According to this article. Some excerpts:
"Rather than being seduced by exhortations to eat more products made
from industrially grown soya, maize and grains, we should be encouraging
sustainable forms of meat and dairy production based on traditional
rotational systems, permanent pasture and conservation grazing. We
should, at the very least, question the ethics of driving up demand for
crops that require high inputs of fertiliser, fungicides, pesticides and
herbicides, while demonising sustainable forms of livestock farming
that can restore soils and biodiversity, and sequester carbon."
"So there’s a huge responsibility here: unless you’re sourcing your
vegan products specifically from organic, 'no-dig' systems, you are
actively participating in the destruction of soil biota, promoting a
system that deprives other species, including small mammals, birds and
reptiles, of the conditions for life, and significantly contributing to
climate change.
"Our ecology evolved with large herbivores – with free-roaming herds of
aurochs (the ancestral cow), tarpan (the original horse), elk, bear,
bison, red deer, roe deer, wild boar and millions of beavers. They are
species whose interactions with the environment sustain and promote
life. Using herbivores as part of the farming cycle can go a long way
towards making agriculture sustainable.
"There’s no question we should all be eating far less meat, and calls
for an end to high-carbon, polluting, unethical, intensive forms of
grain-fed meat production are commendable. But if your concerns as a
vegan are the environment, animal welfare and your own health, then it’s
no longer possible to pretend that these are all met simply by giving
up meat and dairy. Counterintuitive as it may seem, adding the
occasional organic, pasture-fed steak to your diet could be the
right way to square the circle."
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.