TABLE
TABLE
  • 79
  • 79 221
Feed Podcast S3 Bonus Episode: Economics of Food System Transformation (GFSC Part 2)
500 scientists from 60 countries gathered at the 5th Global Food Security Conference in Leuven, Belgium. Instead of saying, "you had to be there," we bring you voices and reflections from the conference. Host Matthew Kessler recorded dozens of interviews, asking experts what key messages they want to deliver to those with the power to change food systems, what are the economics of food systems transformation, and which solutions to make food systems more resilient deserve more attention.
This is Part 2 of a 3-part series, made with the support from ‘shout it out’, an instrument of the Global Minds program.
About the Global Food Security Conference
Food system activities are increasing putting pressure on planetary boundaries and the natural resource base which underpins food security for all. They are also accentuating the triple burden of malnutrition for many, and healthier diets derived from more sustainable food systems are needed. The triple ‘Cs’ of climate, covid and conflict, and other recent short-term shocks to the food system, have emerged against a background of longer-term stresses, adding the issue of food system resilience to the already-recognised sustainability agenda. There is therefore an urgent need for food system change both to improve health and environmental outcomes in fairer and more equitable ways, and to enhance resilience to further shocks and stresses. Building on the momentum from the UN Food System Summit and recognizing that the 2030 target year of the Sustainable Development Goals is on the horizon, this 5th Global Food Security Conference will bring together science, business and policy to address this need.
This 5th edition was organized by Elsevier, KU Leuven, Wageningen University and Research and TABLE.
About the speakers
David Laborde is the Director of the Agrifood Economics and Policy Division at the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) in Rome. In this role, he supervises a number of flagship publications, such as the State of Food Security and Nutrition (SOFI) or the State of Food and Agriculture (SOFA), and leads the division’s work on policy monitoring, policy reform, and realignment of incentives to support agrifood system transformation. He also provides leadership on two priority areas for the institution: resilience and bioeconomy.
Charlotte Janssens is postdoctoral researcher in Agricultural Economics at the Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences at University of Leuven (KU Leuven). She is affiliated with the Biodiversity and Natural Resources Program at the International Institute of Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA). Her research agenda focuses on the linkages between agricultural trade, climate change, and food security on a regional and global scale. She specializes in advancing economic and interdisciplinary quantitative modelling tools for the analysis of future socioeconomic and climate change scenarios.
Koen Deconinck is an economist in Trade and Agricultural Directorate at OECD. He analyses trends and challenges for global agriculture and across the food chain, and distill the policy implications for OECD member states. He was the lead author of the OECD report “Making Better Policies for Food Systems” (2021) and "Fast and furious: the rise of environmental impact reporting in food systems" (2023).
Steven Lord is researches the economics of food systems it the Environmental Change Institute at the University of Oxford. He has worked on system and economic modelling for sustainability, risk and resilience within the Food System Transformation Group, fostering a broad range of international collaborations. His research interests are divided between research into social and abatement costing of food system impact, pure mathematics, and food systems modelling.
Purnima Menon is the Senior Director for Food and Nutritional Policy at International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI). She oversees three units within IFPRI/CGIAR: Nutrition, Diets, and Health (NDH), Poverty, Gender, and Inclusion (PGI), and Markets, Trade, and Institutions (MTI) and is based in New Delhi, India. In her work in India, Dr. Menon directs POSHAN (Partnerships and Opportunities to Strengthen and Harmonize Actions for Nutrition in India), an initiative to support more use of evidence for nutrition in India.
Ewout Frankema is professor and chair of the Economic and Environmental History Group of Wageningen University and research fellow of the UK Centre for Economic Policy Research (CEPR). His research agenda focuses on a deeper understanding of the long-term comparative economic development of developing regions (Africa, Latin America, Asia) and the historical origins and nature of present-day global inequality.
มุมมอง: 5

วีดีโอ

Feed Podcast S3 Bonus Episode: Is Global Food Security a Solvable Puzzle? (GFSC Part 1)
มุมมอง 117 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา
500 scientists from 60 countries gathered at the 5th Global Food Security Conference in Leuven, Belgium. Instead of saying, "you had to be there," we bring you voices and reflections from the conference. Host Matthew Kessler recorded dozens of interviews, asking experts what key messages they want to deliver to those with the power to change food systems, what are the economics of food systems ...
Perspectivas latinoamericanas sobre agrobiodiversidad: Reflexiones de cara a la COP16
มุมมอง 2914 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา
Este webinar tuvo lugar el Martes 15 de Octubre de 2024. Encuentre más información sobre los eventos desarrollados por MESA (TABLE), aquí: tabledebates.org/table-events Descripción del evento: El 40% de la biodiversidad mundial está en la región de América Latina y el Caribe, donde se encuentran 6 de los 17 países con mayor diversidad biológica del mundo: México, Colombia, Brasil, Ecuador, Vene...
Feed Podcast S3E8: Is cultivated "meat" unnatural? Is meat today natural?
มุมมอง 2314 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา
While many wonder about the technological hurdles preventing cultivated meat from entering commercial markets, fewer ask a more basic question: will people actually eat it, or will they find it too unnatural? In this episode, we're joined by Cor van der Weele, emeritus professor in philosophy from Wageningen University, who has had a front-row seat to the past 15 years of shifting perceptions o...
Feed Podcast S3E7: Does CRISPR make our food unnatural?
มุมมอง 6819 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา
If more and more gene-edited foods become common on our plates, is that a sign of a promising or worrying food future? With Dr. Lauren Crossland-Marr, food anthropologist and host of the podcast A CRISPR Bite, we unpack whether it’s fair to call CRISPR a natural way of "speeding up the breeding" process, whether technological innovations such as gene editing are addressing root causes of food s...
Feed Podcast S3E6: What's a natural diet? (with Amy Styring)
มุมมอง 14วันที่ผ่านมา
What influences the meals we enjoy today? Meal historian and cultural researcher Richard Tellström from Stockholm University suggests that the surrounding natural environments and ecosystems only play a minimal role. Instead, he argues that our choices are primarily shaped by cultural, political and economic forces. This episode dives into the dramatic shifts in Swedish diets over the past cent...
Feed Podcast S3E5: What's a natural diet? (with Amy Styring)
มุมมอง 33วันที่ผ่านมา
Around 6000 years ago in Northwest Europe, our ancestors transitioned from hunter-gatherer societies to sedentary farming. How did their diets change during this time? The field of archaeological sciences and chemistry teamed up to shed new light on this question. In this episode, we ask Amy Styring (Archaeological chemist at the U Oxford) what's her take on a natural diet, whether we overestim...
Feed Podcast S3E4: Can we eat enough white-tailed deer to restore forest ecosystems?
มุมมอง 5714 วันที่ผ่านมา
Is it possible to eat enough white-tailed deer to keep their populations low enough to restore ecosystems? We posed this question to Bernd Blossey, professor at Cornell University who specializes in the management of invasive species and the restoration of disrupted ecological relationships. In this episode, we look at the history of white-tailed deer in the eastern forests of the United States...
Feed Podcast S3E3: Eating invasive crayfish - a solution to our ecological mess?
มุมมอง 3314 วันที่ผ่านมา
Are invasive species natural? If we introduced them, do we have some responsibility to manage them? What if we could reduce their numbers through the natural process of eating? In this episode, Jackie Turner (TABLE) joins crayfish trapper Bob Ring to see if we can eat our way out of one of the environmental problems we’ve created - the spread of invasive American Signal Crayfish into the river ...
Feed Podcast S3E2: Grasshoppers - agricultural pest or sustainable food?
มุมมอง 3114 วันที่ผ่านมา
What if we shifted our perspective from seeing some species as a problem to seeing them as an abundant and tasty source of food? Over the next few episodes, we’ll hear three different stories: grasshoppers as pests in Mexico, invasive crayfish in London and overpopulated white-tailed deer in the United States. With a rising trend for traditional foods, demand for grasshoppers has exploded in Me...
Feed Podcast S3E1: Should food systems be more natural?
มุมมอง 7821 วันที่ผ่านมา
“Is a microbe less natural than a cow?” This season we ask scientists, farmers, technologists and philosophers about how natural our food systems should be. In this age where industrial technology has profoundly transformed our eating habits and the landscapes around us, we explore whether we should let nature be our ultimate guide or fully lean into the technological innovations reshaping our ...
Feed Podcast Bonus Episode: Neena Prasad on the power of ultra-processed foods
มุมมอง 4021 วันที่ผ่านมา
People across the world are consuming more ultra-processed foods (UPFs). Will Latin American countries and elsewhere follow the path of the US and the UK, where over half of calories consumed now come from UPFs? Dr Neena Prasad, director of Bloomberg Philanthropies’ Food Policy Program, joins us to talk about the power of and the power behind UPFs. We talk about the utility and harms of process...
Feed Podcast Bonus Episode: Jessica Duncan on COP28 and who shapes food policy
มุมมอง 3528 วันที่ผ่านมา
Food systems are finally getting more attention at global climate conversations. But who is at the table shaping our food futures? We caught up with Jessica Duncan, Associate Professor on the Politics of Food Systems Transformation at Wageningen University, to hear her thoughts and concerns about COP 28. Then we re-air our previous conversation with Jessica Duncan from May 2021, where we talk a...
Event: Fossil Fuels and Food Systems - A Policy Discussion for COP29
มุมมอง 357หลายเดือนก่อน
Our food systems account for 15% of global fossil fuel use. It's hard to imagine our food system without coal, gas, and oil, but the science tells us that we have to not only imagine it we have to build it. But how? A recent podcast series collaboration between TABLE, IPES-Food, and the Global Alliance for the Future of Food explores this transition. In "Fuel to Fork", host Matthew Kessler inte...
Event: Rethinking animals in food and agriculture: welfare, rights and the future of food
มุมมอง 2823 หลายเดือนก่อน
This online panel discussion took place on Tuesday 10 September 2024. Find recordings of previous events and information about other upcoming events from TABLE here: www.tabledebates.org/table-events Event description: Imagine a distant future. In it, our relationship with the animals we eat has changed for the better. What do you see? A world where regenerative farming allows animals to live n...
Women Scientists from Global South on Food Security
มุมมอง 5195 หลายเดือนก่อน
Women Scientists from Global South on Food Security
Are we on the path to more resilient food systems?
มุมมอง 1275 หลายเดือนก่อน
Are we on the path to more resilient food systems?
Event: Ask the Author: Leveraging networks to transform food systems
มุมมอง 597 หลายเดือนก่อน
Event: Ask the Author: Leveraging networks to transform food systems
Event: Global villain, local savior? What's the role of livestock in sub-Saharan Africa
มุมมอง 1648 หลายเดือนก่อน
Event: Global villain, local savior? What's the role of livestock in sub-Saharan Africa
Event: Regenerative & ultra-processed? (Part 2) - What does corporate engagement mean for regen ag?
มุมมอง 16210 หลายเดือนก่อน
Event: Regenerative & ultra-processed? (Part 2) - What does corporate engagement mean for regen ag?
Event: Regenerative & ultra-processed? (Part 1) - What does corporate engagement mean for regen ag?
มุมมอง 34211 หลายเดือนก่อน
Event: Regenerative & ultra-processed? (Part 1) - What does corporate engagement mean for regen ag?
Feed Podcast Bonus Episode: Narrowing the yield gap in sub-Saharan Africa
มุมมอง 77ปีที่แล้ว
Feed Podcast Bonus Episode: Narrowing the yield gap in sub-Saharan Africa
Event: Changing diets to tackle climate change - what's the role of government?
มุมมอง 163ปีที่แล้ว
Event: Changing diets to tackle climate change - what's the role of government?
Event: Can nature-based solutions deliver on their promise?
มุมมอง 307ปีที่แล้ว
Event: Can nature-based solutions deliver on their promise?
Event: Nitrogen, climate change and food: showing the connections
มุมมอง 334ปีที่แล้ว
Event: Nitrogen, climate change and food: showing the connections
Feed Podcast S2E16: What did we learn about power?
มุมมอง 52ปีที่แล้ว
Feed Podcast S2E16: What did we learn about power?
Feed Podcast S2E15: Lucy Vincent and Linda Kjær Minke on Food in Prisons
มุมมอง 65ปีที่แล้ว
Feed Podcast S2E15: Lucy Vincent and Linda Kjær Minke on Food in Prisons
Meat: The Four Futures explores Plant based 'no meat'
มุมมอง 65ปีที่แล้ว
Meat: The Four Futures explores Plant based 'no meat'
Meat: The Four Futures explores Less meat
มุมมอง 68ปีที่แล้ว
Meat: The Four Futures explores Less meat
Feed Podcast S2E14: Philip McMichael on the "Corporate food regime"
มุมมอง 623ปีที่แล้ว
Feed Podcast S2E14: Philip McMichael on the "Corporate food regime"

ความคิดเห็น

  • @gloriaagyare6472
    @gloriaagyare6472 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I love the diverse perspectives of this discussion. Very informative and helpful discussion

  • @bubbajones6907
    @bubbajones6907 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    What about the Muslims? Muslims have many children, and the EU will be predominantly Muslim in the next twenty to thirty years. They don't care about feminism, veganism, or sustainability. Don't forget that feminists usually fail to produce viable offspring.

  • @addl7340
    @addl7340 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    New favourite channel. So many questions answered and dots connected, thank you 👌

  • @klaasvandermolen6335
    @klaasvandermolen6335 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    What everyone seems to miss is that methane, by far the most influential greenhouse gas produced by livestock, is made by the microbes from plant material that the cows eat. In order to grow, plants have first taken up CO2 from the atmosphere. And because methane in the atmosphere readily breakes down back into CO2 (halflife of 12 years), its a cycle! Yes, CH4 is way more potent than CO2 but as long as the amount of cattle does not increase world wide and the feed they eat also does not change, the concentration of ruminant methane reaches an equilibrium and does no longer contribute to climate change but is neutral! In fact, methane concentrations in the atmosphere have been stable in the not so distant past for a couple of years but are now increasing again, mainly because of natural gas leaks which, unlike ruminant derived methane, is not part of the short carbon cycle.

    • @LittleJohnFish
      @LittleJohnFish 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      This is what I don't understand, I watch a very well made video that seems to know what it is talking about but then seems to break the laws of physics by suggesting cows produce methane from nothing and completely ignore that grasses are made up significantly of carbon and hydrogen . I believe cows are carbon neutral however destroying already established ecosystems to stock animals is obliviously not.

    • @klaasvandermolen6335
      @klaasvandermolen6335 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@LittleJohnFish Yes, exactly what I think as well!

  • @terusanzues6571
    @terusanzues6571 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Video full of political propaganda that never be wrong and cannot be corrected.

  • @robsimpson2540
    @robsimpson2540 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    The emissions caused by growing feed crops for livestock. Regenerative grazers do not feed any supplementary feeds, the animals eat only forage at pasture, so including emissions from feed crop production massively skews the figures.

  • @josephmclennan1229
    @josephmclennan1229 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Climate change is BS .

  • @PeterSkye
    @PeterSkye 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    If you make a poll on whether to prioritize economic growth vs environmental protection, it's likely that second one wins. But clearly not against eco-modernism, which aims to improve both. Having strong economy and thriving ecosystem at once. Good conversation!

  • @KeepItSimpleSailor
    @KeepItSimpleSailor 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Private jet owners need you to eat less meat, dairy and eggs - please comply generously 😁

  • @derryperkin58
    @derryperkin58 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    What a bucket of Bull. This kind of stuff should be criminal.

  • @billgrayson9818
    @billgrayson9818 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Most of the soy being fed to livestock can be viewed as a byproduct of the soya oil used in ultra processed human food. Without this pathway, soya meal would become a waste product.

  • @billgrayson9818
    @billgrayson9818 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Where does Sara's figure for the $12tn societal damage cost of the global food system come from?

  • @BJAvegan
    @BJAvegan 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Land used for grazing takes 37% of the world's ice free land. Stop the grazing and promoting of consuming animals and that land could be rewilded to sequester enough crbon to reverse climate change. See Dr. Raos published paper: Animal Agriculture is the leading cause of climate change.

  • @SudenDogan32
    @SudenDogan32 ปีที่แล้ว

    Perfect solution.

  • @thisstepreallysucks
    @thisstepreallysucks ปีที่แล้ว

    Great example of begging the question.

  • @newhouseoxford
    @newhouseoxford ปีที่แล้ว

    An excellent summary

  • @kellypr1
    @kellypr1 ปีที่แล้ว

    Cows & Bulls = Mature males weigh 450-1,800 kg (1,000-4,000 pounds) and females weigh 360-1,100 kg (800-2,400 pounds) The average Stegosaurus was about 30 feet long, between 9 and 13 feet tall, weighed about 5.5 tons (11,000 pounds). Methane would have also been produced by other herbivorous dinosaurs, most notably members of the Thyreophora (shield bearers), such as Stegosaurus.

    • @bono46
      @bono46 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The time life of methane is somewhere in between 7 to 12 years. So all the methane produced by dinosaurs is already gone, like, many, many, maaaaany years ago. The levels of current methane are a consequence of animal farming, not dinosaurs.

    • @pomodorino1766
      @pomodorino1766 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      That's not relevant, you should define the emissions of all dinosaurs and compare it with those of all cows to make a point. A hundred small cows will certainly emit more than one big dino. Most important, the atmosphere that the dinosaurs lived in was completely different. We would all die in short time if we were to time travel to that time. Also there was a balance as shown by available fossil and geological records.

  • @popeyegordon
    @popeyegordon ปีที่แล้ว

    Is agroecology a solution or an agenda? No matter how much sociologists and lawyers prance around in white coats, their arbitrary political imposition goes against any interpretation of the scientific method. Agro-ecology agendas are trapping African farmers in poverty New study reveals: "That’s the finding of the first continent-wide meta-analysis of conservation agriculture experiments in Africa, and it threatens to completely up-end the dominant paradigm around agro-ecology. In recent years, agro-ecology has come to be seen as a virtual panacea in sub-Saharan Africa. Aid agencies, churches, development NGOs and United Nations agencies all now tie their support for resource-poor farmers to an explicitly agro-ecological agenda. NGOs are keen to offer anecdotal evidence for how these approaches can help smallholder farmers in Africa. Yet scientifically rigorous empirical evidence for the benefits of agro-ecology - also termed “conservation agriculture” - has so far been lacking. Until now, with the publication of a paper titled “Limits of conservation agriculture to overcome low crop yields in sub-Saharan Africa” in the peer-reviewed journal Nature Food. Scientists, who analyzed 933 observations across 16 countries in sub-Saharan Africa comparing conservation agriculture with conventional cropping, found that agro-ecological approaches do not substantially improve productivity and do not therefore help address the food insecurity of smallholder farmers. This is not because conventional tillage-based farming is better than conservation agriculture - in fact, as these results show, they are equally bad - but because the advocates for agro-ecology also tend push an ideological agenda that rejects scientific innovations such as biotechnology, hybrid seeds, mechanization, irrigation and other tools that might more reliably increase productivity for smallholder farmers in Africa. The study authors, led by Marc Corbeels, a specialist in sustainable intensification based at CIMMYT in Nairobi, Kenya, found that conservation agriculture did not improve yields in cotton, cowpea, rice, sorghum or soybean. Maize yields did show a 4 percent increase, but only if glyphosate pre-emergence herbicide treatments were applied, something which is strictly forbidden by agro-ecology advocates. In practice therefore, agro-ecology is likely to have no benefits at all to most farmers in Africa. In fact, it could even have negative effects. This is primarily because soil improvements from conservation agriculture require the use of crop residues as mulches. In dry conditions these can help retain moisture in the ground by reducing evaporation. However, crop residues are much more valuable to smallholder farmers as fodder for cattle and other livestock animals, which produce meat, milk and manure and are therefore much more important for safeguarding food security than a slight increase in maize yield. In the arid conditions of much of sub-Saharan Africa, there is simply no spare biomass to use in conservation agriculture. This is not to say that no-till systems have no benefits anywhere in the world. In fact, reduced or conservation tillage approaches have been widely adopted across North and South America, where they help to reduce soil erosion, conserve moisture and sequester carbon. Indeed, most of the carbon benefits of genetically modified crops - which removed 24 million tonnes of CO2 in 2016 - arise because herbicide tolerance traits allow farmers to adopt no-till practices. geneticliteracyproject.org/2020/08/03/viewpoint-agro-ecology-agendas-are-trapping-african-farmers-in-poverty/

  • @popeyegordon
    @popeyegordon ปีที่แล้ว

    All movements start with causes and good intentions,” Mugwanya noted. “At its core it’s to promote taking care of social justice - I wouldn’t fight such a cause. The problem comes in when movements get so radical in terms of their ideology. What I’ve seen in Africa, the dominant version of agroecology to me as an ideological extension of the well-fed, privileged folks in in the West who run to places like Africa and use all these narratives like we don’t want Africa to go through the problems of the West, forgetting the contextual problems that Africa has. I’ve seen the problems you have here [in the US] and food is not one of them. Where I come from, I can tell you, I know what it means to go without a meal a day. We need to have a very honest and nuanced conversation about what kind of agroecology are you trying to promote? And are you really caring about the needs of the farmers, getting them out of poverty, helping them have more food, or are you caring for your ideology?” Mugwanya said that he wrote a critique of the dominant version of agroecology, which “seems to me to be a proxy word for fighting industrial practices.” However, he feels it “diverges from the scientific definition of agroecology, which doesn’t say you can exclude anything” in its practice. “Those with the louder voices, the ideological side, tend to push a point of view that’s very conservative,” that restricts options and can create additional burdens on women. Genetic Literacy Project dot org Oct 5, 2020

  • @joasia077
    @joasia077 ปีที่แล้ว

    Buyest at it's best, shining light on the matters in imbalance. I expect higher standard if you want to provide expert message. TABLE generator, why aren't you responding to valid comments below? Bait click.

  • @johnkilgallon207
    @johnkilgallon207 ปีที่แล้ว

    For this research to have even a scrap of legitimacy it should have been benchmarked against the thousands of years of stable atmospheric CO2 levels up to the industrial Era when humans started burning fossil fuels on a massive scale. How did that all that carbon we are burning now, get sequestered? We had huge herds of ruminants during all that period. Did all the cows start farting more all of a sudden? This is not research. it is propaganda!

  • @regenerationtrust5779
    @regenerationtrust5779 ปีที่แล้ว

    Total rubbish! An integrated approach with 24 hour rotational grazing and well designed Agroforestry is one of the only ways to restore our land and atmosphere. This is a huge difference from growing corn and soy and shoving the cows into feedlots. Please try and make a real case with real data!

    • @reason3581
      @reason3581 ปีที่แล้ว

      So, since you seem to have a strong opinion about it, did you read the entire report? Did you carefully go through their methodology and the data? The solution is not shoving the cows into feedlots, it’s consuming less beef and dairy. The way I see it is that if we continue to eat small amounts of beef it should come from well managed small scale grazing like silvopasture.

  • @murrayculix
    @murrayculix ปีที่แล้ว

    This is antiwhiteism. No white guilt

  • @preppingbasics
    @preppingbasics ปีที่แล้ว

    Many thanks to Holly Cecil for providing English subtitles and to the Association végétarienne de France (not affiliated with the FCRN) for providing French subtitles. You can also contribute subtitles in another language by clicking the three dots under the video and then "Add translations". an anti grazing video giving thanks to a vegetarian association, well that's transparency at🤣 least!!!!! 😂🤣😂🤣😅😅🤣😂🤣😅😂🤣😅

  • @preppingbasics
    @preppingbasics ปีที่แล้ว

    pfft, immediately assumes forest clearing, and ignores reduced pesticide, more jobs, nutrient density of meat/dairy, combing with poultry free ranging, increased wildlife with reduced impact as pastures are not a mono culture of soy or maize, water retention, no phosphate run off, and then adds using land for animal feed(however that was interpreted)...talk about cherry picking!!!

  • @Videomaker-dario
    @Videomaker-dario ปีที่แล้ว

    Maravilhoso

  • @vegandew
    @vegandew ปีที่แล้ว

    In short: *GO PLANT-BASED* Why do we keep playing MENTAL GYMNASTICS instead of accepting the facts?

  • @BJAvegan
    @BJAvegan 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Wildlife are not raised and killed by the billions as babies. Raising animal to be killed is exploitive. Nature is telling to stop.

  • @BJAvegan
    @BJAvegan 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    There are billions in subsidies means it is not sustainable. Thank you for the program. I wonder what you think now that COP26 is done.

  • @BJAvegan
    @BJAvegan 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Ecologist: small farms are less efficient than the CAFOs, who save due to crowding and transportation costs, etc. There is plenty of data already to make good choices and stop animal agriculture.

  • @BJAvegan
    @BJAvegan 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Wildlife are not bred like livestock are. Killed as babies, more bred killed as babies, a very different amount methane.

    • @BJAvegan
      @BJAvegan 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      billions of bred animals are killed per year

  • @BJAvegan
    @BJAvegan 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    I recommend the published report that 87% of green house gases are due to the animal agriculture and the opportunity cost of the deforestation caused by the animal agriculture. Even the father of climate change, James Hansen, said the best thing an individual can do is stop eating beef. According to the IPCC, 43% of ice free land is used for feeding animals. Almost 40% of that used to be forested. By simply stopping animal agriculture we can restore forests and grasslands and sequester enough carbon to take our greenhouse gases back to the 1700s.

  • @BJAvegan
    @BJAvegan 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Just because some have protein deficiency does not mean livestock is needed. There is the more sustainable, less resource using plant protein.

  • @christopherwalton1373
    @christopherwalton1373 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Some carbon went into the roots(not eaten) some into exudates on the roots for microorganisms (not eaten) some into meat, bone, manure (Most of which feeds microorganisms and stored as organic matter) wool in sheep, milk etc…… how dose the methane burped out equal the same amount of co2?? You cant make mass! How can the carbon be in all these places and still be back in the atmosphere?? Sequestration. If you don’t plough it up it’s stored for ever, problem solved 👍

  • @bismarkbizmark5639
    @bismarkbizmark5639 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Millions of bison grazing for millennia and the climate was fine

  • @jackgregory7997
    @jackgregory7997 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    𝓅𝓇o𝓂o𝓈𝓂

  • @sourcepotato_bwobby
    @sourcepotato_bwobby 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    I am the 32nd person to view this video.

  • @REGENETARIANISM
    @REGENETARIANISM 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Where did my prior comments go?

  • @Bandybear
    @Bandybear 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    I watched the video almost in its entirety and learned nothing new ! Don’t even bother!

  • @Bandybear
    @Bandybear 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Propaganda - they won’t talk about regenerative agriculture tell later they are first discussing carbon and the grazing animals being the problem. How very on par with the agenda these institutions are shoving down everyone’s throat but what did i think would be discussed here ? Just more of the same thing and it’s not good for the people. It’s good for a few and the rest will suffer , bravo scientists your doing so much for the future of humanity.

  • @davidighernandez
    @davidighernandez 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Hundreds of years ago millions of bisons roamed almost all over America. Is not reasonable that even when this grazing animals were eating carbon levels remained stable, I do believe this video is biased instead of looking for grazing animals that were already in the environment. Another thing is that carbon even with regenerative grazing has a carbon loss because cows are being degraded elsewhere. With more carbon in the ground, more cover in the soil the carbon uptake increases dramatically.

  • @robbieroberson1488
    @robbieroberson1488 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Why is organic matter 4% in a pasture and 1% in your yard?

  • @petersimpson6814
    @petersimpson6814 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    A newly planted forest is a net carbon emitter for the first 20-25 yrs of its life so present policy of paying multinationals millions of pounds of taxpayers money to greenwash is contributing to world carbon emissions for that period as well asremaving valuable food producing land.If livestock only produce 11.6% of global emissions maybe we should be looking at the near 60% growth in human population in 70 yrs who are the real polluters.

  • @johnslack9328
    @johnslack9328 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Grassland carbon contains more carbon then all the forests on the planet. Wow how was all that carbon sequestered? Perhaps through deep rooted, (in excess of 5 metres), perennial grasses that would not exist if not for symbotic migrating herbivores. Suggesting that we leave these great sinks of carbon alone is an astonishing comment because it does not take into consideration that many of the great bread baskets of the world are grasslands, which are now devoted to monocultures that have irrefutably resulted in significant carbon losses and soil degradation. I just finished reading a UN scientific paper on the ability of deep rooted grasslands in Colombia capable of sequestering 100 to 504 Tg C/yr. Is that the others you refer to in your video. I suggest if you want to challenge the academic merit of an apposing argument it would be only fair to be more specific then others and list these academic institutions as you so have kindly left yours.

  • @ericdanielski4802
    @ericdanielski4802 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Interesting topic.

  • @raykowalchuk3812
    @raykowalchuk3812 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    03:50 Dr. Garnett: "I'd like you to just kind of set up your stall in what you feel the real causes of the livestock problems we face today are and what your visions of a bad livestock future and a desirable livestock future might look like." Really, those are the options? This false dichotomy presupposes that livestock have any upside at all, the baseline for folks like these who defend the Eurocentric privilege of meat consumption (using cultural arguments -- Eastern or Western -- as justification). The problem with livestock is the APPETITE of the "problem solvers" themselves, including Dr. Garnett who struggles mightily defending her flexitarian choices. At 01:27 she says, "[the livestock issue] is an area where scientific understanding is fraught contested and the upshot of this is that the evidence gets pulled and pushed in different directions." Makes me think of when she coauthored a 2011 article (in a feed journal, nonetheless) with the livestock representatives from the FAO to debate Dr. Robert Goodland, a climate and environmental assessment specialist of impeccable reputation. "Scientific vigour" to Herrero et. al. seems to be "one and done" since none of the dozen authors (several of questionable authority and bias) responded to Goodland's rebuttal. I can think of no greater setback to mitigating livestock emissions than the orchestrated dismissal of Goodland and Anhang's research, especially since today's understanding reveals their calculations to be conservative and the GWP100 metric to be revealed as "creative carbon accounting" politically motivated to deprioritize methane emissions. The removal of bias remains a key element in the Scientific Method. While the fossil fuel industry offers up much analysis towards tweaking their emissions and managing their interests "beyond petroleum," why on Earth would we ever value their opinions or trust their research? The parallels with the livestock industry are profound, with the exception that the flavour of electrical power from coal or renewables are indistinguishable to to the consumer. The privileges of meat consumption keeps the future of livestock on *The Table.*

  • @dietistlinn8806
    @dietistlinn8806 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Loving this! THANK YOU

  • @MIKOOL13
    @MIKOOL13 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    I’m confused! So the paper admits that soil carbon sequestration works but it might not work forever? So we shouldn’t do it at all?. And we shouldn’t convert grasslands to croplan but we should eat more crops and less ruminats?

    • @DarkDeepGreen
      @DarkDeepGreen 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      What is clear is that it takes more land for animal agriculture. About 80 % is used for animals and animal feed. Switching to a plant based diet would require a lot less land. Land that could be used for rewilding, which would reverse climate change.

    • @MIKOOL13
      @MIKOOL13 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Who’s going to pay for framers ranchers for land to be unused and rewind? Wild buffalo and large ruminates are gone. We can use cattle to rewind massive grass lands. Rotational grazing increases wildlife on grass lands.

  • @jagatheesanchandrasekharan7248
    @jagatheesanchandrasekharan7248 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    A genuinely crucial in achieving food security and people’s food sovereignty is: Free Online JC PURE free birds 🐦 🦢 🦅 growing fruits 🍍 🍊 🥑 🥭 🍇 🍌 🍎 🍉 🍒 🍑 🥝 vegetables 🥦 🥕 🥗 🥬 🥔 🍆 🥜 🪴 🌱 🎃 🫑 🍅🍜 🧅 🍄 🍝 🥗 🥒 🌽 🍏 🫑 🌳 🍓 🍊 🥥 🌵 🍈 🌰 🇧🇧 🫐 🍅 🍐 🫒 Youniversity

  • @maxking9712
    @maxking9712 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    interesting discussion. thanks