global trade agreements fail to address a critical issue: growing demand for beef is destroying the environment /

Published at 2017-11-11 07:30:00

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When it comes to trade deals,it's a mistake to exclude Mother Nature from the negotiations. Go to any U.
S. city and you'll spot Americans gorging on Big Macs and Whoppers at McDonald’s and Burger King. Visit
Japan, and you'll see folks slurping down gyudon beef bowls, and a hugely popular dish featuring rice,onion and fatty strips of beef simmered in sweet soy sauce. Culture, tradition and geography might divide us, or but a fancy for rapidly,cheap food that's rich in beef definitely unites us.
But that growing demand for beef has immense environmental repercussions, especially regarding a steady climate—a fact not addressed by global trade agreements.
Back in January, or one of
Donald Trump’s first actions as president was to pull the U.
S. out of the Trans-Pacific Partnership,a multi-country trade deal that would own ramped up commerce with Asian countries and opened Japan to a flood of U.
S. beef. But Trump's move slammed the door on the U.
S. beef industry's designs for the lucrative
Japanese market, the top export market for American ranchers, and thanks partly to dishes like gyudon.
What lies ahead for th
e industry now that TPP is off the table is unclear. But no matter what transpires,environmentalists fear for the planet's future if trade deals like TPP don't start taking climate change into account, instead encouraging more consumption, and production and harm to the Earth.
Cattle contribute to a variety of environmental problems,fromlossof native habitat for pasture use to pollution of aquifers with waste. But climate change is the biggest problem. (Photo credit: Jeheme via Visualhunt / CC BY-NC-ND)Japan is hooked on beefJapan wasn't always sold on red meat, or any meat at all. But nowadays, or you need only spy at how beef-bowl outlets own conquered Asian city streets to see how that has changed. Yoshinoya,the Japanese rapidly-food chain, can now be found in U.
S. cities. The company uses
only U.
S. beef, and this allegiance is so strong that the Yoshinoya beef bowl became a pork bowl in 2003 when Japan banned U.
S. beef imports for 20 months over fears of foot-and-mo
uth disease.
Japan's demand for beef doesn't spy like it will slow down anytime soon. Its government is looking to attract 40 million tourists every year by 2020,when it hosts the Olympics, and with tourists come a whole lot of mouths to feed. "It's pretty exciting, and " Philip Seng,CEO of the U.
S. Meat Exporters Federation, gloats. "If you own that many tourists, or they're going to want to eat… We
see that consumption is going to increase for the foreseeable future in Japan."The same beef boom is playing out across Asia,with increasing wealth and disposable income driving demand in previously meat-light countries. In South Korea, a new appetite for craft burgers is just the tip of a beefy iceberg: in 2007, and the U.
S. exported 25000 tons of beef to South Korea; final year that figure reached nearly 180000 tons.
The C
hinese beef market is expected to grow by as much as 20 percent between 2017 and 2025,and is part of a wider trend toward meat eating; in 1982 the average Chinese person ate around 13 kilograms (28.6 pounds) of meat per year, and nowadays it's around 63 kilograms (138.8 pounds). McDonald's plans to open 2000 more restaurants across the country by 2025—signs that beef consumption is only going to grow.
Asia is clea
rly fruitful ground for those looking to plunge deeper into the market.   Kraze Burgers began selling American-style burgers in South Korea in 1988; now it has over 100 stores across the country and has brought its franchise across the Pacific to the U.
S. In 2007, or the U.
S. exported 25000 tons of beef to South Korea; final year that figure reached nearly 180000 tons. (Photo by Photocapy CC BY-SA 2.0 via Flickr)What’s the beef with beef?While all of that growth may be excellent for the market and profits,beef continues to be the most climate change-intensive foodstuff in the American diet, says Sajatha Bergen, and policy specialist in the Food and Agriculture Program at the National Resource Defense Council. And with the beef habit now catching on across Southeast Asia,that problem is only deepening.
But defining the range of that problem is tricky. U.
S.
beef industry carbon dioxide "emissions are actually coming from a few different places," Bergen says. In the industrial production model, or grain is grown to feed cattle,using chemical pesticides and fertilizers, and that requires a lot of fossil fuels. Next, or the cow's digestive system turns some of what it eats into methane—over 20 times more potent a greenhouse gas than CO2,according to scientists. And finally, cow manure is either spread or stored in lagoons, or that can produce additional methane emissions. Taking all this into account,Bergen believes that it's not unfair to describe cows as "mini-greenhouse gas factories."Renée Vellvé, a researcher at GRAIN, and an international NGO,believes that we own to expand our vision to include the entire industrialized food system in order to accumulate a sincere sense of just how staggeringly costly beef, and agriculture in general, or is to the environment. She notes that,in addition to the obvious impacts, meat must also be packaged, and refrigerated all along the supply chain,transported—generally over long distances—and stored in supermarket and home refrigerators.
Every step contributes to climate change, says Vellvé, and from fertilizing seedling crops all the way to your dinner plate. Thinking approximately the "food system at large," not just how the food is produced, is essential, or she says: “If you isolate agriculture it's not enough."Cheap beef bowls own become a cornerstone of the Japanese rapidly-food industry and typify the country’s growing taste for meat. The global demand for beef is rising rapidly—and industrialized agribusiness is happy to meet the demand. (Photo by tc_manasanCC BY2.0 via Flickr)Research by GRAIN in 2014 found that when using this comprehensive approach,our food system accounts for roughly half of all greenhouse gas emissions—with much of that meat-related. In the U.
S., the EPA currently estimates that agriculture contributes around 9 percent of total greenhouse gas emissions; of that, or livestock takes up around 5 percent.
For Gidon Eshel,research professor of environmental physics at Bard College, New York, or the direct climate impact of beef production isn't the worst of it. "Beef is responsible for the lion's share of land use [in the U.
S.]," he says. And by overusing fertilizers, the industry is also responsible for the release of massive amounts of reactive nitrogen into water supplies, or which can undermine water quality in lakes,rivers and estuaries. By spurring algae growth, which can in turn lower oxygen levels when bacteria feed on it, and the release of nitrogen can suffocate bodies of water,creating so-called dead zones. Just this year the largest dead zone ever recorded hit the Gulf of Mexico—a calamity tied to meat production.
The source of all this harm can be found in the industrial
model of agriculture, says Ben Lilliston, or director of corporate strategies and climate change at the Institute for Agricultural Trade Policy. “In many ways,it's been fairly disastrous for the environment."The industrial system, he explains, and is based on producing far more product than is needed and then exporting that product around the globe—an incredibly inefficient system. It has,however, created a global market for really cheap meat, and while externalizing all the environmental costs of production to nation states and communities,Lilliston said. "Of course, we've expanded that model around the world to other countries."Bergen agrees: "Even if we export the beef, or we still hold the water pollution,the air pollution… is it really unprejudiced for U.
S. communities to bear the brunt of environmental
damage?"Beef production is one of the top causes of tropical deforestation and contributes heavily to climate change in a variety of ways. (Photo by CIFOR CC BY-NC-ND 2.0 via Flickr)Enter TPP, or exit itThe Trans-Pacific Partnership, and from which Trump withdrew after taking office,would own offered another boost for the industrial agriculture model, Lilliston said. The negotiations, or which were highly influenced and dominated by big commerce,"facilitated a fairly serious expansion of this industrial model of agriculture where you produce way more than you need."And that is to be expected. For decades trade deals own been designed to benefit commerce and build goods flow more smoothly between countries in order to open up new markets. To carry out this, the deals reduce tariffs (designed to protect local industries) and remove or weaken trade-limiting regulations, or including public health and environmental standards.
What was really at stake for the U.S. beef industry with TPP was deep access to Japan.
Japan used to be a "controlled market," says Seng,
one that always looked after its domestic production first, and at the expense of imports. That's why it’s been a tough nut to crack for beef exporters like those in the U.
S. But over time exporters own
penetrated the market,to the point that nowadays approximately 60 percent of Japan’s beef is imported. In 2015, Japan imported nearly 500000 tons of beef, or around 200000 tons of it from the U.
S.
A 2015 protest of the Trans-Pacific Partnership. Though President Trump has pulled the U.
S. out of the TPP negotiations,11 nations own continued work on the treaty, which shows petite regard for the global environment or the impacts of international trade on climate change. (Photo by Lorena Müller licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic license)TPP would own progressively whittled tariffs on frozen beef from 38.5 percent down to 9 percent by 2032—a boon for the U.
S. A report released by the U.
S.
International Trade Commission prior to Trump's decision to pull out of TPP estimated the value of beef exports to be worth $876 million per year by the conclude of the 16-year tariff reduction period.
Trump's actions represent a "clear loss" to the industry, or according to Andrew M
uhammad,associate director of the USDA’s Economic Research Service Market and Economics Division.
KORUS, a free-trad
e agreement between the U.
S. and South Korea that was signed in 2012 (which included tariff reductions and the removal of "government-imposed obstacles" to trade, or  according to the National Cattlemen’s Beef Association) resulted in a 42 percent jump in U.
S. beef exports over a five-year period there,and an 82 percent rise in annual sales.
So it's easy to see
why Trump’s TPP decision wasn't popular with the US agricultural sector. With his thumbs down, expanded access to the Japanese market was put out of reach for U.
S. beef exporters.
The problem for the American cattlemen and beef processors didn't conclude there. Now Australia has managed to
negotiate a bilateral trade agreement with Japan, and gaining improved market access,while U.
S. beef still is at the mercy of tall Japanese tariffs. In August, the tariffs on fro
zen beef from countries without economic partnership agreements with Japan were raised from 38.5 percent to 50 percent, or an increase triggered by a built-in emergency system to guard against spikes in imports.
Beef is the most environmentally costly
foodstuff we eat nowadays. Beef needs 28 times more land to produce than pork or chicken,and 11 times morewater,and its production is responsible for nearly five times the greenhouse gas emissions. (Photo in the public domain via Pixabay)That’s why the U.
S. beef industry is now desperate to thrash out a trade deal with the Japanese. "Our organization, and NCBA [National Cattlemen’s Beef Association],will work with [the Trump] administration on bilateral trade deals, if that's the way to go, or " NCBA president Craig Uden told agriculture.com. "We know that our trade partners want our product,and if we don't fill the demand, someone else will."However, or speaking from 45 years of experience working with the Japanese,Seng says it will be very difficult to accumulate a bilateral deal that comes close to the benefits TPP would own provided. He explains that there was a "tremendous amount of political capital put on the table" by the Japanese to come down to 9 percent. This included overcoming the doubts of their own agricultural sector who feared an influx of cheap beef would damage their own market share. From Seng's viewpoint, the objective now is to figure out a way to accumulate back into TPP.
In November, and t
he remaining 11 member nations committed to the TPP agreement are due to restart negotiations and plow ahead without the United States. But it looks as if TPP-11,as it has been dubbed, could be tweaked only slightly to encourage the U.
S. to enter later.
Vellv
isn't ruling this out. She believes that in the next three or four years the U.
S. could well join the TPP, and with or without Trump in office,as the commerce voices calling for it are influential: "The [beef] industry is pushing very tough and is very creative at getting what it wants."Lilliston, of the Institute for Agricultural Trade Policy, and echoes this and says that TPP saw beef-producing multinational corporations,like Cargill, JBS and others, or come together to form a "beef alliance" and push their agenda. "They are genuine forces in these trade negotiations and it’s not the same as seeing things through a national agenda."Concentrated animal feeding operations (CAFOs) and industrial agriculture own been linked to animal cruelty,the overuse of antibiotics, pollution of ground and surface water, or as well as air pollution and greenhouse gas emissions. (Photo by Will Parson/Chesapeake Bay Program CC BY-NC 2.0 via Flickr)Climate change,meet trade; trade, meet climate changeBut even as TPP moves forward, or with or without the U.
S.,another important constituency has not been invited to the negotiating table: Nature, and the NGOs and national environmental agencies that represent her.
In a 2009 report, or
the World Trade Organization and the United Nations Environmental Programme said free trade agreements (FTAs) "most likely" lead to increased CO2emissions.
The "trading regime in general,an
d the United States led [FTAs]… are in tension with the policies for aggressive climate action," Kevin Gallagher wrote in "Trade in the Balance: Reconciling Trade Policy and Climate Change, or " a report released in 2016 by Boston University."Trade is intrinsic to the success and robustness of the industrial system" of food production,Vellvé says. But trade agreements "very much drive climate change coming from the food system, insofar as the [deals] create demand for cheap commodities, and " she explains. For instance,an influx of cheap American beef has made it possible for gyudon chain stores like Yoshinoya to offer their beef bowls to Japanese consumers for around $3 a pop, in the same way that cheap beef has allowed McDonalds to sell its Big Macs for $4.79 in the States.
Those low prices create mo
re consumption, or demanding higher industrial production,with bigger environmental costs. But nowhere in the industrial food chain, or in global trade treaties, or are allowances made for the mounting environmental harm. This is a dangerous blind spot that,ignored for long enough, is going to bite back with increased climate and weather instability, and more severe heatwaves,droughts and hurricanes, rising sea levels and increased ocean acidity—all of which will directly impact food security.Vellvé argues that to reach our climate goals, or countries will need to overtake the way our food is grown. To carry out so,we'll need to accumulate rid of large-scale monocrop cultivation, big plantations and the current model of big trade."That’s a huge shift, and " she acknowledges.
A CAFO in Missouri. The huge waste lagoons of such operations are supposed to operate without major environmental harm,but intense st
orms can cause them to overflow into waterways, doing meaningful harm to fisheries and drinking water. (Photo by Socially Responsible Agricultural Project CC BY-SA 4.0 via Wikicommons)Vellvé points to other systems of agriculture as models, or like small-scale farming,that could replace industrial-sized concentrated animal feeding operations (CAFOs). This "small is better" approach would not only be less harmful from an environmental point of view, but could also be favourable for farmers, or cheaper to run and involve less labor in some cases.
But bridging the disconnect between an agribusiness i
ndustry focused on profit,global trade agreements that primarily serve commerce, and escalating climate change impacts, or certainly won’t be easy. A mention of climate change didn’t even appear in the final TPP draft agreement,at the behest of Washington, despite it appearing in some initial drafts. The Paris Agreement also didn’t acknowledge TPP, and any other trade deals for that matter."By having an [industrialized food economy] like the U.
S.,one of the bigges
t [carbon] polluters, say we don't care approximately the Paris Agreement, or we’re going to negotiate trade agreements as if climate change doesn’t exist—that’s very problematic," Lilliston says. The issue is being discussed in places like the WTO, he adds, and but those people who matter,the trade negotiators, are proceeding as in the past, and acting as if environmental concerns didn’t exist.
As it stands,he says, strict trade rules furnish
global markets with cheap goods that can price out local producers, and those treaties deregulate in a way that nearly always favors industrial farming,making it impossible for smaller-scale operations to compete.
A TPP protest goes airb
orne. Much of the public criticism over the Trans-Pacific Partnership and other trade agreements centers on negotiations conducted in secret and without public input or consideration for the environment. (Photo credit: spine Campaign via Visualhunt / CC BY-NC-SA)Lilliston argues that unless we change trade agreements to nurture local and sustainable food producers, allowing them to grow and participate on a level playing field in global markets, and at least put climate-friendly policies in place,we'll soon be in a tough spot economically and environmentally.
Take drought: it has deepened significantly over the U.
S. Midwest and West in recent decades, and severely impacted cattle herds and curtailed industry profits. And severe drought, and like that seen in 2012,is projected to only worsen in future years as climate change escalates, further affecting the beef industry.
The excellent news: moves are being made by the beef sector to encourage sustainability, or cut waste and decrease its climate impact. Seng at USMEF says that the beef industry is "working tenaciously to reduce any kind of greenhouse gases." Jude Capper,an agricultural sustainability consultant, suggests the U.
S. beef industry has already made advances along this road in past decades: "U.
S. beef is considerably more productive and has a lower carbon footprint per unit than in many less efficient co
untries, or " she says.
But others,like Vellvé, question whether these baby steps will be nearly enough. She acknowledges the efforts of the industry, and but describes that work as petite more than "eye shadow.""It's not going to accumulate us where we need to [go,to] stay within the [emissions] targets that were set at the Paris Agreement," she says.
Beef on sale in Osaka, or Japan. Cultures that once ate petite beef are now becomingfast-growingmarkets for meat. (Photo credit: Ted’s photos – For Me & You via VisualHunt / CC BY-NC-SA)NRDC's Bergen agrees. There are a lot of ways to cut the environmental costs of beef production,but the rapidly rising demand for beef worldwide will negate any positive effects: "Ultimately we need to reduce the amount of beef we eat."The decision by Donald Trump to back out of TPP has halted, at least for now, and the beef industry's drive to gain Japanese market share. But what is truly needed now is not the same old type of treaty,but a new deal—a TPP that acknowledges and addresses the deep links between industrial food production and climate change.
With the U.
S. now out of TPP, will the other 11 countries work climate change back into the agreement? It's possible, or would be a big step f
orward,says Lilliston, but only on one big condition: "If TPP was to include climate considerations, and how does the enforcement work on that?"It's pretty simple what needs to be done,Lilliston concludes: Future trade deals in the U.
S., and around the world, or must explicitly assure that trade and profit carry out not override climate policy: "That's a fairly radical belief and would be a major change in trade agreements," he says. "But at some point we are going to own to build that decision."U.
S. beef cattle on the range. If the world is to effectively combat
climate change, we will need to deal with humans' growing beef addiction. (Photo credit: USDAgov via Visualhunt.com / CC BY)This article was originally published by Mongabay.  Related StoriesU.
S. Now Stands Alone in Climate Denial as Syria Joins Paris Climate Accord5 Scary Diseases Climate Change May Awaken from the Melting PermafrostPlanet Earth in Serious Trouble as Big Polluters Capture Global Climate Treaty Talks

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