Livestock emissions and systems in developing countries

According to Carlos Seré, Director General of ILRI, the livelihoods of a billion people, particularly in Africa and Asia, are attached to livestock - and consequently to their greenhouse has emissions. If livestock are removed, many of these people have few other livelihood opportunities. He argues: "improving feeding is one of the key interventions to improve the efficiency of livestock systems, i.e. to produce less methane per kilo of output" - which will relieve pressure on other natural resources like forests. He cautions that aggregating livestock emissions globally misses the big differences between developed and developing countries. It is important to separate the two. "To design policies you really need to clearly separate the problem." In developed countries, livestock production is mainly commercial and there are a number of policies and instruments that can be applied to reduce livestock emissions. In poor countries as well, he states, livestock emissions can be reduced : "but we need to be aware of the stark trade off. We may end up with lots more poor people and hungry children."

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: International Livestock Research Institute
Format: Video biblioteca
Language:English
Published: International Livestock Research Institute 2009-12-17
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/210
http://ilri.blip.tv/file/2985530/
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spelling dig-cgspace-10568-2102023-03-31T14:18:37Z Livestock emissions and systems in developing countries International Livestock Research Institute According to Carlos Seré, Director General of ILRI, the livelihoods of a billion people, particularly in Africa and Asia, are attached to livestock - and consequently to their greenhouse has emissions. If livestock are removed, many of these people have few other livelihood opportunities. He argues: "improving feeding is one of the key interventions to improve the efficiency of livestock systems, i.e. to produce less methane per kilo of output" - which will relieve pressure on other natural resources like forests. He cautions that aggregating livestock emissions globally misses the big differences between developed and developing countries. It is important to separate the two. "To design policies you really need to clearly separate the problem." In developed countries, livestock production is mainly commercial and there are a number of policies and instruments that can be applied to reduce livestock emissions. In poor countries as well, he states, livestock emissions can be reduced : "but we need to be aware of the stark trade off. We may end up with lots more poor people and hungry children." 2009-12-17 2009-12-17T18:06:31Z 2009-12-17T18:06:31Z Video ILRI. 2009. Livestock emissions and systems in developing countries. Video. Nairobi: ILRI https://hdl.handle.net/10568/210 http://ilri.blip.tv/file/2985530/ en Other Open Access International Livestock Research Institute
institution CGIAR
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country Francia
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region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Biblioteca del CGIAR
language English
description According to Carlos Seré, Director General of ILRI, the livelihoods of a billion people, particularly in Africa and Asia, are attached to livestock - and consequently to their greenhouse has emissions. If livestock are removed, many of these people have few other livelihood opportunities. He argues: "improving feeding is one of the key interventions to improve the efficiency of livestock systems, i.e. to produce less methane per kilo of output" - which will relieve pressure on other natural resources like forests. He cautions that aggregating livestock emissions globally misses the big differences between developed and developing countries. It is important to separate the two. "To design policies you really need to clearly separate the problem." In developed countries, livestock production is mainly commercial and there are a number of policies and instruments that can be applied to reduce livestock emissions. In poor countries as well, he states, livestock emissions can be reduced : "but we need to be aware of the stark trade off. We may end up with lots more poor people and hungry children."
format Video
author International Livestock Research Institute
spellingShingle International Livestock Research Institute
Livestock emissions and systems in developing countries
author_facet International Livestock Research Institute
author_sort International Livestock Research Institute
title Livestock emissions and systems in developing countries
title_short Livestock emissions and systems in developing countries
title_full Livestock emissions and systems in developing countries
title_fullStr Livestock emissions and systems in developing countries
title_full_unstemmed Livestock emissions and systems in developing countries
title_sort livestock emissions and systems in developing countries
publisher International Livestock Research Institute
publishDate 2009-12-17
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/210
http://ilri.blip.tv/file/2985530/
work_keys_str_mv AT internationallivestockresearchinstitute livestockemissionsandsystemsindevelopingcountries
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