts to use COVID-19 to influence EU policy and undermine animal agriculture by falsely linking the outbreak with modern farming practices, which are often maligned and poorly understood.

From a business perspective, this is unhelpful, but from a scientific perspective, this is entirely misguided. Coronavirus - like SARS, Ebola and almost three quarters of infectious, animal-borne diseases - was not created on a farm, but most likely originated in wildlife.

Read more via Euronews

Cows ‘could be the newest weapon against Covid-19’

Genetically modified cows are currently being used by an American biotech firm to produce human antibodies that subdue...
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Cows ‘could be the newest weapon against Covid-19’ Genetically modified cows are currently being used by an American biotech firm to produce human antibodies that subdue...

Genetically modified cows are currently being used by an American biotech firm to produce human antibodies that subdue SARS-CoV-2, the pathogen causing Covid-19 – with plans to start clinical trials this summer.

SAB Biotherapeutics, a US firm based in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, genetically alters dairy cows so that certain immune cells carry the DNA that allows people to make antibodies.

That modification “enables the animals to manufacture large quantities of human antibodies against a pathogen protein injected into them”, the company claims.

Read more on AgriLand website

Methane emissions from herbivores have always existed

Greenhouse gas emissions by large herbivores are not a phenomenon these days. Professor Pulina clarifies this issue,...
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Methane emissions from herbivores have always existed Greenhouse gas emissions by large herbivores are not a phenomenon these days. Professor Pulina clarifies this issue,...

Greenhouse gas emissions by large herbivores are not a phenomenon these days. Professor Pulina clarifies this issue, and reveals a noteworthy aspect: if we eliminated all farms and animals were free to graze in nature, their contribution to greenhouse gases would be exactly the same.

It seems paradoxical that in a world where thousands of tons of greenhouse gases from cars, planes, ships, power plants, factories, landfills, rice fields, etc. are discharged into the atmosphere every day, we want to blame the flatulence of farmed herbivorous animals for the greenhouse effect and climate change, a completely natural phenomenon with very ancient origins.

Read more on Carni Sostenibili

Not everybody can thrive on vegan or vegetarian diets

Not everybody can thrive on vegan or vegetarian diets One of the key visions set out in the European Commission’s...
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Not everybody can thrive on vegan or vegetarian diets Not everybody can thrive on vegan or vegetarian diets One of the key visions set out in the European Commission’s...

Not everybody can thrive on vegan or vegetarian diets

One of the key visions set out in the European Commission’s Farm to Fork Strategy – which was published last month and is set to pave the way for the formation of the next Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) – is an intention to transition EU food consumption trends towards “a more plant-based diet with less red meat”.

In the document it is clearly stated that this food shift is being proposed on environmental, health and sustainability grounds.

Dr. Frédéric Leroy of the Food Science and Biotechnology Department at Vrije Universiteit Brussel – whose research primarily deals with the ecological aspects and functional roles of bacteria in foods, with a specific focus on animal products – has offered his perspective on such a proposed dietary change and its potential impact on animal agriculture throughout the bloc.

Read the full article on Agriland webiste

Dutch startup Connecterra lands €7.8 million to make the dairy industry more productive and sustainable

There has been a rapid digital transformation in the global agricultural sector over the last few months because of...
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Dutch startup Connecterra lands €7.8 million to make the dairy industry more productive and sustainable There has been a rapid digital transformation in the global agricultural sector over the last few months because of...

There has been a rapid digital transformation in the global agricultural sector over the last few months because of COVID-19. Farmers and other key industry players are more acutely aware of the need for sustainable and efficient farming practices. “Empowering farmers and the industry with a connected, AI driven platform is a necessity for the future of food production. The COVID-19 outbreak has brought into sharp focus the weaknesses in our food system that is disconnected and faces threats from climate change and a dwindling labor workforce. With the support of our top-class investors, customers and partners, we are well positioned to democratize access to our technology to millions of farmers across the globe”, says Yasir Khokhar, CEO of Connecterra.

Read more on EU-startups website

Coronavirus: est-il possible d'être contaminé en consommant de la viande?

Coronavirus: est-il possible d'être contaminé en consommant de la viande? Depuis maintenant plusieurs jours, les...
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Coronavirus: est-il possible d'être contaminé en consommant de la viande? Coronavirus: est-il possible d'être contaminé en consommant de la viande? Depuis maintenant plusieurs jours, les...

Coronavirus: est-il possible d'être contaminé en consommant de la viande?

Depuis maintenant plusieurs jours, les "clusters" dans les abattoirs se sont multipliés partout dans le monde, tout comme sur le territoire français. Dans les Côtes-d'Armor tout d'abord, où 69 cas positifs ont été confirmés, puis dans le Loiret où 34 employés ont également été testés. Au total, une centaine de personnes, dans ces deux foyers, ont été atteints du Covid-19, sans qu'aucun cas grave n'ait été signalé.

Pour autant, la consommation de viande animale semble sans risque pour l'homme. Comme le signale l'Anses, l'Agence nationale de sécurité sanitaire de l’alimentation, de l’environnement, et du travail, plusieurs études ont été effectuées sur différentes espèces: porcs, canards, poulets, a qui le coronavirus a été inoculé de manière expérimentale. Les conclusions sont claires, les animaux ne sont pas réceptifs à la maladie.

Read more on BFM TV website

Authorities urged to support struggling meat sector post-coronavirus

Authorities urged to support struggling meat sector post-coronavirus More than 65 organisations and individuals...
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Authorities urged to support struggling meat sector post-coronavirus Authorities urged to support struggling meat sector post-coronavirus More than 65 organisations and individuals...

Authorities urged to support struggling meat sector post-coronavirus

More than 65 organisations and individuals across producer, veterinary, research, and academic sectors have co-signed a letter calling for more support in the global meat sector in the wake of the coronavirus crisis and urging authorities to refute claims that the crisis stemmed from the livestock sector.

Read more on Euractiv website

Meat eaters have better mental health than vegans and vegetarians, study claims

Meat eaters have better mental health than vegans and vegetarians, study claims Researchers in the US conducted a...
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Meat eaters have better mental health than vegans and vegetarians, study claims Meat eaters have better mental health than vegans and vegetarians, study claims Researchers in the US conducted a...

Meat eaters have better mental health than vegans and vegetarians, study claims

Researchers in the US conducted a review of 18 studies representing 160,257 participants examining the relation between the consumption or avoidance of meat and psychological health.

Read the article via Food Navigator

Why EU wants more grass-based farms

Why EU wants more grass-based farms EU Ministers for Agriculture this week backed grasslands, crop rotation, reduced...
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Why EU wants more grass-based farms Why EU wants more grass-based farms EU Ministers for Agriculture this week backed grasslands, crop rotation, reduced...

Why EU wants more grass-based farms

EU Ministers for Agriculture this week backed grasslands, crop rotation, reduced tillage, direct sowing, afforestation and agroforestry, as the ways to maximise carbon sequestration on agricultural land.

Read the article via The Conversation

"No, Livestock farming is not responsible for Covid-19!" An Oped by Bernard Vallat

"No, Livestock farming is not responsible for Covid-19!" An Oped by Bernard Vallat  It would be advisable that the...
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"No, Livestock farming is not responsible for Covid-19!" An Oped by Bernard Vallat "No, Livestock farming is not responsible for Covid-19!" An Oped by Bernard Vallat  It would be advisable that the...

"No, Livestock farming is not responsible for Covid-19!" An Oped by Bernard Vallat

 It would be advisable that the investments needed to strengthen the biosecurity of our livestock and wildlife should be broadly eligible for Community grants under the Green Deal. 

Read this Op-Ed by Bernard Vallat in l'Opinion (FR)

‘Meat is part of a sustainable world’: Professor Louise Fresco

‘Meat is part of a sustainable world’: Professor Louise Fresco Professor Louise Fresco used the prestigious City...
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‘Meat is part of a sustainable world’: Professor Louise Fresco ‘Meat is part of a sustainable world’: Professor Louise Fresco Professor Louise Fresco used the prestigious City...

‘Meat is part of a sustainable world’: Professor Louise Fresco

Professor Louise Fresco used the prestigious City Food Lecture in London to argue in favour of the shift towards flexitarian and reductionist diets. But she warned against doing away with meat consumption altogether.

Read the article via Food Navigator

Livestock grazing is vital 'interference' to boost biodiversity, new Plantlife study finds

Livestock grazing is vital 'interference' to boost biodiversity, new Plantlife study finds Livestock grazing has a...
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Livestock grazing is vital 'interference' to boost biodiversity, new Plantlife study finds Livestock grazing is vital 'interference' to boost biodiversity, new Plantlife study finds Livestock grazing has a...

Livestock grazing is vital 'interference' to boost biodiversity, new Plantlife study finds

Livestock grazing has a crucial role to play in addressing a dramatic decline in biodiversity-rich wildflower meadows, according to a prominent botanist who warns that totally abandoning land to nature will do more environmental harm than good.

Read the full article on the Yorkshire Post website

YES, EATING MEAT AFFECTS THE ENVIRONMENT, BUT COWS ARE NOT KILLING THE CLIMATE

YES, EATING MEAT AFFECTS THE ENVIRONMENT, BUT COWS ARE NOT KILLING THE CLIMATE Advocates urge the public to eat...
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YES, EATING MEAT AFFECTS THE ENVIRONMENT, BUT COWS ARE NOT KILLING THE CLIMATE YES, EATING MEAT AFFECTS THE ENVIRONMENT, BUT COWS ARE NOT KILLING THE CLIMATE Advocates urge the public to eat...

YES, EATING MEAT AFFECTS THE ENVIRONMENT, BUT COWS ARE NOT KILLING THE CLIMATE

Advocates urge the public to eat less meat to save the environment. 
A key claim underlying the associated arguments is that globally, meat production generates more greenhouse gases than the entire transportation sector.
In this article Frank Mitloehner, Professor of Animal Science and Air Quality Extension Specialist, University of California, Davis sets the record straight on meat and greenhouse gases.

Read the article via The Conversation

Opinion: The latest flip-flop on red meat uses best science in place of best guesses

Opinion: The latest flip-flop on red meat uses best science in place of best guesses The recent 'turnaround' on...
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Opinion: The latest flip-flop on red meat uses best science in place of best guesses Opinion: The latest flip-flop on red meat uses best science in place of best guesses The recent 'turnaround' on...

Opinion: The latest flip-flop on red meat uses best science in place of best guesses

The recent 'turnaround' on advice about read meat consumption made big headlines recently with people questioning how nutrition advice can flip so apparently easily?

This opinion piece in the LA Times by investigative journalist Nina Teicholz outlines the view that some nutrition recommendations have been based on a type of weak science that experts have unfortunately become accustomed to relying upon. The recent papers question that "iffy science".

Read the full opinion piece on the LA Times.

Why we shouldn’t all be vegan

Why we shouldn’t all be vegan After decades in which the number of people choosing to cut out meat from their diet...
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Why we shouldn’t all be vegan Why we shouldn’t all be vegan After decades in which the number of people choosing to cut out meat from their diet...

Why we shouldn’t all be vegan

After decades in which the number of people choosing to cut out meat from their diet has steadily increased, the alarmist and pressure-filled headlines continue to support arguments that the world needs to change the way that it eats.
In this article Martin Cohen, Visiting Research Fellow in Philosophy, University of Hertfordshire and Frédéric Leroy, Professor of Food Science and Biotechnology, Vrije Universiteit Brussel take on the question of whether the world should consider going vegan.

Read the article via The Conversation

Cars or livestock: which contribute more to climate change?

Cars or livestock: which contribute more to climate change? What we choose to eat,  how we move around and how...
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Cars or livestock: which contribute more to climate change? Cars or livestock: which contribute more to climate change? What we choose to eat,  how we move around and how...

Cars or livestock: which contribute more to climate change?

What we choose to eat,  how we move around and how these activities contribute to climate change is receiving a lot of media attention. In this context, greenhouse gas emissions from livestock and transport are often compared, but in a flawed way.
In this article Anne Mottet and Henning Steinfeld from the UN FAO outline the pitfalls of simplification when looking at greenhouse gas emissions from livestock.

Read the full article via News Trust

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FEFAC Co-products Brochure

This publication by FEFAC provides information on the European feed industry’s extensive use of co-products. It explains how co-products such as brewers’ grains, sugar beet pulp and wheat bran are generated during food and biofuel production, and outlines their value in compound feed for livestock. The use of co-products is an illustration of European livestock's circular economy, creating economic and environmental benefits for both the original production process and the livestock sector.
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FEFAC Co-products Brochure This publication by FEFAC provides information on the European feed industry’s extensive use of co-products. It explains how co-products such as brewers’ grains, sugar beet pulp and wheat bran are generated during food and biofuel production, and outlines their value in compound feed for livestock. The use of co-products is an illustration of European livestock's circular economy, creating economic and environmental benefits for both the original production process and the livestock sector. feed, animal nutrition, compounds, food

Videod

Eating less Meat won't save the Planet. Here's Why

Dr. Frank Mitloehner (@GHGGURU) explains more about livestock and especially beef on the topic of environmental sustainability and tells us more about why eating less meat won't save the planet.
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Eating less Meat won't save the Planet. Here's Why Dr. Frank Mitloehner (@GHGGURU) explains more about livestock and especially beef on the topic of environmental sustainability and tells us more about why eating less meat won't save the planet. cows, cattle, meat, livestock, emissions

The role of ruminants on climate change mitigation.

This infographic video has been produced as part of the BC3 contribution to COP25 in Madrid (5th December 2019) and under the H2020 project iSAGE. Different arguments are shown regarding the differences between emissions from biogenic methane from ruminants and fossil fuel CO2, differences in production systems and the uncertainties regarding N2O emissions and the baseline of reference to compare emissions from ruminants compared with other activities. The video idea and script have been developed by Agustin del Prado (BC3) and Pablo Manzano (University Of Helsinki), animated and produced by Yelena Grigorenko and voice over by Bosco Lliso (BC3).
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The role of ruminants on climate change mitigation. This infographic video has been produced as part of the BC3 contribution to COP25 in Madrid (5th December 2019) and under the H2020 project iSAGE. Different arguments are shown regarding the differences between emissions from biogenic methane from ruminants and fossil fuel CO2, differences in production systems and the uncertainties regarding N2O emissions and the baseline of reference to compare emissions from ruminants compared with other activities. The video idea and script have been developed by Agustin del Prado (BC3) and Pablo Manzano (University Of Helsinki), animated and produced by Yelena Grigorenko and voice over by Bosco Lliso (BC3). farming, cows, livestock, methane, GHG, emissions, agriculture

Cows vs Cars? - Dr. Frank Mitloehner (@GHGGuru) explains how the greenhouse gas emissions from burning fossil fuels differ from those produced by livestock.

Dr. Frank Mitloehner (@GHGGuru) explains how the greenhouse gas emissions from burning fossil fuels differ from those produced by livestock. The Cows and Climate series aims to explain livestock’s role in the global food system and our environment, focusing on climate change, and promoting collaborative and research-based solutions that can further reduce emissions. Dr. Mitloehner’s participation in the Cows and Climate video series is a part of his research and extension activities at the University of California, Division of Agriculture and Natural Resources.
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Cows vs Cars? - Dr. Frank Mitloehner (@GHGGuru) explains how the greenhouse gas emissions from burning fossil fuels differ from those produced by livestock. Dr. Frank Mitloehner (@GHGGuru) explains how the greenhouse gas emissions from burning fossil fuels differ from those produced by livestock. The Cows and Climate series aims to explain livestock’s role in the global food system and our environment, focusing on climate change, and promoting collaborative and research-based solutions that can further reduce emissions. Dr. Mitloehner’s participation in the Cows and Climate video series is a part of his research and extension activities at the University of California, Division of Agriculture and Natural Resources. cows, cattle, meat, livestock, emissions

A voice for the farmers

We’ve been talking to some farmers, asking them what they think about peoples’ perceptions on livestock farming. In this video, Alexis Pugliese, a pig farmer from France talks about what he feels are the biggest misconceptions and offers this thoughts on how farmers can take action to stop misinformation.
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A voice for the farmers We’ve been talking to some farmers, asking them what they think about peoples’ perceptions on livestock farming. In this video, Alexis Pugliese, a pig farmer from France talks about what he feels are the biggest misconceptions and offers this thoughts on how farmers can take action to stop misinformation. farming, pigs, livestock, elevage, agriculture

Uuringud

Meat and mental health: a systematic review of meat abstention and depression, anxiety, and related phenomena

Urska Dobersek, Gabrielle Wy, Joshua Adkins, Sydney Altmeyer, Kaitlin Krout, Carl J. Lavie & Edward Archer

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Meat and mental health: a systematic review of meat abstention and depression, anxiety, and related phenomena We’ve been talking to some farmers, asking them what they think about peoples’ perceptions on livestock farming. In this video, Alexis Pugliese, a pig farmer from France talks about what he feels are the biggest misconceptions and offers this thoughts on how farmers can take action to stop misinformation.

Tackling climate change through livestock – A global assessment of emissions and mitigation opportunities.

Gerber, P.J., Steinfeld, H., Henderson, B., Mottet, A., Opio, C., Dijkman, J., Falcucci, A. & Tempio, G. - Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO).

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Tackling climate change through livestock – A global assessment of emissions and mitigation opportunities. We’ve been talking to some farmers, asking them what they think about peoples’ perceptions on livestock farming. In this video, Alexis Pugliese, a pig farmer from France talks about what he feels are the biggest misconceptions and offers this thoughts on how farmers can take action to stop misinformation.

Is vegetarianism healthy for children?

Scientific paper by Nathan Cofnas

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Is vegetarianism healthy for children? We’ve been talking to some farmers, asking them what they think about peoples’ perceptions on livestock farming. In this video, Alexis Pugliese, a pig farmer from France talks about what he feels are the biggest misconceptions and offers this thoughts on how farmers can take action to stop misinformation.

Should dietary guidelines recommend low red meat intake?

Scientific review by Frédéric Leroy & Nathan Cofnas

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Should dietary guidelines recommend low red meat intake? We’ve been talking to some farmers, asking them what they think about peoples’ perceptions on livestock farming. In this video, Alexis Pugliese, a pig farmer from France talks about what he feels are the biggest misconceptions and offers this thoughts on how farmers can take action to stop misinformation. meat, food, diet

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