'No Such
Thing as Cheap Meat': New Global Index Shows Industry's Failure to Combat
Climate Crisis, Antibiotic Resistance
Wednesday,
May 30, 2018
Index
gauges how 60 suppliers, worth a combined $300 billion, are managing
sustainability risks based on nine criteria
Cattle
graze on a farm in Caroline County, Maryland (Photo: Bob Nichols/USDA/Flickr/cc)
A new
sustainability index found that roughly three-quarters of the world's largest
meat and fish suppliers are failing to manage their contributions to worldwide
antibiotic resistance as well as their contributions to the climate crisis,
"putting the implementation of the Paris agreement in jeopardy."
"There
is no such thing as cheap meat—these industries have been subsidised for years
by the public because we pay for their environmental pollution, public health
costs that they do not account for in their business model."
—Shefali Sharma,
Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy
Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy
The Coller FAIRR
Protein Producer Index, a project from the London-based
investor initiative Farm Animal Investment Risk and Return (FAIRR), launched
Wednesday as a tool for investors. Companies analyzed include suppliers to
major fast-food chains such as McDonald's and KFC.
The
index gauges how 60 suppliers, worth a combined $300 billion, are managing
sustainability risks based on nine criteria: greenhouse gas
emissions; deforestation and biodiversity loss; water scarcity and use; waste
and pollution; antibiotics; animal welfare; working conditions; food safety;
and sustainable protein.
Across
the global livestock sector, the measurement and reporting of greenhouse
gas emissions—which fuel global warming—is "inadequate, unstandardized,
and unverified," according to index's executive summary.
Although
the sector is responsible for 14.5 percent of global emissions—or about the
total amount produced by the United States—FAIRR found that a full 72 percent
of companies simply aren't tracking their emissions at all.
Additionally,
77 percent of these companies are "failing to adequately manage or
disclose antibiotic use, despite growing levels of regulation and international
action to combat antibiotic resistant superbugs."
In
response to rampant overuse of antibiotics on livestock, public health
experts at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
and the World Health Organization (WHO) have
issued grave warnings about the growing threat
that antibiotic resistance poses to human health.
And
while FAIRR's findings about climate and antibiotic risks are enough to alarm
environmentalists and doctors separately, experts say the two issues are connected. Research published last week "found a
signal that the associations between antibiotic resistance and temperature
could be increasing over time," meaning global warming could exacerbate
drug resistance.
Policy
experts argue the findings indicate a need for ramping up accountability across
the livestock sector.
"It
is clear that the meat and dairy industries have remained out of public
scrutiny in terms of their significant climate impact. For this to change,
these companies must be held accountable for the emissions and they must have
credible, independently verifiable emissions reductions strategy," Shefali
Sharma, director of the Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy European
office, told the Guardian, responding
to FAIRR's new index.
Beyond
just the industry's contributions to the global climate crisis, "it's
always worth remembering that there is no such thing as cheap meat—these
industries have been subsidised for years by the public because we pay for
their environmental pollution, public health costs that they do not account for
in their business model," Sharma added. "This is where governments
need to step in."
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