Tuesday, December 15, 2020

Green Living Column Jan 2021: SDG12 - Responsible Consumption and Production

 

PENCINTA ALAM JANUARY 2021

GREEN LIVING COLUMN:

SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT GOAL (SDG) 12: RESPONSIBLE CONSUMPTION AND PRODUCTION.

 By Wong Ee Lynn <wongeelynn@yahoo.com>

 

(Image credits: https://www.globalgoals.org/resources)

In December 2020, Green Living Coordinator Ee Lynn was interviewed by Ecocentric Transitions for their Science Film Festival – Goethe Institute SDG Online Series for a special episode on Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 12: Responsible Consumption and Production.

 

You can view the video here: 

https://www.facebook.com/ecocentrictransitions/videos/842294303211720



(Image credits: https://www.globalgoals.org/12-responsible-consumption-and-production)

As the video is over 40 minutes in length, we have decided to provide you with a summary in the form of the quick facts below:

 

 

1.      1.3 billion tonnes of food is wasted every year, yet almost 2 billion people go hungry or undernourished. At the same time, 2 billion people globally are categorized as overweight or obese.

2.      The production of food accounts for around 22%  of total greenhouse gas emissions, and this is largely from the conversion of forests into farmland. Globally, agriculture accounts for 92% of global freshwater use. 29% of the water used in agriculture is directly or indirectly used for animal production.

3.      Livestock is the world’s largest user of land resources, with pasture and arable land dedicated to the production of feed representing almost 80% of total agricultural land. One third of global arable land is used to grow feed, while 26% of the Earth’s ice-free terrestrial surface is used for grazing.

4.      If we continue to consume and waste resources the way we do, by the year 2050, we will need the equivalent of 3 planet earths to sustain our lifestyles.

5.      World or Earth Overshoot Day is the calculated calendar date on which humanity’s resource consumption for that year exceeds the Earth’s capacity to regenerate those resources that year. It’s like taking out a bank overdraft that you know you’re not going to be able to pay back.

6.      The way you calculate Earth Overshoot Day is by dividing the planet’s biocapacity (which is the amount of natural resources generated by Earth that year) by the world ecological footprint (which is humanity’s consumption of Earth’s natural resources for that year) and multiplying it by 365.

7.      Ecological overshoot started in the early 1970s and is getting earlier each year. Earth Overshoot Day 2019 fell on the 29th of July, the earliest ever. However, due to the Covid19 pandemic, Earth Overshoot Day 2020 was pushed back to the 22nd of August. This is mostly because of reduced fossil fuel consumption, people were flying and driving less, and many factories and plants had to temporarily shut down. There was also a 8.4% reduction in deforestation and the harvesting of forest products because of movement restrictions worldwide and also because of lower demand, which is good for the forests. The pandemic made us aware that we can and should consume less, and we can do so without significantly reducing the quality of our lives.

8.      We need food to survive, but the food we choose makes a big difference to our carbon footprint. Food accounts for between 10 to 30 % of a household’s carbon footprint. Food production accounts for 68% of food’s carbon emissions, while transportation accounts for 5% of it. Since transportation accounts for only 5% of the carbon footprint of our food, we should focus more on WHAT we eat, not whether or not our food is locally produced and sourced.

9.      Meat production has a larger carbon footprint per calorie than plant-based food, because of the inefficient transformation of plant energy to animal energy, and due to the methane released from manure management and enteric fermentation in livestock. It’s not efficient because its production is responsible for 60% of agriculture’s greenhouse gas emissions, but meat products provide merely 18% of calories and 37% of protein levels around the world.

10.   70% of the deforestation of the Amazon is to provide land for cattle ranches so if you want to do something to protect the Amazon rainforest, one of the best things you can do would be to go vegan if you can, go vegetarian if you can’t go vegan, and reduce meat and dairy consumption as much as possible if you can’t go fully vegetarian either. A regular meat-eater has the highest carbon footprint at 3.3 tons of greenhouse gas emissions. A vegan diet has the lowest carbon footprint at only 1.5 tons. You can reduce the carbon footprint of your food by up to 73% just by cutting out meat and dairy.

11.   Researchers at the University of Oxford found that if everyone stopped eating meat and dairy, global farmland use could be reduced by 75%. This is an area equivalent to the size of the USA, China, Australia, and the European Union combined. Not only would this significantly reduce greenhouse gas emissions, it would also free up land which can then be rewilded to support wildlife populations again.

12.   Cities and towns need to be resilient in that in the event of a major disaster or adverse event causing it to be cut off from other cities, it should be able to produce sufficient food to meet the immediate needs of its residents. In neighbouring Singapore, there are sky farming initiatives to boost the nation’s food security by growing vegetables and fruits via hydroponics and aeroponics. Singapore also has the distinction of becoming the first country to approve the sale of lab-grown meat, and this will no doubt improve its food self sufficiency because it will no longer have to rely as heavily on countries with grazing land for animal protein. It would be great to see Malaysia take steps towards increased food self sufficiency in each state and city, and promote the replacement of conventionally grown meat with lab-grown meat and plant-based meat, for environmental and health reasons, and also for food self-sufficiency.

 

 

No comments: