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beef about beef...Beef prices were already rising because ranchers sold off a lot of cattle during last year's dry weather. That has left cattle populations at their lowest level since 1952. The Wall street Journal reports cattle futures surged on news that Tyson Foods will stop accepting cattle fed with Zilmax starting next month. Zilmax is a "beta-agonist." It produces lean muscle in cattle and hogs instead of fat. Without it, some experts say it'll take more corn to feed cattle to produce the same amount of beef. Tyson says the decision had nothing to do with food safety but animal welfare concerns. Tyson says some animals recently arrived at processing centers that couldn't move. "I think it's absolutely great news. It's great news for our beef industry, because Zilmax not only is detrimental from an animal welfare perspective, but it also lowers meat quality," said Mike Callicrate, a Colorado Springs rancher and animal welfare activist.
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beta-agonist versus animal welfare...
Tyson Foods (TSN +0.56%) sent what one commodities broker called a "shock wave" through the meat industry Thursday by announcing it will stop buying cattle fed with the growth-enhancing drug Zilmax.
The result for consumers is that the prices of steaks and other beef products will likely go up. On the plus side, their meat may have one less additive in it.
Controversy has surrounded the industry's use of Zilmax, which is sold by Merck Animal Health, one of the fastest-growing units of Merck (MRK -0.16%). Zilmax was originally created to help people with asthma, Christopher Leonard writes on Slate. But researchers found that it makes animals produce more muscle and less fat.
The drug causes cattle to bulk up dramatically in the last few weeks before slaughter. That produces more meat for consumption, and it was embraced by food producers, who could suddenly get more revenue from a single animal. Merck Animal Health says that Zilmax doesn't cause the quality of steaks to suffer and that people can't tell the difference between beef that has and has not been treated with the drug.
http://money.msn.com/now/post--shock-wave-from-tysons-beef-changes
eat less, please….
THE FOLLOWING ARTICLE IS BY GEORGE MONBIOT. HE HAS GONE OFF THE RAILS AND FORGOTTEN MANY PROBLEMS OF "NON-ORGANIC" FARMING IN ORDER TO ATTACK ORGANIC FOOD, especially beef. ONE OF THE PROBLEM IS THAT WE CONSUME TOO MUCH AND THAT NON-ORGANIC CATTLE IS SUBJECTED TO MANY DRUGS AND ANTIBIOTICS (read above) THAT POLLUTE THE ENVIRONMENT.
WHY HAS MONBIOT GONE STUPID AND GLIB about organic foods????? ANYWAY HERE IS HIS VIEW — published where else, but THE CONSERVATIVE GUARDIAN that tries to present itself as an organ of the Green Left....:
The world’s most damaging farm products? Organic pasture-fed beef and lamb.
(GUSNOTE: THE WORLD'S MOST DAMAGING FARM PRODUCTS ARE INTENSIVE FEEDLOTS, INTENSIVE CROPS GROWN WITH MASSIVE AMOUNTS OF FERTILISERS — TO FEED TOO MANY "FAT PEOPLE" IN THE CYCLE OF THE FAST FOOD INDUSTRIES....)
By George Monbiot, published in the Guardian 16th August 2022
Perhaps the most important of all environmental issues is land use. Every hectare of land we use for extractive industries is a hectare that can’t support wild forests, savannahs, wetlands, natural grasslands and other crucial ecosystems. And farming swallows far more land than any other human activity.
What are the world’s most damaging farm products? You might be amazed by the answer: organic, pasture-fed beef and lamb. I realise this is a shocking claim. Of all the statements in my new book, Regenesis, it has triggered the greatest rage. But I’m not trying to wind people up. I’m trying to represent the facts. Let me explain.
Arable crops, some of which are fed to farm animals, occupy 12% of the planet’s land surface. But far more land (about 26%) is used for grazing: in other words, for pasture-fed meat and milk. Yet, across this vast area, farm animals that are entirely pasture-fed produce just 1% of the world’s protein.
Livestock farmers often claim that their grazing systems “mimic nature”. If so, the mimicry is a crude caricature. A review of evidence from over 100 studies found that when livestock are removed from the land, the abundance and diversity of almost all functional groups (or “guilds”) of wild animals increases. The only category in which numbers fall when grazing by cattle or sheep ceases are those that eat dung. Where there are cattle, there are fewer wild mammals, birds, reptiles and insects on the land, and fewer fish in the rivers. Perhaps most importantly – because of their crucial role in regulating living systems – there tend to be no large predators.
We don’t think about large predators in the UK, because we’ve exterminated them. Efforts to bring back lynx and wolves have so far been thwarted by the objections of livestock farmers. In the United States, where big carnivores still exist, federal and state agencies wage war against them on behalf of cattle and sheep farmers, often with astonishing brutality. A federal body called Wildlife Services uses poisoned baits, snares and leghold traps and shooting from planes and helicopters to kill wolves, coyotes, bears and bobcats. Its agents have incinerated pups in their dens, or dragged them out and clubbed them to death.
Perhaps its most controversial killing tools are cyanide landmines: spring-loaded canisters of sodium cyanide planted in the ground, that spray the poison into the faces of animals that trip them. They’ve killed a wide range of endangered species, dozens of domestic dogs and at least one person. There are very few places – mostly parts of eastern and southern Africa – in which livestock farmers tolerate large predators, generally where tourism revenues are high.
Even if we manage to ignore this crucial ecological issue, there’s still a massive problem. Many livestock farmers now claim to practise “regenerative grazing”. The minimum definition of ecological regeneration is permitting trees to return to formerly wooded lands. In the uplands of Britain, to judge by the experience of deer managers, this means a maximum of about one sheep for every 20 hectares (50 acres). They might as well not be kept at all. In the lowlands, the Knepp rewilding project in Sussex shows how far production has to fall to permit the return of trees and other wildlife: it generates just 54kg of meat a hectare. If, as many chefs and foodies and some environmentalists propose, meat were to come only from regenerative farms, it would be so scarce that only millionaires would eat it.
In reality, the great majority of “regenerative” pasture-fed meat is nothing of the kind. It’s rebranded ranching, arguably the most destructive industry on Earth. In the US, livestock grazing is the primary reason for land degradation. It has caused an invasive species called cheatgrass to sweep across North America, devastating ecosystems. Cattle fencing excludes wild herbivores and stops migration. The supposedly-greener methods some ranchers call “holistic management” or “planned grazing” are just as bad for wildlife as conventional ranching.
In the UK, my estimates suggest that some 4m hectares of hill and mountain are used for sheep farming. Almost all this land, much of which would otherwise support temperate rainforest, is treeless, as tree seedlings are highly nutritious and selectively eaten by sheep. There are more trees on each hectare in some parts of inner London than there are in the “wild” British hills where sheep graze. The remaining vegetation is badly degraded.
Four million hectares is 22% of the entire farmed area. It’s roughly equivalent to all the land used to grow grain in this country, and 23 times the area used for growing fruit and vegetables. But, in terms of calories, lamb and mutton supply just over 1% of the UK’s food.
Pasture-fed meat production, in other words, is the major cause of agricultural sprawl. People rail against urban sprawl: the profligate use of land for housing and infrastructure. But the world’s urban areas occupy just 1% of the planet’s land surface, in comparison with the 26% used for grazing. Agricultural sprawl inflicts a very high ecological opportunity cost: the missing ecosystems that would otherwise exist.
This is matched by the carbon opportunity cost of pasture-fed beef and lamb. Meat production has two kinds of global heating impact: its climate current account, which means the gases released by farming animals; and its climate capital account, which means the carbon dioxide the land could absorb if it were rewilded. The current account is dominated by the powerful greenhouse gases methane and nitrous oxide. Organic beef farms, whose animals take longer to raise and need even more land, lose twice as much nitrogen for each kilo of meat as conventional beef farms. In most cases, their current account emissions are astonishingly high, even in comparison with conventional beef farming, though some organic experiments, such as FAI Farms at Wytham in Oxfordshire, have found ways to reduce the time it takes for cattle to fatten.
Ranching’s capital account is always in debt, because wild ecosystems store more carbon than the fields and pastures that have taken their place. These debts can be enormous. A study of carbon opportunity costs published in Nature found that, while the global average cost of soybeans is 17kg of carbon dioxide for each kilogram of protein, the average carbon opportunity cost of a kilogram of beef protein is an astounding 1,250kg. Another paper calculates that if we all shifted to a plant-based diet, the carbon drawn down from the atmosphere by recovering ecosystems would be equivalent to the world’s fossil fuel emissions from the previous 16 years.
The livestock industry has fought back with a massive public relations campaign, seeking to persuade people that pasture-fed meat helps reduce global heating by storing carbon in the soil. Yet, despite the many claims, there is no empirical evidence that carbon storage in pastures can even compensate for grazing’s current account emissions, let alone address the capital debt. Just as the oil industry tried to convince us that CO2 was good for the planet on the grounds that it’s “plant food”, the ranching industry has sought to sow doubt and confusion about its vast environmental impacts.
We live in a bubble of delusion about where our food comes from and how it is produced. We’ve been dealing in stories when we should be dealing in numbers. Our gastroporn aesthetics, embedded in bucolic fantasy, are among the greatest threats to life on Earth.
George Monbiot’s book Regenesis: Feeding the World Without Devouring the Planet, is published by Penguin.
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