Monday, June 1, 2015

Member Blog: Jayson Lusk

Environmental Impacts of Vegetarianism

May 29, 2015

Given the latest report from the new dietary guidelines committee that recommends less meat eating (see some of my previous discussion on that here), I found this study just published in Ecological Economics by Janina Grabs quite interesting.

Grabs ask an important question that is rarely asked. If people stop spending money on meat, what will they spend their money on instead? And, what are the environmental impacts of those other non-meat expenditures? Using data based on Swedish consumers, she calculates that, at first blush, a vegetarian diet does indeed appear to have slightly smaller energy use and carbon impacts, BUT if you take into consideration what the vegetarians do with the extra money they used to spend on meat, those environmental gains become dramatically smaller. She calls this the rebound effect.

Here's the abstract:
“Sustainable diets, in particular vegetarianism, are often promoted as effective measures to reduce our environmental footprint. Yet, few conclusions take full-scale behavioral changes into consideration. This can be achieved by calculating the indirect environmental rebound effect related to the re-spending of expenditure saved during the initial behavioral shift. This study aims to quantify the potential energy use and greenhouse gas emission savings, and most likely rebound effects, related to an average Swedish consumer’s shift to vegetarianism. Using household budget survey data, it estimates Engel curves of 117 consumption goods, derives marginal expenditure shares, and links these values to environmental intensity indicators. Results indicate that switching to vegetarianism could save consumers 16% of the energy use and 20% of the greenhouse gas emissions related to their dietary consumption. However, if they re-spend the saved income according to their current preferences, they would forego 96% of potential energy savings and 49% of greenhouse gas emission savings. These rebound effects are even higher for lower-income consumers who tend to re-spend on more environmentally intensive goods. Yet, the adverse effect could be tempered by purchasing organic goods or re-spending the money on services. In order to reduce the environmental impact of consumption, it could thus be recommended to not only focus on dietary shifts, but rather on the full range of consumer expenditure.”
A couple caveats. First, it is important to notice an important clause to sentence claiming a 16% reduction in energy use and 20% reduction in greenhouse gas emissions - this is the reduction related only to their diet. In terms of overall impact, I believe these only translate to 1.8% and 4.15% reductions, quite simply because food only makes up a small part of the consumers overall energy use and carbon impact. Of course, all this relates to the "first round" impacts and ignores the rebound effect, which is the main point of this study.

Read the entire blog post on JaysonLusk.com

3 comments:

  1. That makes sense. Think about healthy diets like Almonds, nuts, fruits and lettuces, a lot of these are water intensive commodities produced in the west and south. Energy consumption is a big part of operating costs in irrigated agriculture.

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  2. Interesting point. Instead of directly promoting behavior change (vegetarianism) which has debatable impact on environment, why not subsidize products/production practices with positive environmental impacts (vegetables, electric cars) and tax products/production practices with negative environmental impacts (meat, plastic bags...) and let the consumers choose by themselves?

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  3. Very interesting. I know some vegans that chose in college not to eat meat mostly because of the cost and how it reduced the quantity of other goods that could be purchased with their very limited budget. However, they ended up in fields associated with environmental preservation and sustainability. Go figure.

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