‘Feeding the animals that feed us’ aims to kick-start a discussion about the necessary improvements needed in the way livestock are fed in the UK.
A trend towards intensive factory farming systems over the past 60 years has meant that cattle, chickens and pigs are now eating less grass and food waste and more grains and imported proteins like soya. According to the Soil Association, this is a highly inefficient use of resources – the dependence on grain and soya imported from across the globe makes our food systems much less resilient and adds to the vulnerability and unsustainability of our food chain.
With the rising demand for meat and milk, more and more land and resources are being used to feed farm animals – destroying rainforests and grasslands and contributing towards climate change in the process. The report says that land-use change for the purposes of agriculture is one of the greatest threats facing the planet’s biodiversity and is a key driver of climate change.
With climate scientists, public health professionals and environmentalists all saying we need to eat less meat and dairy products on both health and climate-change grounds, there is a need to examine how meat can be produced more sustainably. Not all meat production systems have an equal impact; therefore the sustainability of future food systems will depend not just on how much meat we eat, but also what we feed our animals.
Farm animals can play an important role in helping to tackle environmental challenges – helping store carbon in grassland soils, recycling waste food, providing nutrients to grow crops, and providing healthy food to eat. ??
Organic farmers have a head start in meeting the feed challenge – they are less reliant on grain, do not use soya from recently converted forest or grassland, and use more grass and silage to feed animals – but there are still improvements that can be made to organic production in the UK, with the intention of producing further environmental and animal welfare-friendly outcomes.
Source: Soil Association/TheCattleSite
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