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This infographic brought to you by the oil industry™
Please focus on this infographic and curbing your own satisfaction, so we can continue to be the biggest polluter AND make money hand over fist.
I'm a biologist and I fully agree with the infographic, unless you have any actual data points that disprove it to share with us.
https://www.epa.gov/ghgemissions/sources-greenhouse-gas-emissions
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Top_contributors_to_climate_change
Huh... Did you even attempt to read what you're citing, or have you just copied the first two Google results?
None of these sources is listing how much each food source contributes to greenhouse emissions - they're just listing how emissions are grouped by category (industry, agriculture, etc). This infographic is a breakdown of the food impact, not a ranking of which industry is got the most emissions - this is quite obvious.
Not eating red meats is the single most impactful change an individual can have on their carbon footprint, it does not mean it's the single most effective change the entire world could make. In fact, the very infographic you're criticizing mentions how much of these emissions come from food production.
Try again.
There are tons of sources that show agriculture and food pale in comparison to the emissions of other sectors.
I'm happy that you could pass Biology, but you failed Statistics. Try again.
I mean not really.
Live stock accounts for 60% of land usage, but only 2% of calories consumed. Much of that land is growing feed for cattle. They eat millions more calories in grain than is harvested.
Meat is just such a luxury with how many resources it uses. Like the world doesn't have enough space for everyone to eat meat like the US does.
It also feels very cruel to grow so much feed for cows when people are starving.
But people love Meat and have it part of their culture so people won't stop no matter what.
So fingers crossed for lab grown meat so this debate can just vanish.
most cows mostly eat grass. what crops are given to livestock is usually plants (or parts of plants) that people can't or won't eat.
I think what they’re getting at is that the land being used to grow that grass and inedible plants could instead be used to grow plants that humans can eat.