Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Save the planet kill your pet.

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Save the planet kill your pet.

    Saw this on yahoo. Lets buy chickens to offset the carbon footprint of dogs and cats.... this is all kinds of assbackwardness.


    http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20091220...inganimalsfood

    Polluting pets: the devastating impact of man's best friend


    AFP/Getty Images/File – A man walks his dog in the snow in the East Village on December 19 in New York City. Man's best friend …



    by Isabelle Toussaint and Jurgen Hecker Isabelle Toussaint And Jurgen Hecker Sun Dec 20, 3:23 pm ET
    PARIS (AFP) – Man's best friend could be one of the environment's worst enemies, according to a new study which says the carbon pawprint of a pet dog is more than double that of a gas-guzzling sports utility vehicle.
    But the revelation in the book "Time to Eat the Dog: The Real Guide to Sustainable Living" by New Zealanders Robert and Brenda Vale has angered pet owners who feel they are being singled out as troublemakers.
    The Vales, specialists in sustainable living at Victoria University of Wellington, analysed popular brands of pet food and calculated that a medium-sized dog eats around 164 kilos (360 pounds) of meat and 95 kilos of cereal a year.
    Combine the land required to generate its food and a "medium" sized dog has an annual footprint of 0.84 hectares (2.07 acres) -- around twice the 0.41 hectares required by a 4x4 driving 10,000 kilometres (6,200 miles) a year, including energy to build the car.
    To confirm the results, the New Scientist magazine asked John Barrett at the Stockholm Environment Institute in York, Britain, to calculate eco-pawprints based on his own data. The results were essentially the same.
    "Owning a dog really is quite an extravagance, mainly because of the carbon footprint of meat," Barrett said.
    Other animals aren't much better for the environment, the Vales say.
    Cats have an eco-footprint of about 0.15 hectares, slightly less than driving a Volkswagen Golf for a year, while two hamsters equates to a plasma television and even the humble goldfish burns energy equivalent to two mobile telephones.
    But Reha Huttin, president of France's 30 Million Friends animal rights foundation says the human impact of eliminating pets would be equally devastating.
    "Pets are anti-depressants, they help us cope with stress, they are good for the elderly," Huttin told AFP.
    "Everyone should work out their own environmental impact. I should be allowed to say that I walk instead of using my car and that I don't eat meat, so why shouldn't I be allowed to have a little cat to alleviate my loneliness?"
    Sylvie Comont, proud owner of seven cats and two dogs -- the environmental equivalent of a small fleet of cars -- says defiantly, "Our animals give us so much that I don't feel like a polluter at all.
    "I think the love we have for our animals and what they contribute to our lives outweighs the environmental considerations.
    "I don't want a life without animals," she told AFP.
    And pets' environmental impact is not limited to their carbon footprint, as cats and dogs devastate wildlife, spread disease and pollute waterways, the Vales say.
    With a total 7.7 million cats in Britain, more than 188 million wild animals are hunted, killed and eaten by feline predators per year, or an average 25 birds, mammals and frogs per cat, according to figures in the New Scientist.
    Likewise, dogs decrease biodiversity in areas they are walked, while their faeces cause high bacterial levels in rivers and streams, making the water unsafe to drink, starving waterways of oxygen and killing aquatic life.
    And cat poo can be even more toxic than doggy doo -- owners who flush their litter down the toilet ultimately infect sea otters and other animals with toxoplasma gondii, which causes a killer brain disease.
    But despite the apocalyptic visions of domesticated animals' environmental impact, solutions exist, including reducing pets' protein-rich meat intake.
    "If pussy is scoffing 'Fancy Feast' -- or some other food made from choice cuts of meat -- then the relative impact is likely to be high," said Robert Vale.
    "If, on the other hand, the cat is fed on fish heads and other leftovers from the fishmonger, the impact will be lower."
    Other potential positive steps include avoiding walking your dog in wildlife-rich areas and keeping your cat indoors at night when it has a particular thirst for other, smaller animals' blood.
    As with buying a car, humans are also encouraged to take the environmental impact of their future possession/companion into account.
    But the best way of compensating for that paw or clawprint is to make sure your animal is dual purpose, the Vales urge. Get a hen, which offsets its impact by laying edible eggs, or a rabbit, prepared to make the ultimate environmental sacrifice by ending up on the dinner table.
    "Rabbits are good, provided you eat them," said Robert Vale.

  • #2
    Re: Save the planet kill your pet.

    So the enviro-backwardists can't even refrain from being disingenuous when suggesting we kill our pets. I'd love to meet the person that drives 6,200 miles or fewer per year. Sorry, but in America, we commute. Mostly. Most of the time.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Save the planet kill your pet.

      I agree with Ghent12, these figures seem disingenuous at best, deliberated cooked at worst.
      The impact of a cat equals a Volkswagen? Bull. I've never seen a Volkswagen rummaging in the trashcan yet, or catch and consume a single rodent or cockroach.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Save the planet kill your pet.

        Originally posted by Guinnesstime View Post
        Saw this on yahoo. Lets buy chickens to offset the carbon footprint of dogs and cats.... this is all kinds of assbackwardness.
        Rhyming with the above theme, here is a warm and cuddlly Neo-Malthusian Global warming site.

        http://www.popoffsets.com





        What is it about?

        PopOffsets is unique - we are operating the only project in the world that helps individuals and organizations to offset their carbon footprint by funding the unmet need for family planning, reproductive health and sex and relationship education.
        Our project recognizes the intrinsic link between increasing CO2 emissions, climate change and the world's ever-growing population.
        Meeting the currently unmet need for family planning is one of the most cost effective ways of minimising climate change - one study shows at about one third of the cost of other technological fixes. Moreover, other energy solutions, while they reduce CO2 emissions compared to fossil fuels, have unwanted environmental impacts.
        Who are the Partners?

        PopOffsets is a project of the Optimum Population Trust.
        The Optimum Population Trust is a UK-registered environmental charity (No. 1114109) and a company limited by guarantee (No. 3019081) founded in 1991 as an educational charity think tank and campaign group that supports sustainable population levels for the planet. Its main aims are;
        • Challenging the view that perpetual population growth is desirable or even possible.
        • Highlighting the inevitable consequences of ever-increasing population on the earth's finite resources.
        • Promoting intelligent and reasoned discussion about the effects of population growth on the global environment and its contribution to the deeply threatening problem of global warming.



        OPT’s patrons are:

        Sir David Attenborough OM, CH, CVO, CBE, FRS , Naturalist, broadcaster and trustee of the British Museum and Royal Botanical Gardens, Kew; and a former controller of BBC Two.
        Professor Sir Partha Dasgupta, Frank Ramsey Professor of Economics, University of Cambridge
        Professor Paul Ehrlich, Professor of Population Studies, Stanford University
        Jane Goodall PhD DBE, Founder, Jane Goodall Institute, and UN Messenger of Peace.
        Professor John Guillebaud Former Co-chair of OPT, Emeritus Professor of Family Planning and Reproductive Health, University College, London.
        Susan Hampshire OBE, Actress and population campaigner
        Dr James Lovelock CBE FRS Scientist and environmentalist known for proposing the Gaia theory that the Earth functions as an organism, and author of 'The Revenge of Gaia'.
        Professor Aubrey Manning OBE, President of the Wildlife Trusts and Emeritus Professor of Natural History, University of Edinburgh
        Professor Norman Myers CMG, Visiting Fellow, Green College, Oxford University, and at Universities of Harvard, Cornell, Stanford, California, Michigan and Texas
        Sara Parkin OBE, Founder Director and Trustee of Forum for the Future, Director of the Natural Environment Research Council and the Leadership Foundation for Higher Education and Head Teachers into Industry.
        Jonathon Porritt CBE, Founder Director of Forum for the Future and former Chair of the UK Sustainable Development Commission.
        Sir Crispin Tickell GCMG KCVO, Chancellor of Kent University, Director of the Policy Foresight Programme at the James Martin Institute, Oxford, and former UK Permanent Representative on the United Nations Security Council


        "that each simple substance has relations which express all the others"

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Save the planet kill your pet.

          Originally posted by Ghent12
          I'd love to meet the person that drives 6,200 miles or fewer per year
          I do. My wife and I drive around 5000 miles a year between both our cars (actually both of my cars - she has no driver's license even).

          But I'm the 'denier'...:eek:

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Save the planet kill your pet.

            Originally posted by c1ue View Post
            I do. My wife and I drive around 5000 miles a year between both our cars (actually both of my cars - she has no driver's license even).

            But I'm the 'denier'...:eek:
            I think we do too. My husband works from home.

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Save the planet kill your pet.

              Originally posted by c1ue View Post
              I do. My wife and I drive around 5000 miles a year between both our cars (actually both of my cars - she has no driver's license even).

              But I'm the 'denier'...:eek:
              Actually, although I drove over 13,000 miles this year, I will drive fewer than 4,000 next year because I am renting within a 5-minute walk from campus. It's definitely plausible for many people to drive fewer than 6,200 miles per year, but it is probably not even close to the average.

              The DoE, from 2002 (although data appears to be from the 1990's), says that the only people that traveled on average as few as 6,100 miles was the 80 years or older demographic.
              http://www.eia.doe.gov/emeu/rtecs/chapter3.html
              Last edited by Ghent12; December 23, 2009, 02:02 PM.

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Save the planet kill your pet.

                How about I kill the planet to save my dog.
                Given my mood recently, I would think, in all seriousness, that I would only be willing to kill half the planet to save my dog.
                There now, my humanitarian sense of balance is starting to re-focus.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: Save the planet kill your pet.

                  I second this sentiment. It is much easier for me to kill my fellow "long pigs" than animals or pets, as I have yet to find any animal that routinely pisses me off as much as my fellow man often does. Kill a human, save the planet.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: Save the planet kill your pet.

                    The species with the largest biomass on the planet is the ant. What's a ant's carbon footprint? Are the little bastards causing problems too?

                    Comment

                    Working...
                    X