Prof Marty Matlock - GFFC 2013gffc2013.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/Marty-Matlock-Part-1.pdf ·...
Transcript of Prof Marty Matlock - GFFC 2013gffc2013.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/Marty-Matlock-Part-1.pdf ·...
Prof Marty Matlock Professor of Ecological Engineering, University of Arkansas & Executive Director, UA Office for Sustainability
The role of animal agriculture in feeding 10 billion people sustainably
Sponsored by:
Marty Matlock, PhD, PE, BCEE Executive Director, Office for Sustainability Professor and Area Director, Center for Agricultural and Rural Sustainability UA Division of Agriculture Biological and Agricultural Engineering Department University of Arkansas
The Role of Animal Agriculture in Feeding 10 Billion People Global Feed and Food Congress April 10, 2013 Sun City, South Africa
Sustainability 2050: The Challenge
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What we do in the next 10 years will shape Earth and Humanity for the next 100 years
When technology and culture collide technology prevails, culture changes
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Population is about Prosperity!
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Source: United Nations, World Population Prospects: The 2004 Revision (medium scenario), 2005.
We are all in this together
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Animal Agriculture Benefits • Animal Agriculture accounts for 40% of Ag
GDP. • Currently employs 1.3 billion people. • Of the 880 million rural poor people living on
less than $1 per day, 70 percent are partially or completely dependent on livestock for their livelihoods and food security.
• Global meat production is expected to more than double to 465 million tonnes by 2050.
• Global milk production is expected to almost double to 1043 million tonnes by 2050.
Environmental Concerns over Animal Agriculture The argument goes something like this: • As the numbers of farm animals reared for meat, egg, and dairy production increase, so do emissions from their production. • By 2050, global farm animal production is expected to double from present levels. • The environmental impacts of animal agriculture require that governments, international organizations, producers, and consumers focus more attention on the role played by meat, egg, and dairy production. • Mitigating and preventing the environmental harms caused by this sector require immediate and substantial changes in regulation, production practices, and consumption patterns. Koneswaran, G., & Nierenberg, D. (2008). Global farm animal production and global warming: impacting and mitigating climate change. Environmental Health Perspectives, 116(5), 578.
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• Grazing and pasture lands account for the 70% of land used in agricultural production (30% of land on Earth).
• Livestock accounts for 8 % of total human water use, largely from irrigation of crops.
• Livestock account for an estimated 18 percent of human-caused greenhouse gas emissions.