Less Meat?
xyz
posted 11/02/09 10:59 AM | updated 11/02/09 11:04 AM
Featured Post! | Views: 258 | Comments : 5 | Features

Time to Eat the Dog? Or Less Meat?

By Michael van Baker
Editor
Recommend this story (1 votes)

Our SunBreak Flickr Pool delivers perfectly, thanks to mangpages.

Mainstream news is having a hard time reporting on Robert and Brenda Vale's study (actually a book) called Time to Eat the Dog? The Real Guide to Sustainable Living. CBS News begins its story like this: "So apparently Rover whizzing on the carpet isn't the worst thing he does. Not by a long shot. He's also killing the planet." Locally, the Seattle Times is more laconic: "Thanks for killing the planet, dog owners."

The upshot of the Vales' figurings is that the ecological footprint of a medium-sized or large dog, based on its food intake, is greater than that of an SUV (a 4.6-litre Toyota Land Cruiser) driven 10,000 km per year. (That's including both the SUV's fuel and the energy used to build it.)

While the book's title is clearly a provocation, the message gets lost in the weeds. In both stories, there's a lot of scoffing from the outset, even though the study's limited parameters have been backed up by New Scientist, in their article, "How green is your pet?"

The Times pitted our local eco-wonk, Sightline's Clark Williams-Derry, against New Scientist.


"When I saw the study I ran some quick numbers," Williams-Derry said. "The average dog has to eat at least twice as much as the average person for this to be right. People are just heavier than dogs so, I just had to scratch my head at that."


[UPDATE: I should have checked Sightline's blog before I wrote this: Clark picks the study apart on a number of its assumptions--not least of which is what we're actually feeding our dogs.]

One: Regardless of what the authors intended, the conclusion that should be drawn from the study is that eating meat, in general, is energy intensive. It doesn't matter who is eating the meat, you or your dog; it's costing an arm and a leg ecologically. That is not always the case, depending on who is raising the meat, but it's fair to say that our industrial meat producers don't tend to have sustainability top of mind.

That is why someone like Michael Pollan might suggest that "A vegan in a Hummer has a lighter carbon footprint than a beef eater in a Prius." He's had to retract that statement because of the "carbon" qualifier, which leads to a fairly strong criticism of the Vale's study. Inputs are not the whole picture--there are also outputs.

That is the larger problem with the Vales' study: it's placed in a single-value context. Based strictly on inputs, the title should be "Time to Eat the Neighbor?" But there is a value context. There are competing carbon outputs. There's the enjoyment and exercise that owning a dog brings. (And don't discount that "enjoyment" as purely personal--Americans need all the exercise we can get.) And of course there's the choice of how big your dog is and what you feed it.

On the second page of the New Scientist article, there's this: "If you already have a pet, then changing its diet can help. Meat is the key, since its production is so energy-intensive. You can almost halve the eco-pawprint of your dog simply by feeding it many of the same sort of savory foods that you eat, which are likely to be far less protein-rich than most dog foods."

Save and Share this article
Tags: new scientist, time to eat the dog, sightline, michael pollan, meat, vegan
savecancel
CommentsRSS Feed
Ecological pawprint nonsense
I've not read the Vale's book, but have read the Newscientist piece. The reason their findings are nonsense is because their fundamental assertion (from which many of their other data are derived) that it takes 13.4 square metres of land to grow a kilogramme of cereals, is wrong. This would correspond to a yield of 0.746 tonnes per hectare. In the UK, average wheat yields are pretty much exactly 10 times this much. This means that the ecologocal footprint of a medium sized dog is actually 0.084 Ha, roughly 20% of that of the Land Cruiser. I strongly suspect that the Vale's entire argument is based upon a misplaced decimal point. I suppose this is actually quite funny, but it's also a bit demoralising that nobody noticed.
Comment by Sam Little
5 days ago
( 0 votes)
( report abuse ) ( )
RE: Ecological pawprint nonsense
I think you're right, Sam. Our local eco-blog Sightline came at it another way, noting that if you accept the .84 Ha, "one-third of all US cropland" must be devoted to dog food, which is clearly not the case.
Comment by Michael van Baker
5 days ago
( 0 votes)
( report abuse ) ( )
RE: Ecological pawprint nonsense
Maybe the authors were not assuming conventional farming techniques which deliver the highly productive US and UK farm yields. Perhaps they simply assumed we would go to "organic" farming instead.
Comment by Allen Casey
4 days ago
( 0 votes)
( report abuse ) ( )
Re: Pawprint Nonsense
That's a fair point, but the numbers are still way out. Organic wheat yields are rarely below 5 tonnes/hectare in the UK. This corresponds to 2 square metres to grow a kilogramme of wheat. NZ data are similar. This gives us an organic doggy eco-pawprint of 0.127 Ha for the medium-sized dog.
Comment by Sam Little
4 days ago
( 0 votes)
( report abuse ) ( )
Eating Dog by the Uncouth Gourmands
We may think that we have domesticated dogs, but it may perhaps be more accurate to say that dogs have domesticated us, which is especially true in some forms of Western cultures; those that consider killing dogs for eating or any other purposes as cultural taboos. What was once considered the undeniable right of the domesticating species, i.e. to manipulate the environment in a way that would positively affect the survival rate of the domesticated species, which would in turn positively affect the survival rate of the domesticating species – in this case, the human– has now been shriveled to a daunty, pusillanimous catchphrase: a companion animal. What was once considered the naturally given prerogative of man as the domesticator has now been folded under the empty slogan of animal rights, and now we face a dilemma that faced a certain famous Danish prince 400 years ago, or something very close to that: to eat, or not to eat, that is the question.

http://uncouthgourmands.com/2009/10/29/a-word-on-eating-dog-
Comment by Josie Mora
3 days ago
( 0 votes)
( report abuse ) ( )
Add Your Comment
Name:
Email:
(will not be displayed)
Subject:
Comment: