We can’t keep eating as we are – why isn’t the IPCC shouting this from the rooftops? | George Monbiot
It's a tragic missed opportunity. The new report on land by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) shies away from the big issues and fails to properly represent the science. As a result, it gives us few clues about how we might survive the century. Has it been nobbled? Was the fear of taking on the farming industry - alongside the oil and coal companies whose paid shills have attacked it so fiercely - too much to bear? At the moment, I have no idea. But what the panel has produced is pathetic.
The problem is that it concentrates on just one of the two ways of counting the carbon costs of farming. The first way - the IPCC's approach - could be described as farming's current account. How much greenhouse gas does driving tractors, spreading fertiliser and raising livestock produce every year? According to the panel's report, the answer is around 23% of the planet-heating gases we currently produce. But this fails miserably to capture the overall impact of food production.
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