Senators' Pre-emptive Strike on 'Cow Tax' Is Shortsighted

Schumer, Thune on Cow Tax

I’ve said it before: There is a quick, painless way to immediately cut global greenhouse gas emissions – reduce beef consumption. Livestock production is responsible for 18 percent of global GHGs, according to the Food and Agriculture Organization. Cutting most of that takes a simple lifestyle change, nothing more.

Apparently, Sens. John Thune of South Dakota and Chuck Schumer of New York missed that memo – as well as President Obama’s directive that science must guide government decisions involving, among other things, “mitigation of the threat of climate change.”

The logical conclusion for anyone looking at the science would be to create policies that pare down beef consumption. Instead, Thune and Schumer introduced Senate Bill 527, which would bar the government from creating a “cow tax” that would effectively tax GHG emissions from livestock.

Here’s the history: In 2007, the Supreme Court ruled that the EPA, under the provisions of the Clean Air Act, cannot refuse to regulate greenhouse gas emissions. In mid-2008, the EPA began investigating the implications of considering GHGs pollutants, and it issued an Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking. The Department of Agriculture, in turn, indicated that farmers with herds larger than 25 dairy cattle or 50 beef cattle would have to buy permits for their methane emissions.

By November of last year, farmers were apoplectic. The American Farm Bureau calculated that the tax would cost $175 per dairy cow, $87.50 per beef cow and $21.87 per hog. Mark Maslyn, the AFB’s executive director for public policy, said, “Steep fees associated with this action would force many producers out of business. The net result would likely be higher consumer costs for milk, beef and pork.”

Briefly, the furor calmed. But recently, the EPA said it would fast-track the process of regulating greenhouse gas emissions—which would mean at sources of emissions. Hence, the anti-“cow tax” bill, a pre-emptive strike.

Blocking such a tax is exceptionally short-sighted and simply a bad idea.

In its discussion of agricultural emissions, the EPA document suggests:

The only means of controlling such emissions would be through limiting production, which would result in decreased food supply and radical changes in human diets.

The assumed response, which Sens. Thune and Schumer are hoping to play to is, “Oh no!”

But the document is wrong, and even if it was right, it wouldn’t be such a bad thing.

First, taxes on emissions don’t necessarily lead to reduced uses of emissions-emitting items, be they cows or cars. Instead, production methods can change. Experts at the UK’s Institute of Grassland and Environmental Research note that if farmers grew grasses with high sugar levels, such as white clover and birdsfoot trefoil, they could cut emissions markedly. Such feed is far easier for animals to digest, so they belch less, emitting less methane. German scientists are working to develop a pill that could do the same thing. Without a tax, there is a far smaller incentive to develop and test such projects.

Even if the document was correct, and controlling emissions could only be done by limiting beef production or changing the American diet, would that be such a calamity?

As we’ve seen, switching from meat to a Mediterranean diet, even just a couple of days a week, can effect massive reductions in per-capita greenhouse gas emissions. According to research published in the journal Earth Interactions, even poultry produces 1/60th the GHG emissions per calorie that beef does.

So switching off beef is probably the single quickest, most effective action a person can take to reduce one’s emissions footprint. Reams of medical studies have also shown that vegetarian diets are far healthier than ones laden with beef.

Ireland is also contemplating a similar tax in order to meet its emissions targets. Meanwhile U.S. senators, placating lobbyists, are actually considering banning the tax. That doesn’t seem so smart.

Max Ajl is a writer living in Brooklyn, N.Y. He has written on Latin American politics and economics for the Guardian, the New Statesman and Society, and is a research associate for NACLA.

Methane is less important than CO2

Gee Max you really have it in for the Beef and Dairy industry don't you?

Fortunately this is unjustified.

Biogenic methane is part of a closed cycle and is treated unfairly by the current GWP calculations.

Currently methane is presumed to last in the atmosphere for 12 years and then break down to CO2. Over the 100 year time frame used methane is presumed to have almost 200 times the radioactive forcing for 12 years and 2.7 times the radioactive forcing for the remaining 88 (because GWP's measure Kg and not Mole, and CO2 atomic weight is 2.7 times greater than methane), giving it a GWP of 25

However this is a simplistic view,

Firstly methane only lasts for around 9 years,

Secondly the CO2 part of the equation is irrelevant for biogenic methane (from cows as opposed to the majority of methane from oil and gas) as CO2 is used to create methane so it is a closed cycle.

This would lower the GWP of methane from 25 to about 17

But also there is a lower level of risk in emitting short life time gasses.

Lets say hypothetically everyone switched to eating chicken instead of beef, and soy instead of dairy.

Yes we would reduce the methane level, and we would possibly reduce the GWP of all anthropogenic gasses, but GWP's are a simplistic human created measurement. We would be exchanging methane for CO2, and possible warming could still happen.

We would be exchanging possible short term warming for possible long term warming. How can you compare the two?

As we get warmer the cost of each additional degree of heat will increase, long term warming will cost more than short term warming.

Also, is this exchange of methane for CO2 in line with many of the key goals of climate policy?

Many talk about stabilisation points, if we maintain current farming levels, atmospheric methane will be stabilised due to the short lifetime. However CO2 from grain farming accumulates in the atmosphere.

Many talk about leaving a safe world for our children’s children. Well, methane emitted now will be long gone by then.

We also talk about the need to get China and India in global agreements, well Max, did you know that rice production may in fact create more methane than beef and dairy? (methane from anaerobic bacteria in rice patties)

Would China ever agree to a international agreement that asked them to limit rice production?

I think that food security is important for all nations. If we are to limit GHG emissions the focus in the short term should be on reduction from large industrial emitters. Long term the focus should be on technological improvements that will reduce emissions from animals, or a myriad of other technologies in the pipeline.

Don’t believe something I have said? Check it for yourself. Or challenge me and I will respond to your comment.

Greenhouse gas emissions

Don't just pick on the moo cow as the culprit of greenhouse gas emmissions that are responsible for climate change resulting in global warming - other creatures have their role too. For example snails! When nitrate (often form fertilised land) is present in water, worms, mussels, freshwater snails and other underwater creatures emit nitrous oxide as a by-product of digestion.

Nitrous oxide (ironically also known as 'laughing gas') has a much higher impact on the greenhouse effect that methand and CO2.

http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/discoblog/2009/03/03/move-over-cow-bur...

world harmony

The future of the world is this knowledge. Check into it.

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