Biden’s climate change plan may not nix cheeseburgers, but science says beef should be on the chopping block

The Washington Post

Biden’s climate change plan may not nix cheeseburgers, but science says beef should be on the chopping block

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clock Biden is not coming for Americans Big Macs, chicken wings or bacon. Over the weekend the Twitterverse exploded with GOP fears that, to meet the administrations goals of cutting greenhouse gas emissions in half by the end of the decade, Americans would be required to curtail their meat consumption. The fears were flamed by a Thursday story in the British tabloid Daily Mail that suggested that to meet Bidens climate change goals, Americans would need to limit red meat consumption to four pounds a year or about a hamburger a month, prompting outrage from Fox Newss Larry Kudlow as well as much of the Internet. So far, there doesnt appear to be any evidence that the White House plans to make any declarations about red meat or hamburgers in regards to climate change policy. And the U.S. Agriculture Department dismissed such suggestions on Monday. This is a fabrication, said a USDA spokesman. There is no such effort or policy that exists by this administration. Its not a part of the climate plan nor the emissions targets. It is not real. Raising the steaks: First 3-D-printed rib-eye is unveiled However, there is a lot of research when it comes to the contribution of industrial agriculture to the greenhouse gases that are warming the planet. The Daily Mail piece erroneously connected Bidens climate plan to a 2020 University of Michigan Center for Sustainable Systems report that advocated severely cutting meat consumption. Bidens plan does not mention this report, nor does the report make any suggestions for Bidens climate stance. Yet, beef consumption, in particular, has been singled out as uniquely harmful to the planet. In 2019, the EAT-Lancet Commission report and the special report on climate change and land by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change made strong suggestions about the need to move away from cattle ranching. Livestock are responsible for about 14.5 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions, according to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization, on a par with all of global transportation. Indeed, beef as straw man is not accidental, according to Marion Nestle, an author and nutrition professor emerita at New York University. The recommendation to eat less meat for reasons of human and planetary health imply a need for changes in government policy, she said. People opposed to government on principle see public health not as a societal benefit, but rather as an intrusion on their personal liberties. She says that public health, because it is about societies, not individuals, is inherently communitarian and antithetical to individualism. Meanwhile, she says, JBS, the largest meat producer in the world, admits meat production plays a role in climate change and says it will reduce that impact. On Sunday, JBS and Pilgrims Pride, one of the countrys largest chicken producers, took out a full-page ad in the New York Times headlined, Agriculture can be a part of the climate solution, committing to net-zero emissions by 2040. Impossible Burger: Heres whats really in it Bruce Friedrich, co-founder of the Good Food Institute, a nonprofit that promotes plant-based meat, sees Big Meats movement in this direction inevitable, calling attention to the fact that JBS, Tyson Foods, Cargill and Smithfield the four biggest meat companies in the world all see the huge promise of making meat from plants, and Tyson and Cargill have both invested in cultivated meat companies. If the U.S. doesnt support making meat from plants and cultivating it from cells, were going to see China do to the U.S. on meat what it did with lithium-ion batteries and solar panels, where China has dominated, leaving the U.S. behind, he said. A bad diet is the No. 1 cause of poor health, and accusations have increasingly been leveled at red meat, with studies associating increases in red meat consumption with mortality in American men and women. Political hand-wringing over food is nothing new. Former president Donald Trump made a point of elevating his own unhealthy eating habits to be the stuff of real Americans, while consigning healthy eating to being a preoccupation of effete elites. Individual foods have always been politicized Ronald Reagan catapulted jelly beans to new heights while George H.W. Bush befouled broccolis honor and Barack Obama found himself in the great Dijon mustard kerfuffle of 2009 yet Biden has said nothing about eschewing beef or even how Americans food consumption might change in efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. From ranch to kitchen table But the political outcry over the weekend about eating meat was particularly heated, after the Daily Mail story reported that to meet Bidens plan described at the two-day climate summit, Americans would be limited to about a hamburger a month. This prompted Fox News host Larry Kudlow on Fox Business on Friday to assert that part of Bidens climate plan required that, America has to stop eating meat, stop eating poultry and fish, seafood, eggs, dairy and animal-based fats. ... No burger on July 4. No steaks on the barbecue. Conservatives took to social media to decry this meatless move, with Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-Colo.) tweeting , Why doesnt Joe stay out of my kitchen? and Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) dubbing Biden , The Hamburglar. Texas Gov. Greg Abbott (R) pushed back flatly that a burger ban was not gonna happen in Texas. Author of study saying red meat is fine failed to disclose industry funding, journal reveals Ezra Klein, in a Saturday New York Times column, called for a moonshot that would turn the United States away from industrial agriculture and toward meatless meat. No moonshot necessary: According to the Good Food Institute, there are more than 800 companies producing plant-based meat products and 70 start-ups focused on developing cell-cultured cultivated meat that does not require animal slaughter. This is why Donald Trumps secretary of agriculture and FDA commissioner were so supportive of alternative proteins they see the need for the U.S. to lead on agriculture innovation, Friedrich said. The U.S. can be a leader or a follower. The meat industry understands this, and the concept really should be bipartisan.