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Climate experts say people should move towards plant-based diets

Today’s climate report says that a shift in land use is crucial to tackling climate change.

THE WORLD MUST shift how it produces food in order to tackle climate change, a United Nations body has warned. 

A report published today by The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has said that humans must manage land better in order to avoid food insecurity and the worst impacts of climate change into the future as well address personal dietary choices.  

One recommendation from the IPCC is for humans to move towards more balanced diets of plant-based foods such as grains and nuts. 

Today’s report notes that climate change has accelerated land degradation, caused deserts to expand and made forests more vulnerable to drought, fire, pests and disease. 

Around 70% of the world’s ice-free land is now affected by human activity, however, and human activities like farming and growing crops accelerate these issues, the report notes.  

Land is also a source of greenhouse gases, with agriculture, forestry and other activities accounting for 24% of man-made emissions.

Our land has already absorbed as much as 29% of mankind’s CO2 emissions in the decade up to 2016. As temperatures rise across the globe, there are fears that absorption rates of CO2 will slow. 

The report, which was complied over two years by 107 scientists in 52 countries, has warned that failure to act rapidly on reducing land degradation, food waste and agriculture’s carbon footprint could challenge food systems and undermine efforts to head off global warming. 

Agriculture, food production and deforestation continue to be major drivers of climate change, the report notes, adding that coordinated action to tackle climate change can improve land, food security and nutrition into the future.

‘Land management’

Today’s report examines ecological issues including greenhouse gas fluxes related to land, interactions between climate change and desertification, land degradation and food security.

“The land that we already use could feed the world in a changing climate and provide biomass for renewable energy,” the report notes. “But it would require early, far-reaching actions across several fronts.”

The IPCC’s Fifth Assessment Report, published in 2014, found that agriculture, forestry and other land use was the source of 24% of greenhouse gas emissions in 2010.

“The way we use land is both part of the problem and also part of the solution,” Valerie Masson-Delmotte, a French climate scientist who co-chairs one of the panel’s working groups said. “Sustainable land management can help secure a future that is comfortable.”

In a statement today, Aditi Sen, Oxfam’s senior climate policy advisor, said: “Land is central to the fight against the climate crisis and hunger. Industrial agriculture, deforestation and increasing weather shocks are destroying the land we depend on for food, with the world’s poorest hit hardest.”

Sen has called for an end to “destructive industrial agriculture and invest in agro-ecological approaches that store carbon, improve soil health and increase yields.”

“Governments must also invest in smallholder farmers and uphold the rights of people to their land and forests, so that poor communities on the frontline of the climate crisis are able to feed themselves now and in the future.”

“Politicians must aim for zero hunger as well as zero emissions. They must reject false solutions that divert land away from growing food and into producing crops and trees for energy and carbon capture.”

IPCC Chair Hoesung Lee said: “I hope this report will raise awareness among all people about the threats and opportunities posed by climate change to the land we live on and which feeds us.”

- with reporting from Associated Press

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    Mute Fiona Fitzgerald
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    Apr 3rd 2017, 12:05 PM

    The producers are bluffing the EU, Ireland is doing it right. Aldi and Lidl do this here too – you can see exactly where the fish was caught, how it was caught and even the scientific name of the kind of fish. It obviously doesn’t cost Aldi and Lidl huge amounts to respect customers enough to supply information.

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    Mute Cloud Jellies
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    Apr 3rd 2017, 11:48 AM

    New law! How about enforcing the old laws that would be a start.

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    Mute Tommy_Bannon
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    Apr 3rd 2017, 11:25 AM

    Closing the stable door after the horse has bolted.
    This is why intelligent humans choose vegetarianism.

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    Mute techman
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    Apr 3rd 2017, 12:08 PM

    @Tommy_Bannon: Closing the stable door after the horse was eaten , to be more precise

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    Mute Mick
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    Apr 3rd 2017, 1:21 PM

    Don’t forget there are plenty of intelligent people who eat meat too.

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    Mute Cosmo Kramer
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    Apr 3rd 2017, 11:34 AM

    If you want to be healthy try cutting animal products from your diet. Processed meat that comes in a packet can’t be good for you. Either can milk from another animal that full of hormones and puss..

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    Mute Mick
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    Apr 3rd 2017, 12:52 PM

    European milk does not contain hormones or ‘puss’. Every delivery from every farm is checked for temperature, antibiotics, bacteria etc. So stop spreading downright lies about the food we produce.

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    Mute Cosmo Kramer
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    Apr 3rd 2017, 2:05 PM

    @Mick: of course there’s hormones in milk. You do realise dairy cows are constantly impregnated to produce milk. Cows like women are full of hormones while pregnant and those naturally produced hormones go into their milk to help bulk up calves. Its not intended for human consumption.. If you’re happy drinking and eating another animals milk go ahead.. Each to their own i suppose

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    Mute Mick
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    Apr 3rd 2017, 2:24 PM

    I’m a dairy farmer myself. I understand completely the process works. What you are implying is false though. Natural, grass fed milk contains nothing untoward, we’ve been drinking milk for thousands of years. It’s when people start adding sugar and salt, E numbers and artificial chemical additives is when the trouble starts.

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    Mute Cosmo Kramer
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    Apr 3rd 2017, 2:33 PM

    @Mick: Mick im not implying anything false. Cows milk is full of hormones, hormones that nature intends to help calves bulk up hundreds of pounds. It is not intended for children or adults to consume.

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    Mute Mick
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    Apr 3rd 2017, 4:42 PM

    The natural hormones in milk are not in unusual quantities to cause any harm in humans. The levels of protein, butterfat etc in the 6L+ of milk that a calf consumes are responsible for growth. Generations of Irish people have eaten beef, dairy, eggs etc without issue. Obesity has only become an issue in this country since the 70′s, due to the advent of cheap, highly processed foods, the likes of coca cola with 30g+ of sugar per serving.

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    Mute Philip King
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    Apr 3rd 2017, 10:12 PM

    @Cosmo Kramer: backtrack much?

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    Mute Niall Donnelly
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    Apr 3rd 2017, 1:04 PM

    What about products labelled as Irish but brought down from the Uk?

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    Mute Jho Harris
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    Apr 3rd 2017, 4:33 PM

    No mention of take always etc imposing their religious beliefs on you, if you buy a ham pizza at many hundred placed you may be served dyed turkey NOT ham because these people don’t have any respect for you, nor your freedom to eat what you choose. It is often written on menu boards but often it won’t; it is dishonest but not illegal make sure your ham is not turkey meat dyed pink a common practice these days but The EU respect our rights on these issues.

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    Mute Andrew Swaine
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    Apr 8th 2017, 12:20 PM

    Any particular reason a Lidl own-brand product was chosen to illustrate the story? Is there something we should be told?

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    Mute Maurice Dodd
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    Apr 3rd 2017, 11:34 PM

    Anybody .anywhere.here or abroad held accountable for putting shit into our food in the form of un regulated horse meat?anyone..

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