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Rapid global phaseout of animal agriculture has the potential to stabilize greenhouse gas levels for 30 years and offset 68 percent of CO2 emissions this century
Author(s) -
Michael B. Eisen,
Patrick O. Brown
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
plos climate
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2767-3200
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pclm.0000010
Subject(s) - greenhouse gas , environmental science , global warming , livestock , nitrous oxide , agriculture , climate change , methane , biomass (ecology) , carbon dioxide , atmospheric carbon cycle , greenhouse effect , animal agriculture , environmental protection , natural resource economics , carbon sequestration , agronomy , ecology , economics , biology
Animal agriculture contributes significantly to global warming through ongoing emissions of the potent greenhouse gases methane and nitrous oxide, and displacement of biomass carbon on the land used to support livestock. However, because estimates of the magnitude of the effect of ending animal agriculture often focus on only one factor, the full potential benefit of a more radical change remains underappreciated. Here we quantify the full “climate opportunity cost” of current global livestock production, by modeling the combined, long-term effects of emission reductions and biomass recovery that would be unlocked by a phaseout of animal agriculture. We show that, even in the absence of any other emission reductions, persistent drops in atmospheric methane and nitrous oxide levels, and slower carbon dioxide accumulation, following a phaseout of livestock production would, through the end of the century, have the same cumulative effect on the warming potential of the atmosphere as a 25 gigaton per year reduction in anthropogenic CO 2 emissions, providing half of the net emission reductions necessary to limit warming to 2°C. The magnitude and rapidity of these potential effects should place the reduction or elimination of animal agriculture at the forefront of strategies for averting disastrous climate change.

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