Workingman wrote:Hmm, I see a slight problem...
Well they can't turn us all into vegetarians so they want this sop.
Also there is the inconvenient truth.
A single cow will expel an average of 220 pounds of methane per year, according to the University of California, Davis.
Meanwhile, the Environmental Protection Agency reports that a typical car will emit an average of 4.6 metric tons of carbon dioxide annually.
Methane gas is nearly 30 times more potent than carbon dioxide when it comes to contributing to climate change, UC Davis reports.
Despite methane's potency, it only lasts for about 12 years in the atmosphere before a majority of it is removed through oxidation. Experts at UC Davis theorize that it’s possible the amount of methane that cows emit into the atmosphere is the same as the amount that breaks down..
This gets a bit complicated but bear with me.
There are 5.1m cows in the UK and each cow produces 100kg of methane per year. Which equates to 15.3m tonnes of CO2 per year. But only for the first 12 years. It then breaks down into .51m tonnes of CO2.
The cars however, 32m of them, emit 147.2m tonnes of CO2 and because that is CO2 and no breakdown is required, continues at the impact of 147.2m tonnes of CO2 for the next 1,000 years.
Of course the fix is to "reduce" 15m tonnes of CO2 by going god knows where and harvesting kelp then trucking it with these hugely emitting vehicles, to the cows so that we can feel good about ourselves.
That is the reality of this insanity. It is always good to know when someone is leading you up the garden path.
After all if we reduced the cars to Zero direct emissions and reduced the power production to 10% of existing emissions, we could then go get the kelp and feed it to the cows which would reduce emissions even further without a massive impact on the transport.
But, of course, that would be a bit of common sense wouldn't it? When I used to be in the ARMY in the REME we said that the REME was like manure. Spread it around and it did an amazing amount of good. But stick it in a heap and it just stinks. Our armoured workshops were just like that pile of manure and so are governments. The bigger the government, the bigger the pile.