Removal of dairy cows would have minimal impact on GHG
The dairy industry in the United States is massive. It supplies dietary requirements to the vast majority of the population.
This same industry also contributes approximately 1.58 percent of the country’s total greenhouse gas emissions (GHG). A commonly suggested solution to reduce greenhouse gas output has been to reduce or eliminate the dairy industry in favor of plant production.
The study
A team of Virginia Tech researchers wanted to uncover the actual impact these cows have on the environment.
The researchers found the removal of dairy cows from the United States agricultural industry would only reduce greenhouse emissions by about 0.7 percent, while significantly lowering the available supply of essential nutrients for humans.
“There are environmental impacts associated with the production of food, period. The dairy industry does have an environmental impact, but if we look at it in the context of the entire U.S. enterprise, it’s fairly minimal,” said Robin White, an associate professor in the Department of Animal and Poultry Sciences and a member of the research team. “Associated with this minimal impact is a very substantial provision of high-quality, digestible and well-balanced nutrients for human consumption.”
White was part of a team, which included scientists from the U.S. Dairy Forage Research Center and the U.S. Department of Agriculture. The team was also supported by Dairy Management Inc., who examined a few different scenarios for dairy cattle in the United States factoring in current management practices, retirement and depopulation from the United States agricultural industry.
Study results
White’s team looked at both the environmental and nutritional impact of three different scenarios.
Greenhouse gas emissions were unchanged in the herd management scenario, in which cattle become an export-only industry and the supply of available nutrients decrease. In this economically realistic scenario, the industry stays similar to how it is now, but the United States no longer benefits from the human consumable nutrients dairy cows provide.
The scenario where cows were retired, living out the remainder of their lives in pastures or free-range, resulted in a 12 percent reduction in agricultural emissions and all 39 nutrients considered declined.
The depopulation scenario, where cows are exterminated, resulted in a seven percent reduction in agricultural emissions. Thirty of 39 nutrients increased for the depopulation scenario, though several essential nutrients declined.
Downstream impacts
A major factor in all of the scenarios is the use of the land, which has to be managed after the removal of the cows. The impact on the industry downstream must be factored into the scenario results.
For example, a pasture formerly used for cattle would no longer be used for the particular resource. Areas used for grain, fertilizer and more would also change functionality.
“Land use was a focus in all animal removal scenarios because the assumptions surrounding how to use land made available if we remove dairy cattle greatly influence results of the simulations,” White said. “If dairy cattle are no longer present in U.S. agriculture, we must consider downstream effects, such as handling of pasture and grain land previously used for producing dairy feed, disposition of byproduct feeds and sourcing fertilizer.”
Plants have long been thought of as a more renewable method to obtain nutrients essential for humans, but this requires farming of the land, which also produces emissions.
A significant reason why the impact of dairy cows on the environment is minimal is because of advancements in the industry over the last 50-plus years, White said. As with most industries, efficiency improves over time.
To produce the same one billion kilograms of milk in 2007 as in 1944, it required just 21 percent of the animals, 23 percent of the foodstuffs, 35 percent of the water and only 10 percent of the land.
For White, this was an extension of previous research conducted in 2017 on the reduction of animals in U.S. agriculture and the associated impacts on nutrition and greenhouse gasses.
This article was written by Max Esterhuizen, assistant director of communications and marketing for the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences at Virginia Tech and is courtesy of the institution. For more information, e-mail Esterhuizen at max.esterhuizen@vt.edu or visit vtnews.vt.edu.