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COLUMNISTS
TODAY'S STORIES
05.06.2008
Is a Well-Traveled Tomato Always a Dirty Tomato?

In The Omnivore's Dilemma, Michael Pollan writes that "the typical item of food on an American's plate travels some fifteen hundred miles to get there, and is frequently better traveled and more worldly than its eater." Observations of that sort have convinced many people that it's far better, from an energy and climate standpoint, to stick with locally grown food and try to reduce their "food miles" whenever possible.

The whole "food miles" concept has never lacked for nitpickers. Drake Bennett wrote a contrarian piece for The Boston Globe last year running through arguments for why it's not always a useful metric for measuring the true environmental impact of this or that grocery item. Moving food by train or ship can, in some cases, be more efficient than having a bunch of customers motor out to a local farm in their minivans. Shipping up a head of lettuce from Chile to New England late in the season can sometimes use less energy than growing that lettuce in a Vermont greenhouse. (Yes, better still would be to stick seasonal produce, but these admittedly simplistic examples are just meant to illustrate that the concept isn't all that straightforward.)

That brings us to the latest twist. Two Carnegie Mellon researchers, Christopher Weber and H. Scott Matthews, published a fairly novel study last month that attempts to pin down the total life cycle of greenhouse gases emitted by the food consumed by the average U.S. household. Not surprisingly, they found that what you eat matters much, much more than where it's grown:

Indeed, they traced 83 percent of the average household's food-related footprint of greenhouse gases to the origins of the food itself. Transportation only contributes 11 percent of greenhouse gas emissions on average—with the transportation leg from producer to retailer accounting for just 4 percent.

Now, this is not to disparage local agriculture in the slightest—it's still very much worthwhile for a whole garden of excellent reasons, one being to break away from the sort of industrial-farming practices that cause so much damage. The how of agriculture still matters. That said, it's striking to learn that, on average, replacing just 21 percent of the red meat in the "typical" diet with fish or chicken does as much, emissions-wise, as buying everything in that same diet locally. Another big surprise is that the far-flung globalization of the food chain that Pollan describes seems to have had a relatively small impact on global greenhouse-gas emissions, in part because ocean freight still accounts for 99 percent of all international transport, and that uses far less energy than trucking. That's unexpected, and it sounds like even the authors were surprised by the result.

--Bradford Plumer

Posted: Thursday, June 05, 2008 7:17 AM with 26 comment(s)

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apfrankel said:

Really cool.  But is there a reason you cite the two journalists by name and leave the "researchers" (Christopher Weber and Scott Matthews, of CMU's Civil and Environmental Engineering department) unnamed?  Aside from any issues of academic etiquette (or common decency, giving respect to the guys who probably spent a year of their lives studying this), it would seem more important to me to publicize and promote the people doing the hard work of contributing to human understanding rather than the ones who are just relaying others' work for a popular audience.

Sure, you'd write the names and nobody would recognize them.  But that's the point.  They're the ones who need their names promoted, since journalists can already get their work to a broad audience on their own.

June 5, 2008 3:32 AM

aeromonas said:

Far out!  This blog rocks.

One nit-picking question, tho.  When you mentioned replacing meat with fish as being advantageous from a greenhouse emissions point of view, was that--the fish part, I mean--in the study you cited, or were you just winging it?   Years ago, I worked a couple summers on commercial fishing boats in Alaska, and I gotta say, we burned a shitload of diesel.  Seining for salmon our engines were running--TWO engines, main boat and skiff--20 hours per day, 7 days per week for three months straight.  I have no idea what the ration of pounds of fish/gallons of diesel would have worked out to or how that compares, say, to beef, but it was significant.  Fuel formed the majority of the overhead.

June 5, 2008 8:34 AM

aeromonas said:

And I second apfrankel's point about the citation, even though I wouldn't have picked up on it myself.

June 5, 2008 8:36 AM

Brad Plumer said:

More than fair point on the citation! The original blockquote mentioned their names, and then I shortened it for purely aesthetic reasons that seemed sensible to me at 2:30 in the morning and plain forgot to mention them elsewhere in the piece. It's fixed.

The 20 percent figure came from the study (it was actually 21 to 24 percent, oops). And I think it's bound to be true that some fish are dirtier than others--the CMU folks were looking at entire supply chains, rather than individual items, so presumably you have to lump in the fishing boats burning diesel with aquaculture and whatever else. But it also seems like, relatively speaking, those fishing boats just aren't *that* dirty compared to all the nitrous oxide and methane that's being produced raising a bunch of cows.

June 5, 2008 10:15 AM

literatehobo said:

As a direct-market small farmer who raises, hunts, and butchers most of my own meat, this post is screaming for a massive essay. I will control myself, especially as I need to be outside working. Thanks for posting this on the one non-stormy day this week, Brad. Couldn't you check the weather forecast for Missouri before throwing such tasty red meat at me? We're having more severe storms roll through tomorrow; that would be a much better time for me to hunker in the basement office...

My largest beef with the global warming arguments is that too much of the discussion is obsessed with carbon, to the neglect of the many other factors and dynamics at work in our environment and economy. Evaluating energy use ought to encompass a much wider spectrum than just carbon; it ought to involve sustainability, geopolitics, local infrastructure, and so on. The whole "garden of good reasons" are indeed important, and we should not assess concepts solely based on their so-called carbon footprint. That said, I'm always interested in assumptions being tested, and this is one.

One criticism I can offer; it seems to me that the authors based their assessment of red meat on standard industrial meat practices. There is a world of difference between industrial meat and pastured raised or small farm meat. Concentrating livestock in feedlots with corn-dominant diet is a far different dynamic than naturally raised beef. The feed alone would make a difference; corn is very carbon-heavy in terms of inputs and energy needs, whereas pastured beef requires very little inputs beyond natural graze. Honestly, I don't know how the methane emissions compare between the two, but it doesn't seem as if the authors considered the two different systems.

Regarding "growing that lettuce in a Vermont greenhouse late in the season. ", you're missing the fact that a large compenent of "localvoria" involves seasonal eating, accepting that it's natural to have different produce available at different times of year. It's the insistence on anything, anytime, no matter the cost/effect that has helped drive our food system to the unsustainable point we're reaching today. Also, it's not an all or nothing system. If you want lettuce in winter, you're welcome to buy the Chilean stuff. But it's asinine to buy the Chilean stuff in spring when lettuce is readily and easily grown almost anywhere in the country. Local eating can be as simple as sourcing what's fresh and available when that's true, and then making your own choices otherwise.

Also, to be nitpicky, that specific statement isn't necessarily accurate, as you don't always need to heat greenhouses. Many items, including leafy greens, can be sown in the fall and grown to a certain stage before winter arrives, and will remain in good condition in an unheated greenhouse throughout the winter. They will not continue to grow, but can be harvested when needed.

On the other hand, there are many farmers around here who actively use propane-heated greenhouses to grow all sorts of out-of-season things like tomatoes in March, and I wouldn't be surprised to see that those items' energy budgets are worse than the California equivalent. I don't do that, and I don't buy that produce, but that's just my personal ethic. I'd still rather have a network of independant small farmers producing that food, propane or not, for all of the economic and cultural benefits that provides rural areas.

Finally, while moving food by train or ship may be more efficient than minivans, that's only a portion of the food's travel. The final movement is almost always going to be by semi, often over a large distance, and trucks are very energy-intensive. So your comparison is not accurate. In addition, in keeping with my argument that we need to consider the entire system and not just fixate on carbon, consider that semis are incredibly hard on roads, and much of the degredation of America's highway system has been linked to the rise in truck traffic as railroads declined. It takes a LOT of customer minivans and farmer pickups to equal the emissions, highway damage, and road safety issues created by the fleets of semis needed to maintain our current food system.

June 5, 2008 11:21 AM

Brad Plumer said:

"Evaluating energy use ought to encompass a much wider spectrum than just carbon; it ought to involve sustainability, geopolitics, local infrastructure, and so on."

Oh, I definitely agree with this, and yeah, this study was solely focused on greenhouse gases. Agreed with your other points, too--those examples were fairly simple-minded and just trying to make the point that "food miles," on its own, isn't always a straightforward concept. But you're right, it can quickly get a *lot* more complex than that.

It's also true that if we simply priced carbon externalities properly, these comparisons would become a lot more straightforward. Food that used more fossil-fuel energy would cost more, plain and simple. (Okay, it wouldn't be that simple, because you'd still have to figure out how to count and price the methane emissions and so forth...) But, as you say, greenhouse emissions are only a small part of the story here.

June 5, 2008 12:17 PM

dylanposer said:

Although I'm kust a tad concerned it would make me a vegetarian, I'm interested in the ways meat obtained cows and ostriches takes vastly more energy than meat from chickens and turkeys.  Is it because the process of fowl slaughter can be done by hand?

June 5, 2008 12:47 PM

literatehobo said:

dylan,

It has less to do with slaughter methods and more to do with basic biology. Every animal converts food to meat at a certain ratio, and some are more efficient than others. For example, most poultry are around 2:1 or 3:1, meaning they convert every 2 units feed into 1 unit meat. Cattle are up at around 8:1 to 10:1. Thus,  a given weight in beef takes up to five times more feed to produce than an equivalent weight in chicken. This is affected by many factors including type of feed, lifestyle, and so on, but cattle are about as inefficient as it gets in this regard. I believe fish are close to 1:1, though that's not my area.

Within this dynamic, though, you have to consider the larger picture. While cattle are less efficient than poultry, a cow raised entirely on pasture will likely be more sustainable and cleaner than a chicken raised in confinement on rations of processed grain and animal byproducts, all of which took a great deal more energy to produce than natural pasture.

The slaughterhouse itself adds very little to the picture. Where the meat goes post-slaughter does, however. How far does it travel through multiple distributors before reaching the grocery store or restaurant, and how much of that trip is through a semi (hint: almost all)?

June 5, 2008 2:38 PM

singlespeed said:

Great post Brad. Props to literate hobo as well. The fact that TNR has the E&E blog is what keeps me coming back everyday. More so than the political stuff. I can't add more to what literate said but I will say this. Part of eating seasonally and regionally also makes one a more adventurous cook. Learning how to creatively cook with fall squash, winter roots and the appropriate mix of meats (red, poultry, pork, venison) and fish makes one appreciative of the rich cultural gastronomy that existed before the advent of super market chains and trucking. Discovering the subtleties of Maryland chowder versus Virginia seafood stocks.

Of course the flip side is adapting far flung regional recipes to new locales. As much as I'd lust after a tomato in mid-winter in DC, I don't mind eating seasonally anyway. Plus the fact that the taste of that well-traveled produce doesn't necessarily taste as good either.

Maybe we could revive the old Victory Garden movement. Do your patriotic duty! Plant a garden today to save gas for tomorrow.

June 5, 2008 2:41 PM

bigfish said:

dylan, leave it up to so-called "food experts" like "farmers" and "scientists" to take all the fun out of eating tasty red meat.  Oh, and I've tried ostrich meat too, which is very good indeed.

Literatehobo, do you mean to tell me that for the environmental impact I have when I order a double-cheeseburger at McDonalds, I could have perhaps FOUR chicken sandwiches?  Environmentalism will make me fat.

June 5, 2008 3:54 PM

liberal reformer said:

Singlespeed: I heartily second you. There is much more light generated here than normally is the case on the Plank and the Stump.  Kudos to Bradford, Dayo, and Britt, as well as you and literatehobo.

June 5, 2008 4:40 PM

dylanposer said:

Well how much energy does it take to make and deliver tofurkey?  I realize vegans eat by their earthen, or whatever, codes, but if eating is part of being part of the "whole", shouldn't it be better for the earth to eat local meat than foreign soy product?

And yes, bigfish, there does seem to be a conflict between the interests of personal health, personal finances, and planetary welfare.  Hilarious post, by the way, my entire office had to wonder what had possessed me when I struck my knee into my desk from laughing so hard.

June 5, 2008 4:43 PM

bigfish said:

Thanks, dylan!

And I also agree with your tofurkey question, and will add that I find it silly some of the foods found in the "natural foods" section of the grocery store.  For example, mini hot dogs aren't a natural food, and shouldn't be anywhere near a "natural" sign.  Then I see mini hot dogs with all sorts of vegetable and soy product instead of the meat (and I use the term lightly) that actually makes hot dogs.  Then, the store has the gall to place this IMITATION of an already-unnatural food in the "natural foods" section.  It's more fake than the hot dog is!  Healthier?  Yes.  Vegan?  Yes.  Better for the environment?  Probably.  Natural?  Not by a long shot.

June 5, 2008 5:25 PM

literatehobo said:

dylan,

I have no idea how much energy goes into tofu, seitan, and so on. I have no interest in those products and do not eat them, although my household only eats meat about once a week. I find the concept of engineering complicated replacements for simple ingredients silly. I respect ethical considerations for not eating meat, but don't see the point of pretending to do so. I actually find veganism more defensible than vegetarianism, as the former is ethically consistent while the latter is not (dairy products, for example, inevitably result in a great many deaths, whether or not you're eating the results). In any case, I think you're still oversimplifying by focusing solely on energy as a matrix for judging food products.

I'm not sure what the conflict is "between the interests of personal health, personal finances, and planetary welfare", unless you're referring to healthier whole foods as being more expensive than processed food products. Short-term, that may be true, but (a) you're paying for those cheaper foods through government subsidies, and (b) the long-term savings in terms of health care ought to be considered. Certainly personal health and planetary welfare (whatever that is) would seem to go well together.

Bigfish,

Funny. I'm surprised KFC hasn't picked up on this yet. Of course, given how all of those animals are raised in industrial systems, switching from McDonalds to KFC is like downgrading from a Hummer to an Escalade in environmental terms.

June 5, 2008 5:30 PM

literatehobo said:

Just noted Bigfish's latest, and agree fully. It drives me crazy to walk into a so-called natural foods store where most of the products are highly processed foods with "organic" ingredients. Ridiculous. If you're going to make ethical choices about what to eat, don't pretend to have both worlds by relying on over-engineered substitues.

June 5, 2008 5:35 PM

dylanposer said:

Literate,

I am not necessarily referring to more nutritious local agriculture and meats.  Plenty of whole, nutrient-rich foods can be produced and delivered in ways that are not energy-effiecient and alternatives can be harder on the body.  Thus, one is left with the quandry: shall I purchase these unmolested avocados that were made in a New Mexico greenhouse project, or shall I purchase this guacamole dip that was made in the food mill twenty miles from where I live?***

By "planetary welfare", I was speaking in the context of transport costs on environment vs. production costs on environment.  

*** This applies to everyone except to New Mexicans or those within twenty miles of the New Mexico border

June 5, 2008 6:15 PM

dylanposer said:

I thought the crowd might enjoy this article, while we were sort of on the subject:

www.kutv.com/.../story.aspx

KUTV's graphic designers struck gold with the lead picture, methinks.

June 5, 2008 6:18 PM

teplukhin2you said:

Kudos to all. I'll second, or third or fourth (lost count) the motion that E&E is _vastly_ more interesting than the other TNR blogs, and increasingly, the only reason to stick around kloogey old tnr.com, It's the one area of tnr.com where the content's excellent-- as Crichton urges, "tell me something that's true and that I didn't know"-- AND the format is reader/commenter-friendly. Well done.

Get rid of the increasingly snide, juvenile and frankly, unbearable Plank and Stump, and I'll be eternally grateful. Or maybe just migrate E&E to another domain altogether??

Brad, or anyone -- one quibble with the premise of the discussion. How much in _absolute_ terms does a "21% red meat replacement in the typical diet" amount to? I'm all for making meaningful changes, but I find it hard to believe that this (in my case, enormous) sacrifice is justified by what I'd expect is a puny diminution in overall carbon emissions.

hobo - the English foodie/farmer Hugh Fearnsley-Whittingstall makes your point in great detail in his superb book, "Meat." My wife and I, being red meat and red wine addicts, devour Hugh's words almost as often as we devour pasture-raised, low water-content aged beef and lamb. I'll be damned if we're going to be deprived of the second greatest pleasure known to red-blooded man (and woman).

June 6, 2008 3:09 AM

teplukhin2you said:

Singlespeed - having a Russian wife and a California climate makes a victory garden a no-brainer. Our soon to be 3-year old daily picks his fill of blueberries, gets a weekly crop of strawberries, and with any luck next year we'll add pluots, apricots, lemons and apples to our stock of limes. Plus all the usual herbs and vegetables.

The only thing we, or my wife especially, miss is mushroom picking. Trying to find the good spots in the mountains is tough-- they're all jealously guarded by the old-timers (and the chefs).

June 6, 2008 3:14 AM

literatehobo said:

Dylan,

Gotcha. Fair point. Thanks for the clarification. Great link.

Tep,

Let me pile on the kudos as well. E&E was started just in time to keep me from ditching TNR Online altogether. Nice to see writers investigating and presenting real ideas from across a spectrum without any of the attitude that's crept into the others.

Good question on 21%. Are they basing that on a certain assumed level of meat consumption in an average diet? Frankly, from my (admittedly biased perspective), I would rather people continue to eat meat and source it from small farmers using sustainable methods than go on an ill-advised vegetarian binge in attempt to influence global climate patterns. Industrial ag is a huge problem on many levels, and one of the best ways to fight back is to encourage and support small farmers. I believe that voting with one's pocketbook is the best way to send a message in this country. Going vegetarian is the equivalent of not voting; changing your meat souce is the equivalent of voting for the opposition. The latter is far more powerful.

California climate...you're spoiled. At least we have natural water!

June 6, 2008 8:17 AM

dylanposer said:

No prob, literate.  The California climate can be idyllic, but right now in SF, it feels like January, and as someone that grew up in the East, I'm having trouble wrapping my mind around his concept of winter-in-summer.

And, the more I think about it, the more I m convinced that "Operation Hamburger Helper" is the best title for a police operation, ever.

June 6, 2008 9:48 AM

singlespeed said:

liberal...thanks. I try to add what I can. Sometimes successfully and other times I let my ten thumbs get in the way of typing coherently. But as far a a forum TNR does seem to provide a modicum of civility when it comes to discourse. Even if it does get heated at times, the regulars all seem to share a level of thoughtfulness I don't see on most blog/website forums these days.

Tep...Don't make me jealous. Man having my garden is one of the main things I miss having from my days as a ruralite. I loved haivng blackberry and raspberry bushes, cantaloupes, peas, toms, cucumbers and the herbs were a pleasure to have on hand. Having a neighbor who provided me with venison from the backyard was even more of a pleasure. Now that I'm temporarily in the confines of my city flat I'm anxious to get back west and have a garden again. And the fact that my girlfriend has some familial depth when it comes to amazing Cajun & Creole recipes using the simplest ingredients so I'm happy to have her in my life (amongst other reasons) I'm looking to mixing her father's recipes with my self-taught skills with western style cooking and recipes.

June 6, 2008 10:14 AM

drdannyu said:

I'm a little late to this thread, but on the advice of another TNR regular, I've decided to check this blog out, and immediately found a topic of intense personal interest.  (Though, unlike some, I have hopes that the end of the Democratic primary race will reanimate the Plank/Stump dyad.)

I'm a big Pollan fan, and just finished "In Defense of Food."  (I liked it, but it's not as cogent and thorough as "Omnivore's Dilemma.")  I know it's already been said, but there are many other reasons I find getting my food from local producers gratifying.  First of all, it simply tastes better, particularly the pastured beef and sustainably raised bacon (which have totally ruined me for their industrial counterparts; I won't bother buying the latter).  In addition, I can ask questions about how the food is produced and get an immediate answer.  And, as has already been amply discussed, there are lots of other considerations besides the carbon footprint, and they support the local, sustainable alternatives.  True, it costs more, and takes more work to find; people who aren't privileged to have the time and money lose out unfairly.  But, having experienced the benefits of local food, I've gotten pretty passionate about supporting it.  (My adopted state of Maine now has "Support community agriculture" license plates!)

June 6, 2008 12:04 PM

literatehobo said:

Dan,

As the other end of that consumer-farmer relationship, that's a joy to hear.

Regarding unpriviledged folks' access to local foods, that's changing as the system changes. Many farmers markets across the country now take food stamps, and I've heard of programs in which food stamps count for more when used for fresh produce as opposed to processed food. Prices are also becoming more competitive, many of the factors leading to rises in food prices don't affect local direct-market farmers as strongly as the industry as a whole. There are exceptions (eggs & chicken being one), but overall the trend is positive toward creating more access to worthwhile foods.

My ex-state of Virginia has a "Tobacco heritage" license plate. Priorities...

June 6, 2008 1:26 PM

drdannyu said:

lilterate -- one of the local school systems is (from what I understand) using food produced largely, if not exclusively, by local growers.  Many of the local farmer's markets do take food stamps, as well.  Maine feels ahead of the curve on the issue of local agriculture, and one of the big pleasures of living where I do is being able to see where my food is grown, and ask the woman who raises the pigs how the meat's been processed.  One of the state legislators from the area is the woman in question, and I think we're likely to see more from the state to foster the growth of local agriculture.  I also helped set up a CSA fair at my church (the same day as the Maine caucus, which was the source of numerous headaches), and the variety and abundance of the options was very heartening.  

And, like I said, there's no arguing with the taste.

June 6, 2008 2:05 PM

aeromonas said:

tep, beware of mushroom picking the the SF Bay Area.  Quite a number of San Franciscans--many of them Laotian migrants--have lost their livers and their lives to Amanita phalloides aka death cap.

June 8, 2008 7:56 AM