The year 2024 set a new record as the hottest year ever documented. The average global temperature surged to 1.6°C above preindustrial levels for the first time, surpassing the critical threshold of 1.5°C necessary to prevent worsening climate change. The consequences of climate change are now evident across every continent.
Remarkably, up to a third of global greenhouse gas emissions can be linked to animal agriculture and food production systems. Yet, many proposed solutions to combat climate change often overlook the significant role that food systems play in mitigation efforts. In the article titled “Solving Climate Change Requires Changing Our Food Systems,” published in the esteemed journal Oxford Open Climate Change, leading scientists from around the globe argue that the urgent challenges posed by irreversible climate change necessitate a reexamination of our food systems.
Lead researcher Dr Feigin and her co-authors assert, “we must undertake a global shift to a fundamentally plant-based diet and a gradual global reduction and eventual phaseout of intensive factory farming, the most prolific and damaging form of agriculture.”
Our increasing appetite for meat and animal products is proving to be unsustainable. The FAO projects that by 2050, the demand for meat could double, necessitating the transformation of about 80% of current forests and shrubland into land for livestock. Such a path would lead to dire consequences for our well-being and the planet’s health.
“As the world population increases, food insecurity and starvation will intensify if we continue to rely on a model of food production (i.e. animal factory farming) which is extraordinarily inefficient and resource intensive”, the study authors contend. The authors present strategies to rethink current food systems, including the removal of government subsidies and higher taxation of animal products to account for the externalized costs of animal agriculture.
The advantages of adopting a predominantly plant-based diet, both for health and healthcare costs, are significant. Consuming animal products plays a role in the rise of numerous chronic diseases. Additionally, the authors point out that “antibiotic-resistant infections in humans are linked to proximity to animal farms and pose a global health risk, resulting in approximately 700,000 deaths each year worldwide.” The growth of industrial animal farming has escalated the threat of deadly zoonotic diseases, such as avian influenza (bird flu) and H1N1 (swine flu), which often emerge from factory farming practices.
The authors also recommend that plant-based diets for pets be included in the global movement away from animal agriculture. Pet dogs and cats account for at least 9% of all livestock consumption annually. By shifting towards nutritionally balanced plant-based diets for pets, we could free up significant amounts of land that could otherwise be utilized for climate change mitigation efforts.
Critical changes to our food system and consumption habits will require a shift in global mindset – lead author Dr Feigin states, “The future of humanity and all life on our planet depends on sustainability, and the data indicate that we will not succeed on the issue of climate change unless we change the way that we produce and consume food.”