A new Oxford University study pinpoints for the first time how high- and low-meat diets impact the planet.

  • @Jessica
    link
    2
    edit-2
    1 year ago

    The title of this article seems rather sensational and misleading because it doesn’t cite or explain the 8 million cars anywhere and neither does the study it’s sourcing as far as I can tell. A quick web search says 8 million cars is 1/4 of all the cars on the road in the United Kingdom. That seems like too large of a number.

    • @Holyginz
      link
      31 year ago

      Not to mention, the super wealthy and corporations being reigned in will still do far more than a random joe eating less steak. Just my two cents.

    • HeartyBeastOP
      link
      fedilink
      21 year ago

      Here are some figures on CO2 output for domestic vehicle travel in the UK https://www.gov.uk/government/statistics/transport-and-environment-statistics-2022/transport-and-environment-statistics-2022

      ( unfortunately for 2020, during lockdown - so add 20%ish to get 2019 )

      domestic transport was responsible for emitting 99 MtCO2e (million tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent), a 19% reduction from 2019 and the largest fall in emissions on record.

      So, if you’re right and 8million is about a quarter of the cars, that’s about 25m tonnes of CO2)

      OK very tough calcalculation stupid assumptions, but just sanity checking.

      • Assuming 60million people in the UK

      • Assume all are heavy meat eaters (no)

      • Assume they cut down saving 5kg of CO2 a day, I make that

      108Mt a year saved.

      So actually, it would take a quarter of the population being heavy meat eaters cuttting down to get to the 80m cars.

      So - not entirely mad?

      Note - my maths is really really bad, so I could well have made egregious errors here