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Livestock

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Livestock's Long Shadow. Environmental Issues and Options. Henning Steinfeld. Pierre Gerber ... Pierre Gerber. Tom Wassenaar. Vincent Castel. Mauricio Rosales ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Livestock


1
Sustainability Issues in Livestock Production
Based on
Livestocks Long ShadowEnvironmental Issues and
Options
Henning Steinfeld Pierre Gerber Tom
Wassenaar Vincent Castel Mauricio Rosales Cees
de Haan
2
Drivers of the Livestock Sector
  • Demand Drivers
  • Population growth 50 by 2050 globally
    slowing down in East Asia, still strong elsewhere
    in developing countries
  • Income growth strong in E and S Asia, NENA and
    SS Africa picking up
  • Urbanization more than 80 of population growth
    occurs in cities of developing countries
  • Supply Drivers
  • Cheap grain decreasing prices over the past four
    decades, rising over the past years
  • Technological change genetics, feeding,
    transport
  • Cheap energy substantial externalities, rising
    over the past years
  • Policy environment incentive frameworks, market
    and credit regulation, sanitary standards, labour
    and environmental policies

3
Broad trends soaring output and underlying
structural changes
Million metric tons
  • Growing intensities
  • Increasing scales
  • Vertical integration/longer food chains
  • Geographic shifts / geographic concentration

4
Meat Production The Relentless Advance of
Monogastrics
5
Estimated distribution of livestock production
systems
livestocks long shadow
6
Quantification of environmental impacts approach
  • Global issues
  • land use
  • climate change
  • water resources
  • biodiversity
  • Analysis of impacts using a food chain approach
    (from feed production to product)
  • Identification of technical and policy mitigation
    options

livestocks long shadow
7
Extent of pasture land
  • 3.4 billion hectares (about 26 of emerged lands)
  • Wide range of production intensity
  • low intensity in developing countries but growing
    in Latin America
  • intensification in OECD countries forest
    transition
  • Marginal land frontier exhausted
  • 20 of rangelands are degraded (higher in the dry
    lands)

livestocks long shadow
8
Extent of feedcrops
  • 470 million hectares (about 33 of arable land)
  • Cereals
  • Production growth mainly based on intensification
  • Regional distribution of crops
  • Soybean
  • Production growth based on expansion
  • Eight countries provide 97 of global production
  • Soybean cake drives the market
  • Decreasing relative importance of crop residues

livestocks long shadow
9
Estimated maize, wheat and barley production for
animal feed
livestocks long shadow
10
Regional trends in the use of feed grains
livestocks long shadow
11
Estimated feed surplus/deficit soymeal (pig and
poultry)
livestocks long shadow
12
Trends in land-use area for livestock production
and total production of meat and milk
13
Trends in land-use area for livestock production
and production of meat and milk EU-15
livestocks long shadow
14
Trends in land-use area for livestock production
and production of meat and milk in South America
and East and Southeast Asia
livestocks long shadow
15
Geographical concentration of pig and poultry
production
  • Three types of clusters
  • Close to markets (poor transport infrastructure)
  • Close to feed resources (developed transport
    infrastructure)
  • In areas characterized by low human population
    density (weak environmental regulations)

livestocks long shadow
16
Review of impacts
  • Climate change
  • 18 of anthropogenic GHG emissions are related to
    livestock (equivalent CO2)
  • Deforestation 35 of sectors emissions
  • Manure 31 of sectors emissions
  • Enteric fermentation 25 of sectors emissions
  • Feed production 7 of sectors emissions
  • Ammonia emissions

livestocks long shadow
17
Livestock related land use changeDeforestation
in the Neotropics
2.4 million ha/year Forest ? Pasture 0.5
million ha/year Forest ? Feed crops 2.4
billion tons CO2
livestocks long shadow
18
Technical options Climate change
  • Intensify land use to limit land conversion
  • Conserve/restore C and N in cultivated soils
  • Mitigate C loss from pasture soils
  • Reduce enteric fermentation
  • Improved manure management

livestocks long shadow
19
Review of impacts
  • Water resources
  • Livestock sector represents 8 of all entropic
    water use, 90 of which for feed production.
  • Feed production 15 of evapotranspiration in
    agriculture (irrigated)
  • Overall pollution hardly quantifiable but
    substantial at feed production, animal production
    and processing levels (nutrients, organic matter,
    antibiotics, pesticides)
  • impact on water cycles

livestocks long shadow
20
Technical options Livestock and water
  • Improved water use efficiency
  • Irrigation efficiency
  • Water productivity
  • Enhance waste management
  • Production stage balance feed, phase feeding,
    supplements
  • Improved manure collection process
  • Manure storage and processing
  • Improved utilization of waste
  • Land management
  • Adapted grazing systems, range improvements,
    critical periods
  • Improving livestock distribution

livestocks long shadow
21
Review of impacts
  • Biodiversity
  • Main mechanism habitats degradation/destruction
  • deforestation
  • pollution
  • desertification
  • intensive agriculture
  • Fishmeal production causing overfishing
  • ? IUCN identifies livestock as one of the threats
    to 1699 endangered species (red list)

livestocks long shadow
22
Technical options Livestock and Biodiversity
Biodiversity loss often results from
environmental degradation ? Many options
previously presented apply
  • Intensify land use to reduction of pressure on
    natural land and habitat
  • Improve land and pest management practices
  • Integrated agriculture response to excessive
    chemical use
  • Conservation agriculture restore habitats
  • Combine field level improvements with ecological
    infrastructure conservation/restoration at
    landscape level

livestocks long shadow
23
Hotspots of environmental impact
24
Underlying causes (i)
  • Neglect of externalities
  • negative externalities, e.g. water and soil
    pollution, climate change, biodiversity losses,
    etc.
  • positive externalities, e.g. carbon
    sequestration, ecosystem diversitybiodiversity
    gains
  • Inadequate pricing
  • At input level, e.g. land water
  • At output level, e.g. subsidies

livestocks long shadow
25
Underlying causes (ii)
  • Livestock production concentrates
  • The clustering of livestock close to feed
    outlets, consumption centres leads to nutrient
    overloads
  • Disruption of nutrient cycling
  • Mismanaged grazing
  • lack of stewardship in marginal and remote areas
  • The multiple objectives pursued with livestock

livestocks long shadow
26
Four main policy principles
  • Get prices right Inefficiencies in resource use,
    often increasing use and leads to misallocation
    of resources among competing uses (within and
    outside agriculture)
  • Apply Polluter pays, provider gets principles
  • Seek livestock/ecosystem balances Bring
    livestock in balance with surrounding land
  • Develop institutions and accountability for
    environmental stewardship
  • Recognize and balance multiple objectives

livestocks long shadow
27
Policy context
  • The social and health dimensions of livestock
  • 40 of agricultural GDP
  • Estimated 1.3 billion people in rural households
    depend on livestock, entirely or partially
  • A pathway out of poverty for some, an expression
    of poverty for most
  • Cultural dimension of livestock
  • Provide protein and micro-nutrients to many of
    the 830 million food insecure people
  • Contribute to health problems of the affluent
    (obesity, cancers, cardio-vascular diseases)

livestocks long shadow
28
Conclusions
  • Production is projected to double by 2050
  • Environmental impacts will follow a similar trend
    under business as usual scenario
  • Technology options are generally available to
    mitigate environmental impacts
  • The sectors feed base plays a determinant role
    in both issues and options
  • Development and implementation of policy mixes
    are required, especially in hotspots of
    environmental impact

livestocks long shadow
29
Livestocks Long Shadow
Download from www.virtualcentre.org
Order a hard copy from FAOs Animal Production
and Health Division website
Henning Steinfeld Pierre Gerber Tom
Wassenaar Vincent Castel Mauricio Rosales Cees
de Haan
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